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La medicina al tempo dei faraoni

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Bruno Halioua and Bernard Ziskind provide a comprehensive account of pharaonic medicine that is illuminated by what modern science has discovered about the lives (and deaths) of people from many walks of life - farmers, fishermen, miners, soldiers, scribes and priests, embalmers, construction workers, bakers, prostitutes. From mummies and medical papyri we are able to recognize the aches of osteoarthritis, imagine the occupational hazards faced by press-ganged stonemasons, and learn of the gynecological complaints of courtesans. In presenting these stories Halioua and Ziskind throw light on some of the most enduring questions about life and death in antiquity: about physicians whose skills predate Hippocrates by twenty-five centuries and were first made famous by Homer; about the remedies and techniques they employed, at once strange and strangely familiar; about the men, women and children they treated; and about the diseases and injuries they were called upon to heal.

Hardcover

First published April 15, 2005

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About the author

Bruno Halioua

24 books

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for R.
117 reviews3 followers
August 17, 2019
Lots of hopeful measures, and almost no hope for successful treatment of serious diseases. The book is a testament to the longings of imagination, longings for health and protection that demanded tradition be put aside enough to permit a continual search for real cures... and how good it is to live in a world that has learned how to use a microscope. The demons are invisible no longer! And they arrive as bacteria, gene glitch, virus, and online trolls.
Profile Image for James F.
1,695 reviews123 followers
February 4, 2015
A work on ancient Egyptian medicine, more recent than Nunn but not nearly as good. The authors are quite uncritical and take far too many writings and representations which are probably mythical or symbolic literally and at face value -- they even include an appendix explaining the ten plagues of Moses!
35 reviews
August 5, 2016
Contains basic factual inaccuracies, heavily relies on Greek accounts, and liberally presents assertions from modern secondary sources as facts. Also it conflates thousands of years of Egyptian medical advancement as though it was all true at the same time. Cannot recommend.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews

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