Roman Medicine for Kids - Galen

Roman Medicine


The Romans started by learning what the Greeks thought about medicine, and in fact most Roman doctors were from Greece, or of Greek origin. Like the Greeks, the Romans believed in the four humors and the power of bloodletting. The most important Roman doctor was Galen (GAY-lenn), who lived in the 100's AD and wrote a book about medicine. Galen's book about medicine (actually a shortened version of it) was the main medical book that doctors used in Europe for the next thousand years and more.
Galen repeated a lot of Hippocrates' work on the four humors, but he also added a lot of observations about how the human body worked that he learned from looking at the insides of human bodies. He saw the insides of people by looking at wounded soldiers and gladiators. And he cut open a lot of animals to see how they worked. Galen certainly knew more about anatomy than Hippocrates did. Galen understood that the blood was pushed around the body by the heart, for instance. And he knew that nerves controlled the movement of the body, and that people thought with their brains. But he did not make any real advances in treating people. He still thought that blood-letting was a good idea.

To find out more about Roman medicine, check out these books from Amazon.com or from your library:

Twitta and the Ferocious Fever (The Romans), by Ann Jungman

Go on to Islamic medicine
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