The Origin and Growth of the Healing Art by Edward Berdoe
Chapter 1
1849 words | Chapter 1
The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Origin and Growth of the Healing Art
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States,
you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located
before using this eBook.
Title: The Origin and Growth of the Healing Art
Author: Edward Berdoe
Release date: April 22, 2019 [eBook #59331]
Most recently updated: June 15, 2020
Language: English
Other information and formats: www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/59331
Credits: E-text prepared by Turgut Dincer, Les Galloway, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ORIGIN AND GROWTH OF THE HEALING ART ***
E-text prepared by Turgut Dincer, Les Galloway, and the Online Distributed
Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
file which includes the original illustrations.
See 59331-h.htm or 59331-h.zip:
(https://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epub/59331/pg59331-images.html)
or
(https://www.gutenberg.org/files/59331/59331-h.zip)
Images of the original pages are available through
Internet Archive. See
https://archive.org/details/origingrowthofhe00berduoft
Transcriber’s note:
Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
A caret character is used to denote superscription.
Multiple superscripted characters are enclosed by
curly brackets (example: Excell^{mi}).
THE HEALING ART.
* * * * * *
_WORKS BY THE SAME AUTHOR._
THE BROWNING CYCLOPÆDIA.
A Guide to the Study of the Works of Robert Browning, with copious
Explanatory Notes and References on all difficult passages. Second
Edition. Pp. xx., 572. Price 10_s._ 6_d._
SOME OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
“Conscientious and painstaking.”—_Times._
“A serviceable book, and deserves to be widely bought.”—_The Spectator._
“A book of far-reaching research and careful industry.”—_Scotsman._
“A most learned and creditable piece of work.”—_Vanity Fair._
“A monument of industry and devotion.”—_Bookman._
BROWNING’S MESSAGE TO HIS TIME:
His Religion, Philosophy, and Science. With Portrait and Facsimile
Letters. Third Edition. Price 3_s._ 6_d._
[Dilettante Library.]
OPINIONS OF THE PRESS.
“Full of admiration and sympathy.”—_Saturday Review._
“Should have a wide circulation; it is interesting and
stimulative.”—_Literary World._
“We have no hesitation in strongly recommending this little volume to
any who desire to understand the moral and mental attitude of Robert
Browning.... We are much obliged to Dr. Berdoe for his volume.”—_Oxford
University Herald._
* * * * * *
[Illustration: EXPELLING THE DISEASE-DEMON. [_Frontispiece._]
THE ORIGIN AND GROWTH OF THE HEALING ART
A Popular History of Medicine in All Ages and Countries.
by
EDWARD BERDOE,
Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians, Edinburgh; Member of the
Royal College of Surgeons, England; Licentiate of the
Society of Apothecaries, London, etc., etc.
Author of “The Browning Cyclopædia,” etc., etc.
[Illustration: Publishers device]
London
Swan Sonnenschein & Co.
Paternoster Square
1893
Butler & Tanner,
The Selwood Printing Works,
Frome, and London.
PREFACE.
The History of Medicine is a _terra incognita_ to the general reader,
and an all but untravelled region to the great majority of medical
men. On special occasions, such as First of October Addresses at the
opening of the Medical Schools, or the Orations delivered before the
various Medical Societies, certain periods of medical history are
referred to, and a few of the great names of the founders of medical
and surgical science are held up to the admiration of the audience.
From time to time excellent monographs on the subject appear in the
_Lancet_ and _British Medical Journal_. But with the exception of these
brilliant electric flashes, the History of Medicine is a dark continent
to English students who have not made long and tedious researches in
our great libraries. For it is a remarkable fact that the History of
Medicine has been almost completely neglected by English writers.
This cannot be due either to the want of importance or interest of
the subject. Next to the history of religion ranks in interest and
value that of medicine, and it would not be difficult to show that
religion itself cannot be understood in its development and connections
without reference to medicine. The priest and the physician are own
brothers, and the Healing Art has always played an important part in
the development of all the great civilisations. The modern science of
Anthropology has placed at the disposal of the historian of medicine
a great number of facts which throw light on the medical theories of
primitive and savage man. But most of these have hitherto remained
uncollected, and are not easily accessible to the general reader.
Although English writers have so strangely neglected this important
field of research, the Germans have explored it in the most exhaustive
manner. The great works of Sprengel, Haeser, Baas, and Puschmann,
amongst many others of the same class, sustain the claim that Germany
has created the History of Medicine, whilst the well-known but
incomplete treatise of Le Clerc shows what a great French writer could
do to make this _terra incognita_ interesting.
Not that Englishmen have entirely neglected this branch of literature.
Dr. Freind, beginning with Galen’s period, wrote a _History of Physic
to the Commencement of the Sixteenth Century_. Dr. Edward Meryon
commenced a _History of Medicine_, of which Vol. I. only appeared
(1861). In special departments Drs. Adams, Greenhill, Aikin, Munk,
Wise, Royle, and others have made important contributions to the
literature of the subject; but we have nothing to compare with
the great German works whose authors we have mentioned above. The
encyclopædic work of Dr. Baas has been translated into English by Dr.
Handerson of Cleveland, Ohio.
Sprengel’s work is translated into French, and Dr. Puschmann’s
admirable volume on Medical Education has been given in English by Mr.
Evan Hare.
None of these important and interesting works, valuable as they are to
the professional man, are quite suitable for the general reader, who,
it seems to the present writer, is entitled in these latter days to be
admitted within the inner courts of the temple of Medical History, and
to be permitted to trace the progress of the mystery of the Healing
Art from its origin with the medicine-man to its present abode in our
Medical Schools.
With the exception of an occasional note or brief reference in his
text-books of medicine and surgery, the student of medicine has little
inducement to direct his attention to the work of the great pioneers of
the science he is acquiring.
One consequence of this defect in his education is manifested in the
common habit of considering that all the best work of discoverers in
the Healing Art has been done in our own times. “History of medicine!”
exclaimed a hospital surgeon a few months since. “Why, there was none
till forty years ago!” This habit of treating contemptuously the
scientific and philosophical work of the past is due to imperfect
acquaintance with, or absolute ignorance of, the splendid labours
of the men of old time, and can only be remedied by devoting some
little study to the records of travellers who have preceded us on the
same path we are too apt to think we have constructed for ourselves.
Professor Billroth declared, “that the great medical faculties should
make it a point of honour to take care that lectures on the history of
medicine are not missing in their curricula.” And at several German
universities some steps in this direction have been taken. In England,
however—so far as I am aware—nothing of the sort has been attempted,
and a young man may attain the highest honours of his profession
without the ghost of an idea about the long and painful process through
which it has become possible for him to acquire his knowledge.
Says Dr. Nathan Davis,[1] “A more thorough study of the history of
medicine, and in consequence, a greater familiarity with the successive
steps or stages in the development of its several branches, would
enable us to see more clearly the real relations and value of any
new fact, induction, or remedial agent that might be proposed. It
would also enable us to avoid a common error of regarding facts,
propositions, and remedies presented under new names, as really new,
when they had been well known and used long before, but in connection
with other names or theories.” He adds that, “The only remedy for these
popular and unjust errors is a frequent recurrence to the standard
authors of the past generation, or in other words, an honest and
thorough study of the history of medicine as a necessary branch of
medical education.”
In these times, when no department of science is hidden from the
uninitiated, especially when medical subjects and the works of medical
men are freely discussed in our great reviews and daily journals, no
apology seems necessary for withdrawing the professional veil and
admitting the laity behind the scenes of professional work.
Medicine now has no mysteries to conceal from the true student of
nature and the scientific inquirer. Her methods and her principles are
open to all who care to know them; the only passport she requires is
reverence, her only desire to satisfy the yearning to know. In this
spirit and for these ends this work has been conceived and given to the
world. “The proper study of mankind is man.”
EDWARD BERDOE.
TYNEMOUTH HOUSE,
VICTORIA PARK GATE,
LONDON, _April 22nd, 1893_.
SPRENGEL GIVES THE FOLLOWING TABLE OF THE GREAT PERIODS IN
THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE:—
I. Expedition of the | 1273-1263 B.C. | I. First traces of
Argonauts. | | Greek Medicine.
II. Peloponnesian War. | 432-404 B.C. | II. Medicine of
| | Hippocrates.
III. Establishment of the | 30 A.D. | III. School of the
Christian Religion. | | Methodists.
IV. Emigration of the hordes | 430-530 | IV. Decadence of
of Barbarians. | | the Science.
V. The Crusades. | 1096-1230 | V. Arabian medicine
| | at its highest
| | point of
| | splendour.
VI. Reformation. | 1517-1530 | VI. Re-establishment
| | of Greek medicine
| | and anatomy.
VII. Thirty Years War. | 1618-1648 | VII. Discovery of the
| | circulation of
| | the blood and
| | reform of Van
| | Helmont.
VIII. Reign of Frederick the | 1640-1786 | VIII. Haller.
Great. | |
Renouard[2] arranges the periods of the growth of the art of medicine
as follows:—1st. The Primitive or Instinctive Period, lasting from the
earliest recorded treatment to the fall of Troy. 2nd. The Sacred or
Mystic Period, lasting till the dispersion of the Pythagorean Society,
500 B.C. 3rd. The Philosophical Period, closing with the foundation of
the Alexandrian Library, B.C. 320. 4th. The Anatomical Period, which
continued till the death of Galen, A.D. 200.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
EXPELLING THE DISEASE-DEMON _Frontispiece_
THE MEDICINE-DANCE OF THE NORTH AMERICAN INDIANS _To face p._ 32
EXAMPLES OF ANCIENT SURGERY „ 204
ANCIENT SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS „ 246
INTERIOR OF A DOCTOR’S HOUSE „ 340
CONTENTS.
Reading Tips
Use arrow keys to navigate
Press 'N' for next chapter
Press 'P' for previous chapter