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500 - 1400 AD: The Middle Ages |
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Picture 10. Surgeons often needed to treat injuries gained in battle. Unfortunately the arrow in the eye killed King Harold.
Bayeux tapestry. |
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| Surgery |
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Perhaps the most famous wound of all was the arrow in the eye that killed King Harold at the battle of Hastings. Surgery was a crude practice during the middle ages but operations such as amputations, setting broken bones, replacing dislocations and binding wounds were relatively common. Opium was sometimes used as an anaesthetic while wounds were cleaned with wine to try and prevent infections.
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Plague
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The biggest challenge to medieval medicine came in the form of the Black death, or Bubonic Plague. In 1347, an outbreak of bubonic plague broke out in Istanbul (modern day Turkey). Traders soon carried the disease throughout Europe and records show that in some areas it killed up to 90% of the population. That is the equivalent of 54 million people in the UK today.
We now know that bubonic plague is a form of highly contagious and fatal pneumonia. During the middle ages, the only treatments were superstitious remedies, prayer, herbal medicines and recipes for clearing the air of miasma or poison. The plague was considered to be a punishment from God and so public health was not considered to be important. There was never any attempt to control the many rats that infested villages and towns and carried the disease. This was one of the main reasons that that the plague was so devastating.
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| A modern day plague? |
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In 2003 a new viral disease emerged called Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome or SARS. How would an outbreak like SARS be treated in modern times compared to medieval times?
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