Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Conditions for health and disease
- 3 Physician and patient
- 4 The earliest notices of Anglo-Saxon medical practice
- 5 Medical texts of the Anglo-Saxons
- 6 Compilations in Old English
- 7 Compilations in Latin
- 8 Latin works translated into Old English: Herbarium and Peri Didaxeon
- 9 Sources for Old English texts
- 10 Making a Leechbook
- 11 Materia medica
- 12 Rational medicine
- 13 Magical medicine
- 14 The humours and bloodletting
- 15 Surgery
- 16 Gynaecology and obstetrics
- 17 Conclusions
- Appendix 1 Quotations for ch. 10
- Appendix 2 Quotations for ch. 13
- Appendix 3 Quotations for ch. 14
- Appendix 4 Quotation for ch. 15
- Bibliography
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction
- 2 Conditions for health and disease
- 3 Physician and patient
- 4 The earliest notices of Anglo-Saxon medical practice
- 5 Medical texts of the Anglo-Saxons
- 6 Compilations in Old English
- 7 Compilations in Latin
- 8 Latin works translated into Old English: Herbarium and Peri Didaxeon
- 9 Sources for Old English texts
- 10 Making a Leechbook
- 11 Materia medica
- 12 Rational medicine
- 13 Magical medicine
- 14 The humours and bloodletting
- 15 Surgery
- 16 Gynaecology and obstetrics
- 17 Conclusions
- Appendix 1 Quotations for ch. 10
- Appendix 2 Quotations for ch. 13
- Appendix 3 Quotations for ch. 14
- Appendix 4 Quotation for ch. 15
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The present book is an attempt to explain the rational basis of Anglo-Saxon medicine in the light of modern physiology and pharmacology. I should explain at the outset why I have undertaken this approach, and I think I should offer some explanation of my educational background. My formal education and training have been in biology, especially in limnology (the dynamics of the evolution of fresh-water lakes) and in invertebrate physiology. I have never had a lesson in Old English or in the history of Anglo-Saxon England; all I know about these subjects I have acquired through my interest in medieval medicine. I should perhaps add that I spent my childhood on a farm where the children were expected to be able to identify all the animals and plants around them. We lived with a grandmother whose memory went back to the way of life of Scottish Highland crofters transplanted to the New World. It was a way of life, I have come to realize, not very different from that of the Anglo-Saxons.
As a consequence, I entered on the study of Anglo-Saxon medicine, being deficient in much of importance in Anglo-Saxon language, literature and history, but at the same time having a background rich in ancient folk-customs and mores experienced at first hand, and an understanding of the scientific bases of disease, therapeutics and pharmacology. Because I think that this background has given me a peculiar outlook on the subject of Anglo-Saxon medicine, I have dared to write this book.
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- Information
- Anglo-Saxon Medicine , pp. ixPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993