从业人员和圣徒:13至15世纪册封过程中的医务人员。

J. Ziegler
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引用次数: 39

摘要

这篇文章表明,依靠专家医学判断来鉴定奇迹有中世纪的根源,可以追溯到13世纪。它提供了对从公元1200年到公元1500年印刷版册封过程中医务人员作为证人积极出现的案例的调查。它表明,从13世纪下半叶开始,许多封圣过程(绝大多数在南欧)至少包括一位医生,他作为药品供应商见证或提供专家证词。作为专家证人出现的医生们被期望排除这种神奇疗法有自然解释的可能性。对于那些希望证实其神圣性的人来说,获得医学证实某种治疗是奇迹般的似乎是非常可取的。医生证人经常被要求对他们个人了解的案件进行评估,因为他们拥有医学知识:然而,医学并不被认为是如此普遍,以至于任何医生都可以审查案件(就像今天在梵蒂冈医学委员会理论上的情况一样)。因此,自13世纪下半叶以来,南欧的内科医生和外科医生的治疗功能应该加上一项迄今为止被忽视的职责:只要有必要,社区和当地教会当局都希望医疗服务提供者为正式承认一位明显的圣人做出贡献。
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Practitioners and saints: medical men in canonization processes in the thirteenth to fifteenth centuries.
This article shows that recourse to expert medical judgement for authenticating miracles has medieval roots which lead to the thirteenth century. It provides a survey of those cases in the printed versions of canonization processes from c. 1200 to c. 1500 where medical men actively appeared as witnesses. It shows how, from the second half of the thirteenth century, many canonization processes (overwhelmingly in southern Europe) included at least one medical man who witnessed or gave expert testimony as a supplier of medicine. The physicians who appeared as expert witnesses were expected to rule out the possibility that there was a natural explanation for the wonderous cure. To acquire medical confirmation that a certain cure was miraculous seemed highly desirable to those wishing to substantiate claims of sanctity. Physician witnesses were often called upon to evaluate cases of which they had personal knowledge because of the medical know-how they possessed: however, medical science was not considered so universal that any physician could review the case (as is theoretically the case today in the medical council at the Vatican). Thus, to the therapeutic function of physicians and surgeons in southern Europe from the second half of the thirteenth century, a hitherto neglected duty should be added: whenever necessary, the community as well as the local ecclesiastical authorities expected the suppliers of medical services to contribute to the formal recognition of an apparent saint.
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