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Jewish medicine

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jewish medicine is medical practice of the Jewish people, including writing in the languages of both Hebrew and Arabic. 28% of Nobel Prize winners in medicine have been Jewish, although Jews comprise less than 0.2% of the world's population.[1]

History

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Ancient

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There are no extant texts of ancient medicine, as a first subject, of Hebrew origin.[2] There was no medicine distinctly Jewish and instead Jewish practitioners had adopted Greek and later Graeco-Roman knowledge as practice.[3]

A text known as the "Book of Remedies" is recorded of in the Babylonian Talmud twice, and the baraita,[4][5] evidently dating from at least the reign of Hezekiah. Likewise, a text known as Sefer Refuot, which means "book of remedies," is known. However, its composition has been dated roughly to the time of the Byzantine Empire, anywhere from 1,000 and 1,700 years after Hezekiah.

It is possible that folk healers who had knowledge of herbalism, occult practices, and folk magic

Middle Ages

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Further Information: Medieval medicine of Western Europe

A Jewish physician in traditional costume, circa 1568; from the Wellcome Library
A Jewish physician in traditional costume, circa 1568; from the Wellcome Library

The Book of Remedies, the earliest medical text written in Hebrew, to Asaph the Jew, dates to the seventh or eighth century.[6] The text comprises four parts; a story of the transmission of medicine from God to mankind, a medical survey, a Materia medica and a list of medical aphorisms.[6] While there is no knowledge of the writer himself or where the text was written, it circulated widely in Jewish communities during the Medieval period, and it can be assumed that it was of great influence to Jewish practitioners during this time.[6]

Though advances were made in gynaecology during the Middle Ages, the texts about gynaecology were written using the masculine form of Hebrew, indicating that gynecological texts were directed towards male doctors, not female midwives.[6] The only mention of midwives in these texts seems to be when direct contact with a woman’s genitalia is necessary; only then do texts specifically mention the women involved in the procedure.[6] In one instance, a text advised the doctor to "order the midwife to massage the orifice of her womb" with the herbs mentioned.[6]

Female practitioners contributed significantly both to the practice of medicine inside and outside of Jewish communities, and to the body of medical knowledge in Jewish community and beyond. From the surviving texts, it would seem that the greatest occurrence of female medical practitioners was during the 14th and 15th centuries. While women contributed to the advancement of Jewish medicine during this time, there were still a number of restrictions placed on them by society. No Jew, male or female, was permitted to attend a Christian university. This could be bypassed by taking an examination and acquiring a licentia curandi et practicandi, a license to practice medicine.[6] In at least one case, this examination was specifically directed towards Jews who would work with Christian patients.[7]

As a result, the education of these women largely fell to their male relatives. Hava (also known as Hana), a Manoesque woman mentioned for her "medical capacity" in a document dated to the early 1320s,[8] and Virdimura, a Sicilian who obtained her medical license in 1376,[8] were female Jewish practitioners whose direct relatives—Hava's husband and sons, Virdimura's husband—were practitioners as well.[8] Jewish medical practitioners were often educated in Greek, Latin, Arabic, and Hebrew, which gave them access to medical texts that were often inaccessible to their Christian counterparts.[9] Working as physicians, surgeons, and midwives, Jewish women were accepted as medical authorities in Paris, Florence, Naples, and Sicily, among other cities. Sara of St. Gilles, for instance, was a Jewish doctor who admitted a male Christian student, Salvetus de Burgonovo, in fourteenth century France.[8] Shatzmiller believes this is enough evidence to indicate that Sara taught female students as well.[8] Mayrona, a Jewish woman from Manoesque, France, is listed in over forty documents from 1342 as a phisica, or a licensed medical practitioner.[8] Jewish midwives made up a larger percentage of practitioners in some regions than their population would suggest.[10] In the French town of Marseille between 1390 and 1415, there are 24 known Jewish practitioners to 18 Christian ones; this is a shift from the period from 1337 to 1362 where Jewish doctors compromised approximately half of all practitioners in Marseille.[10]

Jewish practitioners participated in the exchange of knowledge between Christian and Muslim writers and practitioners. The degree to which Jewish women practiced midwifery in the Middle Ages depended largely on the areas in which they lived. In Iberia, for instance, Jews were well accustomed to a mix of Muslim, Christian, and their own Jewish culture. Along with this came a shared understanding of medicine; Jews living in this area even wrote medicinal texts in Judeo-Arabic (Arabic written in Hebrew letters) rather than standard Hebrew or the local vernacular[6] Here, it was commonplace for Jewish midwives to work alongside Christian and Muslim women.[10] However, Jewish women still faced adversity and discrimination on the basis of both their gender and their religion. This is more clearly demonstrated in Central Europe, where it is difficult to determine if Jewish midwives working for non-Jewish patients was common practice or, instead, the exception rather than the rule. In 1403, Floreta d’Ays, a Jewish midwife from Marseilles, was brought to court under charges of malpractice.[10] This is the first such known case brought against a midwife and, according to Monica Green, an unusual case of anti-Jewish sentiment in an otherwise relatively tolerant town.[10] While the result of the trial is unknown, it's clear that Floreta's non-Christian status played a part in the charges levied against her.

The 17th century

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The first organized study of Biblical medicine began during the 17th century.[11]

20th century

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The famous doctor of psychiatry Sigmund Freud was Jewish by birth.[12] Abraham Maslow was born to Russian Jewish parents during 1908.[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Jewish Nobel Prize Winners". jinfo.org. Retrieved 24 January 2015.
  2. ^ H Friedenwald - The Bibliography of Ancient Hebrew Medicine - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov, Bull Med Libr Assoc, v. 23(3); Jan 1935.
  3. ^ GB Ferngren - Medicine and Health Care in Early Christianity, JHU Press, 2009 ISBN 0801891426
  4. ^ DJ Halperin - The Jewish Quarterly Review New Series, Vol. 72, No. 4 (Apr., 1982), pp. 269-292 The "Book of Remedies," the Canonization of the Solomonic Writings, and the Riddle of Pseudo-Eusebius. Retrieved 2012-12-20
  5. ^ definotion of baraita - jewishencyclopedia.com and mishnah - jewishencyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2012-12-20
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Barkai, Ron (1998). A History of Jewish Gynaecological Texts in the Middle Ages. Leiden: Brill. p. 7. ISBN 978-9004109957.
  7. ^ Caballero-Navas, Carmen (June 2008). "The care of women's health and beauty: an experience shared by medieval Jewish and Christian women". Journal of Medieval History. 34 (2): 146–163. doi:10.1016/j.jmedhist.2008.03.007. S2CID 143076908.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Shatzmiller, Joseph (1994). Jews, Medicine, and Medieval Society. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 9780520080591.
  9. ^ Whaley, Leigh (2011). Women and the Practice of Medical Care in Early Modern Europe, 1400-1800. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 23. ISBN 9780230282919.
  10. ^ a b c d e Green, Monica (June 2008). "The trial of Floreta d'Ays (1403): Jews, Christians, and obstetrics in later medieval Marseille". Journal of Medieval History. 34 (2): 185–211. doi:10.1016/j.jmedhist.2008.03.001. S2CID 159621709.
  11. ^ Friedenwald
  12. ^ Arnold D. Richards - The Jewish World of Sigmund Freud: Essays on Cultural Roots and the Problem of Religious Identity, McFarland, 2010 ISBN 078644424X
  13. ^ S D Kunin, JMiles-Watson - Theories of Religion: A Reader, Rutgers University Press, 2006
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