在拜占庭晚期亚历山大教授外科手术。

Studies in ancient medicine Pub Date : 2010-01-01
John Scarborough
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引用次数: 0

摘要

当一个人检查亚历山大对盖伦和希波克拉底作品的评论时,揭示了五世纪末,六世纪和七世纪初实践的医学艺术的基本指南。这些是晚期拜占庭亚历山大的“医学课程”的大纲和内容,以及拉文纳,感谢Dickson的耐心和熟练的劳动,达菲,2 Irmer, Palmieri, Pritchet, Westerink,和其他人,在Bräutigam, Meyerhoff和Temkin的开创性研究的基础上,医学历史学家现在可以仔细阅读精心编辑的希腊语和拉丁语文本以及拉文纳的Agnellus的一些评论的一般可靠的翻译,亚历山大的约翰,帕拉迪乌斯,和雅典的司提反。在亚历山大和拉文纳,经验丰富的医疗从业人员成为医学生的老师。亚历山大港长期以来一直以医学教学之家而闻名,大约550年或稍晚一些,教师们开始对希腊和罗马医学的经典文献进行评论,盖伦和希波克拉底是主要的权威。医学教授在他们的评论中所描述的,是在实际医学实践中度过的延长生命,有时是作为军事医生(如7世纪早期埃伊纳岛的保罗),有时是作为在亚历山大本身积累了长期经验的医生,有时是作为在讲希腊语的东罗马帝国的另一部分成功职业后移民到埃及的医疗专业人员。阿弥达的阿提乌斯的《四书卷》反映了他作为一名医学生和后来在君士坦丁堡的职业生涯的时间,预示了文本注释的编辑机制和技术,因为它们在550年后与医学评论员一起更加清晰地出现。“哲学家和医生”斯蒂芬努斯很可能来自雅典,但无论他是否来自雅典,雅典背景的归因表明,非亚历山大的医生要么是被招募的,要么是医学教学日益增长的名声吸引了来自帝国其他城市和省份的有成就的人员。
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Teaching surgery in late Byzantine Alexandria.

When one examines Alexandrian commentaries on works of Galen and Hippocrates, disclosed are essential guides to the Art of Medicine as practiced in the late fifth, sixth, and early seventh centuries. These are outlines and contents of a 'medical curriculum' in late Byzantine Alexandria, as well as Ravenna, and thanks to the patient and skilled labors of Dickson,' Duffy,2 Irmer, Palmieri, Pritchet, Westerink, and others, following and building on the pioneering studies of Bräutigam, Meyerhoff, and Temkin, medical historians can now peruse carefully edited Greek and Latin texts and generally reliable translations of some commentaries by Agnellus of Ravenna, John of Alexandria, Palladius, and Stephanus of Athens. Deeply experienced medical practitioners became teachers of would-be medical students in Alexandria and Ravenna. Alexandria had long functioned as a city reputed to be the home of medical instruction, and by ca. 550 or slightly later, teachers began to produce commentaries on the classic texts of Greek and Roman medicine, with Galen and Hippocrates as major authorities. Underpinning what the medical professors set down in their commentaries were extended lives spent in the actual practice of medicine, sometimes as military physicians (as may have been the case of Paul of Aegina in the early seventh century), sometimes as doctors who had gained lengthy experience in Alexandria itself, and sometimes as medical professionals who had emigrated to Egypt after successful careers in another part of the Greek-speaking eastern Roman Empire. Reflecting time as a medical student and later career in Constantinople, Aetius of Amida's Tetrabiblon foreshadows editorial mechanics and techniques of textual exegesis as they emerge more clearly with the medical commentators after 550. It may well be that Stephanus, 'the Philosopher and Physician', was originally from Athens, but whether he was or not, the attribution of an Athenian background suggests that non-Alexandrian physicians either were recruited or that the growing fame of medical instruction attracted accomplished personnel from other cities and provinces of the Empire.

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