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Medicine
during the Medieval period changed in a number of ways,
often for the worse.
Medieval
Europe was a place that placed less importance on the
value of Public Health facilities. Through a lack of
care, or a lack of ability to maintain the aqueducts
et al built by the romans, medieval Europe became a
place where medical practice was in places regressing
rather than progressing.
It
was over 400 years after the fall of the Roman Empire
that Europe was again a place that was peaceful and
relatively stable. Larger nations were beginning to
emerge, such as Anglo-Saxon England, but Europe suffered
from only being united by the Christian faith.
Little
remained of the Roman era, only Latin, which was a universal
language for the priesthood of the day. As a result
there were a variety of different medical practices
available to people in Medieval Times: they may have
been treated by monks following the Hippocratic theory
of the Four Humours, by apothecaries who specialised
in herbal remedies or by doctors who made use of charms.
As
the church taught that God sent illness, and that repenting
would cure all evils, many people at the time believed
that pilgrimage would cure them. Other theories were
based upon astrology, the movement of the sun and stars.
Despite
this disparate range of theories, there were many examples
of good practice and advances were made. Most well trained
doctors used Hippocrates teachings and diagnosis was
developed, the use of Urine samples being a significant
step forward. Even so, some physical cures
were administered for purely superstitious reasons:
herbal remedies being prescribed as they would rid the
body of evil spirits, for example.
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