Nombre de réponses :
15
1-15
Asclepius and temple medicine in Aelius Aristides' Sacred Tales |
"(...) What is the role of (Hippocratic) medicine in Aelius Aristides' Sacred Tales? How are the two rationales, of (Hippocratic) medicine and of the Asclepius cult, related? (...)" |
Publié dans :
Magic and rationality in ancient Near Eastern and Graeco-Roman medicine. edited by H.F.J. Horstmanshoff and M. Stol ; in collaboration with C.R. van Tilburg. - Leiden ; Boston : Brill, 2004. - XV-407 p. ; 21 cm.. - (Studies in ancient medicine ; 27) . - Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 90-04-13666-5. Pages :325-341
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Textes recensés dans le même document
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HORSTMANSHOFF, Herman Frederik Johan (Manfred)
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Cote BIU Santé Médecine :
233.418-27
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Méd. ancienne : médecine grecque et romaine
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fiche entrée le 20/12/2004
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The four seasons of human life : Four anonymous engravings from the Trent Collection |
Rotterdam, Durham : Erasmus Publishing and Duke University, 2002. 109 p |
Edited with Translation and Full Commentary by H. F. J. Horstmanshoff, A.M. Luyendijk-Elshout, F. G. Schlesinger and al.
The Trent Collection at Duke University, Durham, North Carolina, U.S.A., holds four, probably unique, copperplate engravings, each associated with a season and concerned with morality and with scientific matters from a variety of disciplines: medicine, astronomy, astrology, meteorology, alchemy. The texts, allegories, prints and symbols present a fascinating cross section of the history of medicine and science up to the 17th century. The plates contain as many as twelve layers, which can be folded back to reveal underlying illustrations.
Each print has at its center two human figures, standing between two trees. The first print, VER (Spring), shows a fetus, a seven month old baby, a child aged three, and a boy fourteen years of age. In AESTAS (Summer) a man and a woman are holding a urinal. In AUTUMNUS (Fall) the couple seems to be in the prime of life; the emphasis is on sexual vigor and fertility. In HYEMS (Winter) the man has turned his back towards the viewer, and the woman is stepping into the grave.
Each print contains an astrological arch, with the signs of the zodiac, astrological-medical and meteorological data, in addition to maps or charts. Two aspectuaria and a horoscope illustrate the Fall of life: AUTUMNUS. There are also urinals in each print, which refer to hermetic symbolism. A rich background with birds, various flowers of the season, human figures and villages, can be found in all four prints, which also contain pennants, banderoles and inscribed leaves with moral proverbs and Hippocratic texts, as well as other classical texts, all in Latin translation. Some text is in Greek.
The plates are of unknown origin and date. The many references to hermetic medicine and the dominant idea of the symbolism of the Macrocosmos/Microcosmos may lead to the conclusion that the design was meant for a person of high birth, as was fashionable in Europe during the 16th and 17th century. Unsolved, however, remain the questions: Who was this person? And especially: Who made the engravings? Who is stepping into the open grave? The possibility also remains that we are dealing with popular prints, once widely spread. Internal evidence that the copperplates are worn out points in this direction.
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HORSTMANSHOFF, Herman Frederik Johan (Manfred)
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Cote BIU Santé Médecine :
10.443
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Méd. ancienne : perception de la médecine antique
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fiche entrée le 29/08/2002
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Nombre de réponses :
15
1-15
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