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This collection highlights and nuances some of the recent critical
advances in scholarship on death and disease, across and beyond the
pre-modern Mediterranean world, Christian, Islamic and Jewish
healing traditions. Across and beyond the pre-modern Mediterranean
world, Christian, Islamic and Jewish healing traditions shared
inherited medical paradigms containing similar healthy living
precepts and attitudes toward body, illness and mortality. Yet, as
the chapters collected here demonstrate, customs of diagnosing,
explaining and coping with disease and death often diverged with
respect to knowledge and practice. Offering a variety of
disciplinary approaches to a broad selection of material emerging
from England to the Persian Gulf, the volume reaches across
conventional disciplinary and historiographical boundaries. Plague
diagnoses in pre-Black Death Arabic medical texts, rare,
illustrated phlebotomy instructions for plague patients, and a
Jewish plague tract utilising the Torah as medicine reflect
critical re-examinations of primary sources long thought to have
nothing new to offer. Novel re-interpretations of Giovanni
Villani's "New Chronicle", canonisation inquests and saints' lives
offer fresh considerations of medieval constructions of epidemics,
disabilities, and the interplay between secular and spiritual
healing. Cross-disciplinary perspectives recast late medieval
post-mortem diagnoses in Milan as a juridical - rather than
strictly medical - practice, highlight the aural performativity of
the Franciscan deathbed liturgy, explore the long evolution of
lapidary treatments for paediatric and obstetric diseases and
thrust us into the Ottoman polychromatic sensory world of disease
and death. Finally, considerations of the contributions of modern
science alongside historical primary sources generates important
new ways to understand death and disease in the past. Overall, the
contributions juxtapose and interlace similarities and differences
in their local and historical contexts, while highlighting and
nuancing some of the recent critical advances in scholarship on
death and disease - two historiographical subfields long approached
separately.
This book guides readers through 10 pervasive fictions about
medieval history, provides them with the sources and analytical
tools to critique those fictions, and identifies what really
happened in the Middle Ages. This book is the first to present
fictions about the medieval world to serious students of history.
Instead of merely listing myths and stating they are wrong, this
volume promotes critical historical analysis of those myths and how
they came to be. Each of the ten chapters outlines a pervasive
modern myth about medieval European history, describing "What
People Think Happened" and "What Really Happened," and illustrating
both trends with primary source documents. The book demonstrates
that historical fictions also have a history, and that while we
need to replace those fictions with facts about the medieval past,
we can also benefit from understanding how a fiction about the
Middle Ages developed and what that says about our modern
perspectives on the past. Through this innovative presentation,
readers are introduced to a wide range of sources, from Roman
imperial perspectives on the "Fall of Rome" to songs of chivalry
and chronicles of the Crusades, scientific treatises on the shape
of the Earth and the creation of the universe and early modern
stories and textbooks that developed or perpetuated historical
myths. Provides an overview of a particular historical
misconception and its corresponding truth Presents primary source
documents to help readers to see how the misconceptions developed
and spread, and provide evidence for what we now believe to be the
historical truth behind each fiction Suggests further reading and
additional sources of information Fosters critical thinking skills
and engages readers with the history of the Middle Ages
Medicine and Healing in the Pre-Modern West traces the history of
medicine and medical practice from Ancient Egypt through to the end
of the Middle Ages. Featuring nearly one hundred primary documents
and images, this book introduces students and scholars to the words
and ideas of prominent physicians and humble healers, men and
women, from across Europe and the Mediterranean Sea. Each of the
ten chronological and thematic chapters is given a significant
historical introduction, in which each primary source is described
in its original context. Many of the included source texts are
newly translated by the editor, some of them appearing in English
for the first time. Key Features The first history of medicine
reader to cover both Antiquity and the Middle Ages in a single
volume. Nearly one hundred primary sources, including several
images. Each topic and reading is accompanied by an introduction
from the editor, and explanatory annotations are included
throughout to clarify unfamiliar concepts. Significant coverage of
Christian, Jewish, and Muslim cultures in the Middle Ages. Many of
the primary sources are newly translated, some of them available in
English for the first time.
This clear and comprehensive text covers the Middle Ages from the
classical era to the late medieval period. Distinguished historian
John Riddle provides a cogent analysis of the rulers, wars, and
events-both natural and human-that defined the medieval era. Taking
a broad geographical perspective, Riddle includes northern and
eastern Europe, Byzantine civilization, and the Islamic states.
Each, he convincingly shows, offered values and
institutions-religious devotion, toleration and intolerance, laws,
ways of thinking, and changing roles of women-that presaged
modernity. In addition to traditional topics of pen, sword, and
word, the author explores other driving forces such as science,
religion, and technology in ways that previous textbooks have not.
He also examines such often-overlooked issues as medieval gender
roles and medicine and seminal events such as the crusades from the
vantage point of both Muslims and eastern and western Christians.
In addition to a thorough chronological narrative, the text offers
humanizing features to engage students. Each chapter opens with a
theme-setting vignette about the lives of ordinary and
extraordinary people. The book also introduces students to key
controversies and themes in historiography by featuring in each
chapter a prominent medieval historian and how his or her ideas
have shaped contemporary thinking about the Middle Ages. Richly
illustrated with color plates, this lively, engaging book will
immerse readers in the medieval world, an era that shaped the
foundation for the modern world.
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