118.
(7) W. Wreszinski: Die Medizin der alten Aegypter, Leipzig,
J. C. Hinrichs, 1909-1912.
In this way it came about that diseases were believed to be due to
hostile spirits, or caused by the anger of a god, so that medicines,
no matter how powerful, could only be expected to assuage the pain; but
magic alone, incantations, spells and prayers, could remove the disease.
Experience brought much of the wisdom we call empirical, and the
records, extending for thousands of years, show that the Egyptians
employed emetics, purgatives, enemata, diuretics, diaphoretics and
even bleeding. They had a rich pharmacopoeia derived from the animal,
vegetable and mineral kingdoms. In the later periods, specialism reached
a remarkable development, and Herodotus remarks that the country was
full of physicians;--"One treats only the diseases of the eye, another
those of the head, the teeth, the abdomen, or the internal organs."
Our knowledge of Egyptian medicine is derived largely from the
remarkable papyri dealing specially with this subject. Of these, six or
seven are of the first importance. The most famous is that discovered by
Ebers, dating from about 1500 B.C. A superb document, one of the
great treasures of the Leipzig Library, it is 20.
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