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Medicine and the Body in Antiquity


About the Series

Medicine and the Body in Antiquity is a series which fosters interdisciplinary research that broadens our understanding of past beliefs about the body and its care. The intention of the series is to use evidence drawn from diverse sources (textual, archaeological, epigraphic) in an interpretative manner to gain insights into the medical practices and beliefs of the ancient Mediterranean. The series approaches medical history from a broad thematic perspective that allows for collaboration between specialists from a wide range of disciplines outside ancient history and archaeology such as art history, religious studies, medicine, the natural sciences and music. The series will also aim to bring research on ancient medicine to the attention of scholars concerned with later periods. Ultimately this series provides a forum for scholars from a wide range of disciplines to explore ideas about the body and medicine beyond the confines of current scholarship.

For further information about contributing to the series please contact Dr Patty Baker at [email protected] 

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Music Therapy in Ancient Greece

Music Therapy in Ancient Greece

1st Edition

Forthcoming

By Antonietta Provenza
June 30, 2024

The evidence of the ancient Greeks’ interest in music therapy is scattered through Greek literature from its earliest beginnings. Music was considered to be a magic remedy yet the idea of a connection between musical structures (harmonia, rhythms) and the human constitution had already begun to ...

Systems of Classification in Premodern Medical Cultures Sickness, Health, and Local Epistemologies

Systems of Classification in Premodern Medical Cultures: Sickness, Health, and Local Epistemologies

1st Edition

Edited By Ulrike Steinert
August 01, 2022

Systems of Classification in Premodern Medical Cultures puts historical disease concepts in cross-cultural perspective, investigating perceptions, constructions and experiences of health and illness from antiquity to the seventeenth century. Focusing on the systematisation and ...

Sleep and Dreams in Early Greek Thought Presocratic and Hippocratic Approaches

Sleep and Dreams in Early Greek Thought: Presocratic and Hippocratic Approaches

1st Edition

By Stephanie Holton
March 18, 2022

This book examines how sleep and dreams were approached in early Greek thought, highlighting the theories of the Presocratic and Hippocratic writers on both phenomena as more varied, complex, and substantial than is usually credited. It explores how the Presocratic natural philosophers and early ...

Roman Domestic Medical Practice in Central Italy From the Middle Republic to the Early Empire

Roman Domestic Medical Practice in Central Italy: From the Middle Republic to the Early Empire

1st Edition

By Jane Draycott
March 26, 2019

Roman Domestic Medical Practice in Central Italy examines the roles that the home, the garden and the members of the household (freeborn, freed and slave) played in the acquisition and maintenance of good physical and mental health and well-being. Focussing on the period from the middle Republic to...

Becoming a Woman and Mother in Greco-Roman Egypt Women’s Bodies, Society and Domestic Space

Becoming a Woman and Mother in Greco-Roman Egypt: Women’s Bodies, Society and Domestic Space

1st Edition

By Ada Nifosi
February 04, 2019

How did Greco-Roman Egyptian society perceive women’s bodies and how did it acknowledge women’s reproductive functions? Detailing women’s lives in Greco-Roman Egypt this monograph examines understudied aspects of women's lives such as their coming of age, social and religious taboos of menstruation...

Prostheses in Antiquity

Prostheses in Antiquity

1st Edition

Edited By Jane Draycott
August 23, 2018

Today, a prosthesis is an artificial device that replaces a missing body part, generally designed and assembled according to the individual’s appearance and functional needs with a view to being both as unobtrusive and as useful as possible. In classical antiquity, however, this was not necessarily...

Hippocratic Oratory The Poetics of Early Greek Medical Prose

Hippocratic Oratory: The Poetics of Early Greek Medical Prose

1st Edition

By James Cross
November 08, 2017

On Ancient Medicine, On the Art, On Breaths, On the Nature of Human Beings and On the Sacred Disease are among the most well-known and sophisticated works of the Hippocratic Collection. The authors of these treatises were seeking to find means to express their arguments that built on authoritative ...

Tertullian and the Unborn Child Christian and Pagan Attitudes in Historical Perspective

Tertullian and the Unborn Child: Christian and Pagan Attitudes in Historical Perspective

1st Edition

By Julian Barr
February 24, 2017

Tertullian of Carthage was the earliest Christian writer to argue against abortion at length, and the first surviving Latin author to consider the unborn child in detail. This book is the first comprehensive analysis of Tertullian’s attitude towards the foetus and embryo. Examining Tertullian’s ...

Bodies of Evidence Ancient Anatomical Votives Past, Present and Future

Bodies of Evidence: Ancient Anatomical Votives Past, Present and Future

1st Edition

Edited By Jane Draycott, Emma-Jayne Graham
January 10, 2017

Dedicating objects to the divine was a central component of both Greek and Roman religion. Some of the most conspicuous offerings were shaped like parts of the internal or external human body: so-called ‘anatomical votives’. These archaeological artefacts capture the modern imagination, recalling ...

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