Medieval Medicine

audiobook

Medieval Medicine

by James J. (James Joseph) Walsh

EN·~5 hours

Chapters

Description

The book opens a window onto a thousand years of healing, tracing how medieval physicians wrestled with disease long after the fall of Rome. Far from the stagnant “Dark Ages” stereotype, it reveals a vibrant tapestry of scholars, monks, and surgeons who blended inherited Greek knowledge with their own observations, establishing hospitals, medical schools, and early surgical practices.

Illustrated with striking images of medieval operating tables, instruments, and hospital interiors, the narrative follows the evolution of care—from the humble leper houses of St. Bartholomew to the sophisticated surgical armaments of Arab and European doctors. Readers discover how figures such as Guy de Chauliac laid foundations for modern surgery, while religious communities turned infirmaries into centers of learning.

By the close of the first act, the story shows a rising confidence in empirical treatment, setting the stage for the breakthroughs that would later reshape Western medicine. It invites listeners to appreciate a forgotten chapter of ingenuity that helped shape today’s health practices.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (301K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2013-07-25

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

James J. (James Joseph) Walsh

James J. (James Joseph) Walsh

1865–1942

A physician, medical historian, and prolific Catholic writer, he brought science, faith, and history together in a way that reached a wide popular audience. His books often explored the achievements of medieval medicine and the human side of medical practice.

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