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Title: Tammy Nguyen


1
Ancient Greek Medicine
Ancient Greek Medicine
  • Tammy Nguyen

2
Table of Contents 1
Table of Contents
Hippocratic Oath (General)
The Invention of Medicine
Asclepius God of Medicine
Hippocratic Oath (Greek)
Other Gods and Goddesses
Hippocratic Oath (Current)
Pythagoras
Aristotle
Hippocrates
MORE!!
3
Table of Contents 2
Table of Contents
Herophilus of Chalcedon
Galen
Timeline
Erasistratus
Greek Medical Vocabulary
Dioscorides
Bibliography
Asclepiades
The End
Back
4
The Invention of Medicine
The Invention of Medicine
  • "...But save me. Take me to the ship, cut this
    arrow out of my leg, wash the blood from it with
    warm water and put the right things on it - the
    plants they say you have learned about from
    Achilles who learned them from Chiron, the best
    of the Centaurs."-The Iliad of Homer, Book XI
  • According to Greek mythology, when Chiron, a
    centaur, was injured by Hercules, he created
    medicine to heal himself .
  • Chiron supposedly taught the art of healing to
    Asclepius, a Greek hero who became the Greek god
    of medicine and healing, which became the source
    of all medical knowledge among the Greeks. Chiron
    also taught Achilles, who was thought to have
    some special medical knowledge.

Asclepius
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Asclepius
Asclepius
  • Asclepius was the son of Apollo and Coronis and
    is thought to be an actual famous historical
    figure for his medical knowledge.
  • Healers and those who were ill would give homage
    to him in prayers and healing ceremonies. Temples
    were created across the Mediterranean in his
    honor. Those in dire need of healing would often
    travel to those temples to make sacrifices, pray,
    or even spend the night.
  • The most important temple was at Epidaurus. There
    were many inscriptions that recorded cures for
    lameness, baldness, worm infestation, blindness,
    etc. There was also a cult of Asclepius at the
    temple.
  • Asclepius is often identified by a staff with a
    single snake around it. In ancient Greece, the
    snake symbolized rejuvenation and healing.

More information on Ascelpius CLICK
HERE!
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6
Other Gods and Goddesses
Other Gods and Goddesses
  • Apollo- In the Illiad Apollo was mentioned as the
    bringer and reliever of plagues
  • Hera, the protector of women, and Artemis, the
    protector of childbirth, were often called upon
    in prayers during childbirth.
  • The goddesses Hygieia (Health) and Panaceia
    were the daughters of Asclepius and considered a
    guardian of health.
  • All are called upon in the Greek translation of
    the Hippocratic Oath.

More information on Apollo CLICK
HERE!
Apollo
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7
Pythagoras
Pythagoras
Pythagoras
  • Born in 580 B.C.E
  • Pythagoras is important to Ancient Greek medicine
    because it was believed that he advocated a
    healthy existence through a specific vegetarian
    diet.
  • Pythagoras refused to allow his follower to
    consume beans because they released an odorous
    gas, which was not a healthy existence.

More information on Pythagoras CLICK
HERE!
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Hippocrates
Hippocrates
  • There is little information on what was
    supposedly the first physician named Hippocrates.
    However, there is evidence that the name
    Hippocrates encompasses a group of teachers at a
    famous medical on the island of Cros.
  • Hippocrates is usually credited with the
    monumental step of removing divine notions in
    medicine and using observations of the body as a
    scaffold for medical knowledge.
  • Hippocrates resisted the idea of divine
    intervention concerning disease, but instead
    believed that the cause of disease was an
    imbalance of the four bodily humors (fluids)
    which were blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow
    bile.
  • The Hippocratic Corpus, is a collection of
    writings that is credited to Hippocrates, it is
    assumed to be by several authors scatter over
    several centuries, and contains about sixty works
    on topics including diagnosis, epidemics,
    pediatrics, nutrition, and surgery. The books
    began a tradition of studying the cause of
    disease rather than looking only at the symptoms
    when finding a cure.

More information on Hippocrates CLICK
HERE!
The Hippocratic Oath
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The Hippocratic Oath
Hippocratic Oath General
Hippocratic Oath
  •  

The Hippocratic Oath is one of the most widely
known Greek medical text, which requires a
physician to swear to the healing gods that he
will follow certain ethical standards such as not
assisting in euthanasia or abortion. Estimated to
be written in the 4th century BCE, it is not
known for sure who or what group of people
started and wrote the oath but there is evidence
of strong influence from the followers of
Pythagoras and Hippocrates.
Greek Translation
Current Hippocratic Oath
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Current Hippocratic Oath
Current Hippocratic Oath
  • You do solemnly swear, each by whatever he or
    she holds most sacred
  • That you will be loyal to the Profession of
    Medicine and just and generous
  • to its members
  • That you will lead your lives and practice your
    art in uprightness and
  • Honor
  • That into whatsoever house you shall enter, it
    shall be for the good of the
  • sick to the utmost of your power, your holding
    yourselves far aloof from wrong,
  • from corruption, from the tempting of others to
    vice
  • That you will exercise your art solely for the
    cure of your patients, and will
  • give no drug, perform no operation, for a
    criminal purpose, even if solicited, far less
  • suggest it
  • That whatsoever you shall see or hear of the
    lives of men or women which is not
  • fitting to be spoken, you will keep inviolably
    secret
  • These things do you swear. Let each bow the head
    in sign of acquiescence
  • And now, if you will be true to this, your oath,
    may prosperity and good repute be ever
  • yours the opposite, if you shall prove
    yourselves forsworn.
  • Approved by the American Medical Association.

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Greek Translated Hippocratic Oath
Hippocratic Oath- Translation from Greek Text
  • I swear by Apollo Physician, and Asclepius and
    Hygieia and Panaceia and all the gods and
    goddesses,
  • making them my witnesses, that I will fulfill
    according to my ability and judgment this oath
    and the covenant
  • To hold him who has taught me this art as equal
    to my parents and to live my life in partnership
    with
  • him, and if he is in need of money to give him a
    share of mind, and to regard his offspring as
    equal to my
  • brothers in male lineage and to teach them this
    art- if they desire to learn it- without fee and
    covenant to
  • give a share of precepts and oral instruction and
    all the other learning to my sons and to the sons
    of him
  • who has instructed me and to pupils who have
    signed the covenant and have taken an oath
    according to the
  • medical law, but to no one else.
  • I will apply dietetic measures for the benefit
    of the sick according to my ability and judgment
    I will keep
  • them from harm and injustice.
  • I will neither give a deadly drug to anybody if
    asked for it, nor will I make a suggestion to
    this affect.
  • Similarly I will not give to a woman an abortive
    remedy. In purity and holiness I will guard my
    life and my art.
  • I will not use the knife, not even on sufferers
    from stone, but will withdraw in favor of such
    men as are
  • engaged in this work.
  • Whatever houses I may visit, I will come for the
    benefit of the sick, remaining free of all
    intentional
  • injustice, of all mischief and in particular of
    sexual relations with both female and male
    persons, be they free
  • or slaves.
  • What I may see or hear in the course of the
    treatment or even outside of the treatment in
    regard to the

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12
Aristotle
Aristotle
Aristotle
More information on Aristotle CLICK
HERE!
  • In relation to Ancient Greek medicine, Aristotle
    is famous for his writings on human and animal
    anatomy. His writings show that he believed in
    direct observation. In his writings he has many
    anatomical comparisons between species through
    dissection.
  • Aristotle wrote extensively on animal life (both
    sexual and asexual reproduction) and his
    observations of marine invertebrates such as the
    octopus were very accurate and could have only
    been done through direct dissection

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Herophilus of Chalcedon
Herophilus of Chalcedon
  • Born in 320 BCE.
  • A Greek physican, he was the first anatomist,
    practicing in Alexandria, where human dissections
    were permitted.
  • His discoveries were recorded in On Dissections,
    and included the difference between sensory and
    motor nerves, and observations of the liver,
    retina, and ovaries.
  • He also studied the brain, which he thought to be
    the site of intelligence, and the alimentary
    canal (named the duodenum),
  • He also believed that bleeding a person had
    therapeutic value because of Hippocrates idea of
    the four humors.

More information on Herophilus CLICK
HERE!
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14
Erisistratus
Erasistratus
  • Erasistratus was born in 304 BCE
  • He was a Greek anatomist who furthered
    Herophilus investigations.
  • He studied the cerebrum, cerebellum, nerves, and
    the valves of the heart.
  • He distinguished between arteries and veins and
    suggested that air carried from the lungs to the
    heart was converted into a spirit and distributed
    by the arteries.
  • He believed in a tripartite system of humors
    consisting of nervous spirit (carried by nerves),
    animal spirit (carried by the arteries), and
    blood (carried by the veins).

More information on Erasistratus CLICK
HERE!
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15
Dioscorides
Discorides
Dioscorides
  • Dioscorides of Anazarbus was born in was a Greek
    physician born in southeast Asia Minor.
    Throughout his life, Dioscorides traveled across
    the Greek and Roman world trying to find
    medicinal substances
  • Between 50 to 70 C.E., he wrote his important
    work, known in Latin as De materia medica, a five
    book study focused upon the "the preparation,
    properties, and testing of drugs."

More information on Dioscorides
CLICK HERE!
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16
Asclepiades
Asclepiades
  • Born in 124 BCE
  • Asclepiades was a Greek physician who was born in
    Prusa and studied at Alexandria.
  • He opposed humoralism and introduced into
    medicine Democritus' atomic theory. He believed
    that inharmonious movement of atoms caused
    disease and was cured by restoring harmony, which
    included practices such as diet, friction,
    bathing, exercise, inducing vomiting, and
    bleeding.
  • Through his character it was reported that he
    made Greek medicine honorable in Rome through his
    good graces.

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17
Galen
Galen
Galen
  • Galen received his medical education in Smyrna
    and Alexandria and became famous as a surgeon to
    the gladiators of Pergamos. Over time, he was
    summoned to Rome to be the personal physician of
    the Emperor Marcus Aurelius. He would spend the
    rest of his life in the Roman court and create
    numerous amounts of writings on medicine until
    his death.
  • Galen took Hippocrates idea of the four humors
    and integrated the anatomical knowledge of
    Alexandrians such as Herophilus of Chalcedon.
  • A supporter of observation and reasoning, he was
    one of the first experimental physiologists,
    researching the function of the kidneys and the
    spinal cord.

More information on Galen CLICK HERE!
Galen demonstrating on a pig
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Timeline
Timeline...
  • 700 B.C.E.- Homer writes of Apollo in The Illiad,
    the bringer and reliever of plagues
  • 600 B.C.E.- Thales begins questioning nature and
    physics
  • 580 B.C.E.- Pythagoras born at Samos (promoted a
    specialized vegetarian diet to aid in health)
  • 460 B.C.E.- The Hippocratic Corpus begins its
    formation
  • 384 B.C.E.- Aristotle born (wrote about human and
    animal anatomy)
  • 334-325 B.C.E.- Alexander the Great conquers
    Egypt, the Middle East and Western India,
    extending Greek influence.
  • 330 B.C.E.-100 C.E. Alexandria serves as a center
    for Greek scholarship in medicine.
  • 320 BCE- Herophilus of Chalcedon (first
    anatomist)
  • 304 B.C.E- Erasistratus is born (continued the
    work of Herophilus)
  • 146 B.C.E.- Greece become a Roman colony.
  • 129 B.C.E.- Asclepiades of Prusa is born
    (believed that diseases occurred because of an
    imbalance in the human body)
  • 40 C.E. Dioscorides is born (writes De materia
    medica, the first books of pharmacology)
  • 129 C.E.- Galen born (integrated Hippocrates
    four humors with ideas fro Alexandria, first
    experimental physiologist)

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Greek Medical Vocabulary
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From the National Institute of Health
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Bibliography
Bibliography
  • Ancient Greek Civilizations. eMuseums. 16 Dec.
    2004 lthttp//www.mnsu.edu/emuseum/prehistory/aege
    an/culture/greekmedicine.htmlgt.
  • Demand, Nancy. Medicine in Ancient Greece. 19 May
    2000. Indiana University. 16 Dec. 2004
    lthttp//www.indiana.edu/ancmed/greekmenu.HTMgt.
  • Greek Medicine. 16 Sept. 2002. National Institute
    of Health. 16 Dec. 2004 lthttp//www.nlm.nih.gov/h
    md/greek/gt.
  • History Medicine Through Time. bbc.co.uk. 16 Dec.
    2004 lthttp//www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/h
    istory/medicine/ancientandgreekmedicinerev4.shtmlgt
    .
  • Jenkins, Neil, Sumair Mirza, and Jason Tsang.
    Picture Gallery. 2004. MythNet. 15 Dec. 2004
    lthttp//www.classicsunveiled.com/mythnet/html/pics
    10.htmlgt.
  • Leadbetter, Ron. Asclepius. 3 Mar. 1997.
    Encyclopedia Mythica. 15 Dec. 2004
    lthttp//www.pantheon.org/articles/a/asclepius.htm
    lgt.
  • Weissten, Erik. Herophilus of Chalcedon.
    WORLDFRAM Research. 16 Dec. 2004
    lthttp//scienceworld.wolfram.cgt

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The End
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