© www.teachithistory.co.uk 201420476 1 What did medieval people believe caused disease?

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Presentation transcript:

© What did medieval people believe caused disease?

© Credit: Wellcome Library, London A picture of ‘astrological man’ showing which zodiac signs rule which body parts. From the Medical Practitioner's Handbook, (1463). Source A

© What does the source suggest about what people believed caused disease? Do people still believe this today? Source A Source B Source C Source D Source E Source F

© Source B God is terrible towards the sons of men. He often allows plagues, miserable famines, conflicts, wars and other forms of suffering to arise, and uses them to terrify and torment people and so drive out their sins. And so the people of England are to be oppressed by the plague. From a monk’s letter to the Bishop of London, 1348.

© Medieval doctors thought that the body was made up of four humours – earth, fire, water and air. If these humours should get out of balance, you fell ill. In summer, the dry heat would increase the fire so you would sweat and get very hot – you might even become bad tempered. In winter, the damp climate would increase the water in your body. This would make you produce more phlegm and suffer from coughs and colds. From a textbook published in 1991 Source C

© Picture from 1675 of a man letting blood into a bowl. Two other bowls already filled with blood sit nearby. People believed that if the humours were out of balance an illness could be cured by ‘letting’ blood to restore the balance. Source D Credit: Wellcome Library, London

© The general cause of the plague was the close position of the three great planets, Saturn, Jupiter and Mars. This had taken place in 1345 on 24 March. Such a coming together of planets is always a sign of wonderful, terrible or violent things to come. Guy de Chauliac, a famous doctor writing in the 1300s. Source E

© In the Middle Ages, people thought that worms were connected to illness. When doctors examined the faeces of sick people they often saw worms. It seemed obvious to link these to whatever illness the person was suffering from. From a textbook published in Source F

© What are the differences between what people believed caused disease in medieval times, and what people think today? 2.Are there any similarities? Questions