
- 330 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
All too often ancient herbal and other remedies have been dismissed as 'simply' folklore, of no relevance to medical science. John Riddle's approach, however, has been to explore the history of drugs with the hypothesis that ancient and medieval medicines were effective - a methodology that he expounds in the final essay (hitherto unpublished). Indeed, he shows, both from detailed case-studies and from the comparison of the listings given by classical and medieval authorities with those in modern pharmacopoeias, that our ancestors had discovered and made effective use of many of the drugs used in medicine today, from antiseptics and analgesics to oral contraceptives, even chemotherapy for cancer. There is the suggestion, therefore, that more careful examination and identification of the drugs used in the past may reveal chemicals that can be exploited anew. Central to these studies is the investigation of how a drug was used and how knowledge about it was transmitted - and perhaps also distorted in the process - from the Classical world through the Middle Ages. Les anciens remĂšdes, phytothĂ©rapie et autres, ont trop souvent Ă©tĂ© mis aux rangs du folklore et considĂ©rĂ©s comme n'ayant aucun rapport avec la science mĂ©dicale. L'approche de John Riddle, cependant, a Ă©tĂ© d'explorer l'histoire des drogues, en prenant pour hypothĂšse l'efficacitĂ© de la mĂ©decine ancienne et mĂ©diĂ©vale - une mĂ©thodologie qu'il expose dans son dernier essai (jusqu'Ă prĂ©sent jamais publiĂ©). En effet, il dĂ©montre Ă partir de cas d'Ă©tudes dĂ©taillĂ©s et de la comparaison Ă©tablie entre les listages fournis par les autoritĂ©s antiques et mĂ©diĂ©vales et ceux des pharmacopĂ©es modernes, que nos ancĂȘtres avaient dĂ©couvert et mis Ă bon escient l'utilisation de nombreux remĂšdes dont se sert la mĂ©decine Ă l'heure actuelle: des antiseptiques et analgĂ©siques, aux contraceptifs oraux et mĂȘme jusqu'Ă la chimiothĂ©rapie pour le cancer. Sugge
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Series Page
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Preface
- Publisher's Note
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter I: Pomum ambrae: Amber and Ambergris in Plague Remedies
- Chapter II: The Introduction and Use of Eastern Drugs in the Early Middle Ages
- Chapter III: Lithotherapy in the Middle Ages ... Lapidaries Considered as Medical Texts
- Chapter IV: The Latin Alphabetical Dioscorides Manuscript Group
- Chapter V: Amber in Ancient Pharmacy. The Transmission of Information about a Single Drug. A Case Study
- Chapter VI: Theory and Practice in Medieval Medicine
- Chapter VII: Book Reviews, Lectures and Marginal Notes. Three Previously Unknown Sixteenth-Century Contributors to Pharmacy, Medicine and Botany â Ioannes Manardus, Franciscus Frigimelica and Melchior Guilandinus
- Chapter VIII: Albert on Stones and Minerals
- Chapter IX: Pseudo-Dioscorides' Ex herbis femininis and Early Medieval Medical Botany
- Chapter X: Gargilius Martialis as a Medical Writer
- Chapter XI: The Pseudo-Hippocratic Dynamidia
- Chapter XII: Ancient and Medieval Chemotherapy for Cancer
- Chapter XIII: Byzantine Commentaries on Dioscorides
- Chapter XIV: Folk Tradition and Folk Medicine Recognition of Drugs in Classical Antiquity
- Chapter XV: Methodology of Historical Drug Research
- Index