The transforming influence of the Greeks on Roman medical practice
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Date
Authors
Cilliers, Louise
Retief, Francois
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
University of the Free State
Abstract
Showing abstract in English
English: When Rome conquered Greece in the second century BC, she had no equivalent to Greek
rational medicine as established by Hippocrates and the Alexandrians. Roman medicine
was of a quasi-religious nature, with a strong element of folk traditions and herbal
medicine; the paterfamilias would treat any sickness in the family (including slaves and
even animals) with his array of folk remedies. Greek rational medicine was initially received
with great skepticism by the Roman elite, in particular, but it gradually transformed
the scene, replacing superstition and magic with a reliance on rational science as it
was understood at the time. However, the belief in herbal remedies and the Asclepian cult
of temple medicine remained strong. Rome also made its own unique contributions in
the fields of hygiene (effective water supplies, sewage and drainage) and military medicine
(including the introduction of the first hospitals). Roman doctors gradually replaced
their Greek colleagues, and by the fifth century Latin had established itself as a significant
medical language. In practice Roman folk medicine was not necessarily much inferior to
Greek rational medicine, because the latter was based on ill-understood and largely erroneous
concepts of medical science.
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Citation
Cilliers, L., & Retief, F. (2007). The transforming influence of the Greeks on Roman medical practice. Acta Academica, 39(3), 152-164.