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The medicine
In the Egyptian medicine there were two different tendencies:
the magical-religious one, which included very primitive elements, and the
empirical-rational one, based on experience and observation, with no mystic
elements.
There were many doctors in Ancient Egypt, so each one of them cared
almost exclusively about the diseases they knew better. The ordinary doctors
were helped by professionals of a superior level, by inspectors and by
supervisors.
A male paramedic staff assisted them. They owed their anatomic
knowledge to the observation of animals during the slaughtering and not to the
observation of the embalming of a dead person which was reserved to the priests
devoted to Anubi, so their knowledge on anatomy, that is, of the structure and
of the disposition of the organs, was modest and, so in consequence, even the
surgery procedures were very limited: a practice of old tradition and still
widely used was the drilling, which was the perforation of the skull to heal
cephaleas and mental disorder.
The heart was considered the place for emotions
and intellect.
The well-being of the body depended, according to them, on the
flowing of liquids in the metu, the vessels that went across it, and if one of
these vessels was obstructed, the disease appeared.
Pneumonia and tuberculosis
were the most common diseases, caused by the inhalation of sand and smoke of the
domestic hearths.
The parasitic diseases were as common caused by the absence of
hygiene. The common diseases were usually cured by doctors with the
empirical-rational method, thanks mostly to the fact that these organs are
directly accessible; the illness of other parts of the body were, instead cured
by sorcerers with magic and incantations.
During the third dynasty the doctor
began to be distinguished as a figure, although primitive, of a scientist,
different from the sorcerer and the priest. The first Egyptian doctor whose name
has reached us is Imhotep (who lived around 2725 BC), famous also as a builder
of pyramids and as an astrologer.
Usually the doctor spent years of hard
training in the schools in the temples, to learn the art of questioning the sick
person, of his inspection and of the palpating (an examination of the body made
feeling with hands).
The pharmacopeia of the time included vegetal medical
substances: the use of laxatives was common such as figs, dates and castor-oil,
tannico acid , derived mostly by galla nuts was considered useful to treat burns.
The most common tools were: tweezers, knives, suture threads, splinters, drills
and dental pieces.
Learn more
Ophthalmology
The medical papyrus
The circumcision
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