Ancient, Bird, Egypt, Egyptian, Sacred


Ancient Egyptians began practicing medicine in a very early age; around 4000 BC. For example, clues from that period indicate that the "malachite or dahsh" eye coating was used to prevent certain parasitic diseases that affected the eye. It is also thanks to the ancient Egyptians in the achievement is still worth to today; they are the owners of the oldest civil know the practitioner. Amhotep was one of the first practitioners and a brilliant healer.
Doctors and some priests taught medicine in the temples during years of training. Ancient Egyptian medical practitioners had a great deal of knowledge of the human body, although at the time there were no schools of medicine in the common sense today. Their knowledge came mainly through the process of embalming; they extracted and examined various parts of the body after death. These internal organs were often placed in the so-called Canopian pots. They also knew about brain fluids, the right position of the heart, that the arteries were hollow and that blood flowed into a cycle within the body. They have also performed a number of surgeries, confirmed by evidence in some of the discovered structures.
Ancient Egyptian doctors knew the power of observation and appreciated the importance of listening attentively to their patients. In general, the most important areas of medical practice were the care of women and children and the treatment of infertility. The tests were performed on women to determine their ability to conceive, or to determine the type of fetus. Doctors also invented various means to facilitate the situation in difficult situations. Knowledge of these means was transmitted, genetically, by inheritance. Medical manuscripts dating back to the 16th century BC have been recorded; eleven methods of obstetrics. In addition, intestinal flu, stomach aches, cough, toothache and eye injuries were common diseases among the ancient Egyptians. Doctors used natural substances in most of their therapeutic forms, and they could count the heart rate; using the water clock. The fourth century BC witnessed the flourishing of medicine in ancient Egypt.
Our knowledge of medicine in ancient Egypt comes mainly from papyrus dating back to the Pharaonic times; the most famous of them are Edwin Smith and Ebers, the authors and commentators of Edwin Smith. These papyrus contain a statement of some pathological conditions, surgical steps and therapeutic prescriptions for diseases and wounds; most are based on natural materials, but they also contain magic spells dating back to the 18th and 19th centuries. The ancient Egyptians provided the best models of integrated health care; they treated the individual as a whole, physically, mentally (psychologically) and spiritually. Many of the medicinal herbs used today were ancient Egyptians first used; and our current knowledge of the anatomy has reached us from these healers, through their experience in embalming.
It is worth mentioning that medicine in ancient Egypt was generally not separate from magical and religious rituals. Drug therapy and medication went hand-in-hand with magic spells to treat patients. There were a number of sticks used by the priests, and waved at them as they chanted to the saviors; to drive out evil powers. In addition, they also used magic tools with vague phrases; Medicine remained linked to the priesthood, in Egypt, to the end of the Roman era. The study of anatomy in ancient Egypt peaked in the Ptolemaic era; the arrival of two great doctors to Alexandria, to get a detailed knowledge of the detailed anatomy of the human body and be able to treat all cases of disease. Doctors from all over the world came to Alexandria, especially during that period, to practice anatomy.
In the age of succession and the rule of Muslim rulers in Egypt, medicine reached a high position. Medicine is offered in a variety of other areas, such as careful clinical observation of patients, description of pathological relations with diseases and scientific methods of teaching; addition of public health care and improvement of hospital services. The emergence of hospitals (sanatoriums) was one of the greatest achievements of that era. The mission of the hospital was perhaps the most remarkable aspect of health care, and its message was to take care of all those who came to it, regardless of their social status.

Tags: Sciences
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