INTRODUCTION
Under the term Old-Time Medicine most
people probably think at once of Greek medicine, since
that developed in what we have called ancient history,
and is farthest away from us in date. As a matter
of fact, however, much more is known about Greek medical
writers than those of any other period except the
last century or two. Our histories of medicine
discuss Greek medicine at considerable length and practically
all of the great makers of medicine in subsequent generations
have been influenced by the Greeks. Greek physicians
whose works have come down to us seem nearer to us
than the medical writers of any but the last few centuries.
As a consequence we know and appreciate very well as
a rule how much Greek medicine accomplished, but in
our admiration for the diligent observation and breadth
of view of the Greeks, we are sometimes prone to think
that most of the intervening generations down to comparatively
recent times made very little progress and, indeed,
scarcely retained what the Greeks had done. The
Romans certainly justify this assumption of non-accomplishment
in medicine, but then in everything intellectual Rome
was never much better than a weak copy of Greek thought.
In science the Romans did nothing at all worth while
talking about. All their medicine they borrowed
from the Greeks, adding nothing of their own.
What food for thought there is in the fact, that in
spite of all Rome’s material greatness and wide
empire, her world dominance and vaunted prosperity,
we have not a single great original scientific thought
from a Roman.
Though so much nearer in time medieval
medicine seems much farther away from us than is Greek
medicine. Most of us are quite sure that the
impression of distance is due to its almost total lack
of significance. It is with the idea of showing
that the medieval generations, as far as was possible
in their conditions, not only preserved the old Greek
medicine for us in spite of the most untoward circumstances,
but also tried to do whatever they could for its development,
and actually did much more than is usually thought,
that this story of “Old-Time Makers of Medicine”
is written. It represents a period that
of the Middle Ages that is, or was until
recently, probably more misunderstood than any other
in human history. The purpose of the book is to
show at least the important headlands that lie along
the stream of medical thought during the somewhat
more than a thousand years from the fall of the Roman
Empire under Augustulus (476) until the discovery of
America. After that comes modern medicine, for
with the sixteenth century the names and achievements
of the workers in medicine are familiar Paracelsus,
Vesalius, Columbus, Servetus, Caesalpinus, Eustachius,
Varolius, Sylvius are men whose names are attached
to great discoveries with which even those who are
without any pretence to knowledge of medical history
are not unacquainted. In spite of nearly four
centuries of distance in time these men seem very close
to us. Their lives will be reserved for a subsequent
volume, “Our Forefathers in Medicine.”
It is usually the custom to contemn
the Middle Ages for their lack of interest in culture,
in education, in literature, in a word, in intellectual
accomplishment of any and every kind, but especially
in science. There is no doubt about the occurrence
of marked decadence in the intellectual life of the
first half of this period. This has sometimes
been attributed to what has been called the inhibitory
effect of Christianity on worldly interests.
Religion is said to have occupied people so much with
thoughts of the other world that the beauties and
wonders, as well as much of the significance, of the
world around them were missed. Those who talk
thus, however, forget entirely the circumstances which
brought about the serious decadence of interest in
culture and science at this time. The Roman Empire
had been the guardian of letters and education and
science. While the Romans were not original in
themselves, at least they had shown intense interest
in what was accomplished by the Greeks and their imitation
had often risen to heights that made them worthy of
consideration for themselves. They were liberal
patrons of Greek art and of Greek literature, and did
not neglect Greek science and Greek medicine.
Galen’s influence was due much more to the prominence
secured by him as the result of his stay in Rome than
would have been possible had he stayed in Asia.
There are many other examples of Roman patronage of
literature and science that might be mentioned.
As we shall see, Rome drained Greece and Asia Minor
of their best, and appropriated to herself the genius
products of the Spanish Peninsula. Rome had a
way of absorbing what was best in the provinces for
herself.
Just as soon as Rome was cut off from
intimate relations with the provinces by the inwandering
of barbarians, intellectual decadence began.
The imperial city itself had never been the source
of great intellectual achievement, and the men whom
we think of as important contributors to Rome’s
literature and philosophy were usually not born within
the confines of the city. It is surprising to
take a list of the names of the Latin writers whom
we are accustomed to set down simply as Romans and
note their birthplaces. Rome herself gave birth
to but a very small percentage of them. Virgil
was born at Mantua, Cicero at Arpinum, Horace out
on the Sabine farm, the Plinys out of the city, Terence
in Africa, Persius up in Central Italy somewhere,
Livy at Padua, Martial, Quintilian, the Sénecas,
and Lucan in Spain. When the government of the
city ceased to be such as assured opportunity for those
from outside who wanted to make their way, decadence
came to Roman literature. Large cities have never
in history been the fruitful mothers of men who did
great things. Genius, and even talent, has always
been born out of the cities in which it did its work.
It is easy to understand, then, the decadence of the
intellectual life that took place as the Empire degenerated.
For the sake of all that it meant
in the Roman Empire to look towards Rome at this time,
however, it seemed better to the early Christians to
establish the centre of their jurisdiction there.
Necessarily, then, in all that related to the purely
intellectual life, they came under the influences
that were at work at Rome at this time. During
the first centuries they suffered besides from the
persécutions directed against them by the Emperors
at various times, and these effectually prevented
any external manifestations of the intellectual life
on the part of Christians. It took much to overcome
this serious handicap, but noteworthy progress was
made in spite of obstacles, and by the time of Constantine
many important officials of the Empire, the educated
thinking classes of Rome, had become Christians.
After the conversion of the Emperor opportunities
began to be afforded, but political disturbances consequent
upon barbarian influences still further weakened the
old civilization until much of the intellectual life
of it almost disappeared.
Gradually the barbarians, finding
the Roman Empire decadent, crept in on it, and though
much more of the invasion was peaceful than we have
been accustomed to think, the Romans simply disappearing
because family life had been destroyed, children had
become infrequent, and divorce had become extremely
common, it was not long before they replaced the Romans
almost entirely. These new peoples had no heritage
of culture, no interest in the intellectual life,
no traditions of literature or science, and they had
to be gradually lifted up out of their barbarism.
This was the task that Christianity had to perform.
That it succeeded in accomplishing it is one of the
marvels of history.
The Church’s first grave duty
was the preservation of the old records of literature
and of science. Fortunately the monasteries accomplished
this task, which would have been extremely perilous
for the precious treasures involved but for the favorable
conditions thus afforded. Libraries up to this
time were situated mainly in cities, and were subject
to all the vicissitudes of fire and war and other modes
of destruction that came to cities in this disturbed
period. Monasteries, however, were usually situated
in the country, were built very substantially and
very simply, and the life in them formed the best
possible safeguard against fire, which worked so much
havoc in cities. As we shall see, however, not
only were the old records preserved, but excerpts
from them were collated and discussed and applied by
means of direct observation. This led the generations
to realize more and more the value of the old Greek
medicine and made them take further precautions for
its preservation.
The decadence of the early Middle
Ages was due to the natural shifting of masses of
population of this time, while the salvation of scientific
and literary traditions was due to the one stable element
in all these centuries the Church.
Far from Christianity inhibiting culture, it was the
most important factor for its preservation, and it
provided the best stimulus and incentive for its renewed
development just as soon as the barbarous peoples
were brought to a state of mind to appreciate it.
Bearing this in mind, it is easier
to understand the course of medical traditions through
the Middle Ages, and especially in the earlier period,
with regard to which our documents are comparatively
scanty, and during which the disturbed conditions
made medical developments impossible, and anything
more than the preservation of the old authors out
of the question. The torch of medical illumination
lighted at the great Greek fires passes from people
to people, never quenched, though often burning low
because of unfavorable conditions, but sometimes with
new fuel added to its flame by the contributions of
genius. The early Christians took it up and kept
it lighted, and, with the Jewish physicians, carried
it through the troublous times of the end of the old
order, and then passed it on for a while to the Arabs.
Then, when favorable conditions had developed again,
Christian schools and scholars gave it the opportunity
to burn brightly for several centuries at the end
of the Middle Ages. This medieval age is probably
the most difficult period of medical history to understand
properly, but it is worth while taking the trouble
to follow out the thread of medical tradition from
the Greeks to the Renaissance medical writers, who
practically begin modern medicine for us.
It is easy to understand that Christianity’s
influence on medicine, instead of hampering, was most
favorable. The Founder of Christianity Himself
had gone about healing the sick, and care for the ailing
became a prominent feature of Christian work.
One of the Evangelists, St. Luke, was a physician.
It was the custom a generation ago, and even later,
when the Higher Criticism became popular, to impugn
the tradition as to St. Luke having been a physician,
but this has all been undone, and Harnack’s
recent book, “Luke the Physician,” makes
it very clear that not only the Third Gospel, but
also the Acts, could only have been written by a man
thoroughly familiar with the Greek medical terms of
his time, and who had surely had the advantage of
a training in the medical sciences at Alexandria.
This makes such an important link in medical traditions
that a special chapter has been devoted to it in the
Appendix.
Very early in Christianity care for
the ailing poor was taken up, and hospitals in our
modern sense of the term became common in Christian
communities. There had been military hospitals
before this, and places where those who could afford
to pay for service were kept during illness.
Our modern city hospital, however, is a Christian institution.
Besides, deformed and ailing children were cared for
and homes for foundlings were established. Before
Christianity the power even of life and death of the
parents over their children was recognized, and deformed
or ailing children, or those that for some reason were
not wanted, were exposed until they died. Christianity
put an end to this, and in two classes of institutions,
the hospitals and the asylums, abundant opportunity
for observation of illness was afforded. Just
as soon as Christianity came to be free to establish
its institutions publicly, hospitals became very common.
The Emperor Julian, usually known as the Apostate,
who hoped to re-establish the old Roman Olympian religion,
wrote to Oribasius, one of the great physicians of
this time, who was also an important official of his
household, that these Christians had established everywhere
hospitals in which not only their own people, but
also those who were not Christians, were received and
cared for, and that it would be idle to hope to counteract
the influence of Christianity until corresponding
institutions could be erected by the government.
From the very beginning, or, at least,
just as soon as reasonable freedom from persecution
gave opportunity for study, Christian interest in
the medical sciences began to manifest itself.
Nemesius, for instance, a Bishop of Edessa in Syria,
wrote toward the end of the fourth century a little
work in Greek on the nature of man, which is a striking
illustration of this. Nemesius was what in modern
times would be called a philosopher, that is, a speculative
thinker and writer, with regard to man’s nature,
rather than a physical scientist. He was convinced,
however, that true philosophy ought to be based on
a complete knowledge of man, body and soul, and that
the anatomy of his body ought to be a fundamental
principle. It is in this little volume that some
enthusiastic students have found a description that
is to them at least much more than a hint of knowledge
of the circulation of the blood. Hyrtl doubts
that the passage in question should be made to signify
as much as has been suggested, but the occurrence
of any even distant reference to such a subject at
this time shows that, far from there being neglect
of physical scientific questions, men were thinking
seriously about them.
Just as soon as Christianity brought
in a more peaceful state of affairs and had so influenced
the mass of the people that its place in the intellectual
life could be felt, there comes a period of cultural
development represented in philosophy by the Fathers
of the Church, and during which we have a series of
important contributors to medical literature.
The first of these was Aetius, whose career and works
are treated more fully in the chapter on “Great
Physicians in Early Christian Times.” He
was followed by Alexander of Tralles, probably a Christian,
for his brother was the architect of Santa Sophia,
and by Paul of AEgina, with regard to whom we know
only what is contained in his medical writings, but
whose contemporaries were nearly all Christians.
Their books are valuable to us, partly because they
contain quotations from great Greek writers on medicine,
not always otherwise available, but also because they
were men who evidently knew the subject of medicine
broadly and thoroughly, made observations for themselves,
and controlled what they learned from the Greek forefathers
in medicine by their own experience. Just at
the beginning of the Middle Ages, then, under the
fostering care of Christianity there is a period of
considerable importance in the history of medical literature.
It is one of the best proofs that we have not only
that Christianity did not hamper medical development,
but that, directly and indirectly, by the place that
it gave to the care of the ailing in life as well as
the encouragement afforded to the intellectual life,
it favored medical study and writing.
A very interesting chapter in the
story of the early Christian physician is to be found
in what we know of the existence of women physicians
in the fourth and fifth centuries. Theodosia,
the mother of St. Procopius the martyr, was, according
to Carptzovius, looked upon as an excellent physician
in Rome in the early part of the fourth century.
She suffered martyrdom under Diocletian. There
was also a Nicerata who practised at Constantinople
under the Emperor Arcadius. It is said that to
her St. John Chrysostom owed the cure of a serious
illness. From the very beginning Christian women
acted as nurses, and deaconesses were put in charge
of hospitals. Fabiola, at Rome, is the foundress
of the first important hospital in that city.
The story of these early Christian women physicians
has been touched upon in the chapter on “Medieval
Women Physicians,” as an introduction to this
interesting feature of Salernitan medical education.
During the early Christian centuries
much was owed to the genius and the devotion to medicine
of distinguished Jewish physicians. Their sacred
and rabbinical writers always concerned themselves
closely with medicine, and both the Old Testament
and the Talmud must be considered as containing chapters
important for the medical history of the periods in
which they were written. At all times the Jews
have been distinguished for their knowledge of medicine,
and all during the Middle Ages they are to be found
prominent as physicians. They were among the
teachers of the Arabs in the East and of the Moors
in Spain. They were probably among the first
professors at Salerno as well as at Montpellier.
Many prominent rulers and ecclesiastics selected Jewish
physicians. Some of these made distinct contributions
to medicine, and a number of them deserve a place
in any account of medicine in the making during the
Middle Ages. One of them, Maimonides, to whom
a special chapter is devoted, deserves a place among
the great makers of medicine of all time, because
of the influence that he exerted on his own and succeeding
generations. Any story of the preservation and
development of medical teaching and medical practice
during the Middle Ages would be decidedly incomplete
without due consideration of the work of Jewish physicians.
Western medical literature followed
Roman literature in other departments, and had only
the Greek traditions at second hand. During the
disturbance occasioned by the invasion of the barbarians
there was little opportunity for such leisure as would
enable men to devote themselves with tranquillity
to medical study and writing. Medical traditions
were mainly preserved in the monasteries. Cassiodorus,
who, after having been Imperial Prime Minister, became
a monk, recommended particularly the study of medicine
to the monastic brethren. With the foundation
of the Benedictines, medicine became one of the favorite
studies of the monks, partly for the sake of the health
of the brethren themselves, and partly in order that
they might be helpful to the villages that so often
gathered round their monasteries. There is a
well-grounded tradition that at Monte Cassino medical
teaching was one of the features of the education
provided there by the monks. It is generally
conceded that the Benedictines had much to do with
the foundation of Salerno. In the convents for
women as well as the monasteries for men serious attention
was given to medicine. Women studied medicine
and were professors in the medical department of Salerno.
Other Italian universities followed the example thus
set, and so there is abundant material for the chapter
on “Medieval Women Physicians.”
The next phase of medical history
in the medieval period brings us to the Arabs.
Utterly uninterested in culture, education, or science
before the time of Mohammed, with the growth of their
political power and the foundation of their capitals,
the Arab Caliphs took up the patronage of education.
They were the rulers of the cities of Asia Minor in
which Greek culture had taken so firm a hold, and
captive Greece has always led its captors captive.
With the leisure that came for study, Arabians took
up the cultivation of the Greek philosophers, especially
Aristotle, and soon turned their attention also to
the Greek physicians Hippocrates and Galen. For
some four hundred years then they were in the best
position to carry on medical traditions. Their
teachers were the Christian and Jewish physicians
of the cities of Asia Minor, but soon they themselves
became distinguished for their attainments, and for
their medical writings. Interestingly enough,
more of their distinguished men flourished in Spain
than in Asia Minor. We have suggested an explanation
for this in the fact that Spain had been one of the
most cultured provinces of the Roman Empire, providing
practically all the writers of the Silver Age of Latin
literature, and evidently possessing a widely cultured
people. It was into this province, not yet utterly
decadent from the presence of the northern Goths, that
the Moors came and readily built up a magnificent
structure of culture and education on what had been
the highest development of Roman civilization.
The influence of the Arabs on Western
civilization, and especially on the development of
science in Europe, has been much exaggerated by certain
writers. Closely in touch with Greek thought and
Greek literature during the eighth, ninth, and tenth
centuries, it is easy to understand that the Arabian
writers were far ahead of the Christian scholars of
Europe of the same period, who were struggling up out
of the practical chaos that had been created by the
coming of the barbarians, and who, besides, had the
chance for whatever Greek learning came to them only
through the secondary channels of the Latin writers.
Rome had been too occupied with politics and aggrandizement
ever to become cultured. In spite of this heritage
from the Greeks, decadence took place among the Arabs,
and, as the centuries go on, what they do becomes
more and more trivial, and their writing has less significance.
Just the opposite happened in Europe. There,
there was noteworthy progressive development until
the magnificent climax of thirteenth century accomplishment
was reached. It is often said that Europe owed
much to the Arabs for this, but careful analysis of
the factors in that progress shows that very little
came from the Arabs that was good, while not a little
that was unfortunate in its influence was borrowed
from them with the translations of the Greek authors
from that language, which constituted the main, indeed
often the only, reason why Arabian writers were consulted.
With the foundation of the medical
school of Salerno in the tenth century, the modern
history of medical education may be said to begin,
for it had many of the features that distinguish our
modern university medical schools. Its professors
often came from a distance and had travelled extensively
for purposes of study; they attracted patients of
high rank from nearly every part of Europe, and these
were generous in their patronage of the school.
Students came from all over, from Africa and Asia,
as well as Europe, and when abuses of medical practice
began to creep in, a series of laws were made creating
a standard of medical education and regulating the
practice of medicine, that are interesting anticipations
of modern movements of the same kind. Finally
a law was passed requiring three years of preliminary
work in logic and philosophy before medicine might
be taken up, and then four years at medicine, with
a subsequent year of practice with a physician before
a license to practise for one’s self was issued.
In addition to this there was a still more surprising
feature in the handing over of the department of women’s
diseases to women professors, and the consequent opening
up of licensure to practise medicine to a great many
women in the southern part of Italy. The surprise
that all this should have taken place in the south
of Italy is lessened by recalling the fact that the
lower end of the Italian peninsula had been early
colonized by Greeks, that its name in later times
was Magna Graecia, and that the stimulus
of Greek tradition has always been especially favorable
to the development of scientific medicine.
Salerno’s influence on Bologna
is not difficult to trace, and the precious tradition
of surgery particularly, which was carried to the
northern university, served to initiate a period of
surgery lasting nearly two centuries, during which
we have some of the greatest contributions to this
branch of medical science that were ever made.
The development of the medical school at Bologna anticipated
by but a short time that of a series of schools in
the north Italian universities. Padua, Piacenza,
Pisa, and Vicenza had medical schools in the later
Middle Ages, the works of some of whose professors
have attracted attention. It was from these north
Italian medical schools that the tradition of close
observation in medicine and of thoroughly scientific
surgery found its way to Paris. Lanfranc was the
carrier of surgery, and many French students who went
to Italy came back with Italian methods. In the
fourteenth century Guy de Chauliac made the grand tour
in Italy, and then came back to write a text-book
of surgery that is one of the monuments in this department
of medical science. Before his time, Montpellier
had attracted attention, but now it came to be looked
upon as a recognized centre of great medical teaching.
The absence of the Popes from Italy and the influence
of their presence at Avignon made itself felt.
While culture and education declined in Italy in the
midst of political disturbances, they advanced materially
at the south of France.
For our generation undoubtedly the
most interesting chapter in the history of medieval
medicine is that which tells of the marvellous development
of surgery that took place in the thirteenth and fourteenth
centuries. Considerable space has been devoted
to this, because it represents not only an important
phase of the history of medicine, and recalls the
names and careers of great makers of medicine, but
also because it illustrates exquisitely the possibility
of important discoveries in medicine being made, applied
successfully for years, and then being lost or completely
forgotten, though contained in important medical books
that were always available for study. The more
we know of this great period in the history of surgery,
the more is the surprise at how much was accomplished,
and how many details of our modern surgery were anticipated.
Most of us have had some inkling of the fact that
anæsthesia is not new, and that at various times in
the world’s history men have invented methods
of producing states of sensibility in which more or
less painless operations were possible. Very few
of us have realized, however, the perfection to which
anæsthesia was developed, and the possibility this
provided for the great surgeons of the later medieval
centuries to do operations in all the great cavities
of the body, the skull, the thorax, and the abdomen,
quite as they are done in our own time and apparently
with no little degree of success.
Of course, any such extensive surgical
intervention even for serious affections would have
been worse than useless under the septic conditions
that would surely have prevailed if certain principles
of antisepsis were not applied. Until comparatively
recent years we have been quite confident in our assurance
that antisepsis and asepsis were entirely modern developments
of surgery. More knowledge, however, of the history
of surgery has given a serious set-back to this self-complacency,
and now we know that the later medieval surgeons understood
practical antisepsis very well, and applied it successfully.
They used strong wine as a dressing for their wounds,
insisted on keeping them clean, and not allowing any
extraneous material of any kind, ointments or the
like, to be used on them. As a consequence they
were able to secure excellent results in the healing
of wounds, and they were inclined to boast of the
fact that their incisions healed by first intention
and that, indeed, the scar left after them was scarcely
noticeable. We know that wine would make a good
antiseptic dressing, but until we actually read the
reports of the results obtained by these old surgeons,
we had no idea that it could be used to such excellent
purpose. Antisepsis, like anæsthesia, was marvellously
anticipated by the surgical forefathers of the medieval
period.
It has always seemed to me that the
story of Medieval Dentistry presented an even better
illustration of a great anticipatory development of
surgery. This department represents only a small
surgical specialty, but one which even at that period
was given over to specialists, who were called dentatores.
Guy de Chauliac’s review of the dentistry of
his time and the state of the specialty, as pictured
by John of Arcoli, is likely to be particularly interesting,
because if there is any department of medical practice
that we are sure is comparatively recent in origin,
it is dentistry. Here, however, we find that
practically all our dental manipulations, the filling
of teeth, artificial dentures, even orthodontia, were
anticipated by the dentists of the Middle Ages.
We have only the compressed account of it which is
to be found in text-books of general surgery, and while
in this they give mainly a heritage from the past,
yet even this suffices to give us a picture very surprising
in its detailed anticipation of much that we have
been inclined to think of as quite modern in invention
and discovery.
Medicine developed much more slowly
than surgery, or, rather, lagged behind it, as it
seems nearly always prone to do. Surgical problems
are simple, and their solution belongs to a great
extent to a handicraft. That is, after all, what
chirurgy, the old form of our word surgery, means.
Medical problems are more complex and involve both
art and science, so that solutions of them are often
merely temporary and lack finality. During the
Middle Ages, however, and especially towards the end
of them, the most important branches of medicine, diagnosis
and therapeutics, took definite shape on the foundations
that lie at the basis of our modern medical science.
We hear of percussion for abdominal conditions, and
of the most careful study of the pulse and the respiration.
There are charts for the varying color of the urine,
and of the tints of the skin. With Nicholas of
Cusa there came the definite suggestion of the need
of exact methods of diagnosis. A mathematician
himself, he wished to introduce mathematical methods
into medical diagnosis, and suggested that the pulse
should be counted in connection with the water clock,
the water that passed being weighed, in order to get
very definite comparative values for the pulse rate
under varying conditions, and also that the specific
gravity of fluids from the body should be ascertained
in order to get another definite datum in the knowledge
of disease. It was long before these suggestions
were to bear much fruit, but it is interesting to
find them so clearly expressed.
At the very end of the Middle Ages
came the father of modern pharmaceutical chemistry,
Basil Valentine. Already the spirit that was
to mean so much for scientific investigation in the
Renaissance period was abroad. Valentine, however,
owes little to anything except his own investigations,
and they were surprisingly successful, considering
the circumstances of time and place. His practical
suggestions so far as drugs were concerned did not
prove to have enduring value, but then this has been
a fate shared by many of the masters of medicine.
There were many phases of medical practice, however,
that he insisted on in his works. He believed
that the best agent for the cure of the disease was
nature, and that the physician’s main business
must be to find out how nature worked, and then foster
her efforts or endeavor to imitate them. He insisted,
also that personal observation, both of patients and
drugs, was more important than book knowledge.
Indeed, he has some rather strong expressions with
regard to the utter valuelessness of book information
in subjects where actual experience and observation
are necessary. It gives a conceit of knowledge
quite unjustified by what is really known.
What is interesting about all these
men is that they faced the same problems in medicine
that we have to, in much the same temper of mind that
we do ourselves, and that, indeed, they succeeded in
solving them almost as well as we have done, in spite
of all that might be looked for from the accumulation
of knowledge ever since.
It was very fortunate for the after
time that in the period now known as the Renaissance,
after the invention of printing, there were a number
of serious, unselfish scholars who devoted themselves
to the publication in fine printed editions of the
works of these old-time makers of medicine. If
the neglect of them that characterized the eighteenth
and early nineteenth centuries had been the rule at
the end of the fifteenth and during the sixteenth
century, we would almost surely have been without
the possibility of ever knowing that so many serious
physicians lived and studied and wrote large important
tomes during the Middle Ages. For our forefathers
of a few generations ago had very little knowledge,
and almost less interest, as to the Middle Ages, which
they dismissed simply as the Dark Ages, quite sure
that nothing worth while could possibly have come
out of the Nazareth of that time. What they knew
about the people who had lived during the thousand
years before 1500 only seemed to them to prove the
ignorance and the depths of superstition in which
they were sunk. That medieval scholars should
have written books not only well worth preservation,
but containing anticipations of modern knowledge,
and, though of course they could not have known that,
even significant advances over their own scientific
conditions, would have seemed to them quite absurd.
Fortunately for us, then, the editions
of the early printed books, so many of them monuments
of learning and masterpieces of editorial work with
regard to medieval masters of medicine, were lying
in libraries waiting to be unearthed and restudied
during the nineteenth century. German and French
scholars, especially during the last generation, have
recovered the knowledge of this thousand years of human
activity, and we know now and can sympathetically
study how the men of these times faced their problems,
which were very much those of our own time, in almost
precisely the same spirit as we do ours at the present
time, and that their solutions of them are always
interesting, often thorough and practical, and more
frequently than we would like to think possible, resemble
our own in many ways. For the possibility of this
we are largely indebted originally to the scholars
of the Renaissance. Without their work that of
our investigators would have been quite unavailing.
It is to be hoped, however, that our recovery of this
period will not be followed by any further eclipse,
though that seems to be almost the rule of human history,
but that we shall continue to broaden our sympathetic
knowledge of this wonderful medieval period, the study
of which has had so many surprises in store for us.