Alternative voices in Babylonian Medicine

Auteurs

  • Markham Geller University College London

DOI :

https://doi.org/10.35305/cl.vi20.65

Mots-clés :

Babylonian medicine, Diagnostic Handbook, witchcraft, 'hand' (of gods, demons, ghosts), medical incantations

Résumé

The usual approach to Babylonian medical writings is to assume a monolithic corpus of data presented in either recipes, lists of drugs, or collections of symptoms for prognosis and diagnosis.   Despite the lengthy period of documentation of Babylonian medicine, no attempt has been made to view the acquisition of Akkadian medical knowledge as a dynamic process, which also needed to adapt to changing expectations.  The present paper will survey Babylonian medicine while seeking out the cacophony of different voices, ending with the intriguing question:  who controls the narrative?

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Abbreviations

AM = Asfar Malwaša (Book of the Zodiac)

AMD = Ancient Magic and Divination (Brill)

BAM = Babylonisch-Assyrische Medizin (de Gruyter)

BMS = Babylonian Magic and Sorcery (L. W. King)

STT = The Sultantepe Tablets, published by Gurney, Finkelstein, and Hulin

TUAT = Texte aus der Umwelt des Alten Testaments (Gutersloher Verlag)

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Publiée

2021-12-30

Comment citer

Geller, M. (2021). Alternative voices in Babylonian Medicine. Claroscuro. Revista Del Centro De Estudios Sobre Diversidad Cultural, (20), 1–25. https://doi.org/10.35305/cl.vi20.65