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The Mirror of Health: Discovering Medicine in the Golden Age of Islam

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Illustration of the female reproductive cycle, from Manṣūr’s anatomy (Tašrīḥ-i Manṣūrī), 1656
Illustration of the female reproductive cycle, from Manṣūr’s anatomy (Tašrīḥ-i Manṣūrī), 1656

A rare collection of Islamic medical manuscripts has gone on display for the first time, illuminating medical traditions that developed in the Golden Age of Islamic culture, between the 9th and 17th centuries AD.

Based at the Royal College of Physicians in London, and curated by Professor Peter E Pormann from The University of Manchester, The mirror of health: discovering medicine in the golden age of Islam explores the evolution of medical practices in Europe and the Middle East, and the interactions and exchange of influences between the two schools of thought.

While Islamic medicine initially drew heavily on Ancient Greek knowledge – particularly humoral pathology, in which human health is governed by the balance of blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile – by the Renaissance Arabic learning was a dominant, pioneering trend.

‘When we look deep into the medical tradition of Islamic lands, we recognise many reflections with today – which is why we called the exhibition ‘Mirror of health,’ said Professor Pormann. ‘The Islamic medics not only transmitted and translated medical thought and practice from Ancient Greece, but also innovated and changed the science. This enabled medicine to evolve over the centuries into the truly sophisticated science we know today.’

The manuscripts, which date back to the 9th century, are complemented by artefacts on loan from the collections of the Science Museum, London, Gonville & Caius College, Cambridge, The Bodleian Library, Oxford and Eton College, Windsor.

The Mirror of Health: Discovering Medicine in the Golden Age of Islam, runs from 1 May to 25 October 2013.

 

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