Paul Potter, Hippocrates. Volume XI: Diseases of Women 1-2. The Loeb classical library, 538.
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2018.
Pp. 528. ISBN 9780674996571. $26.00.
Reviewed by M. J. Geller, FU Berlin and University College, London (mark.geller@fu-berlin.de; m.geller@ucl.ac.uk)
Publisher's Preview
The
appearance of the last of the of the Loeb Classical Library volumes of
Hippocrates is a welcome event, especially when coming from the pen of
Paul Potter, widely acknowledged for his expertise in editing and
translating this crucial corpus. The final volume consists of only two
treatises concerned with women's diseases, Diseases of Women 1 and Diseases of Women 2,
which differ from most other Hippocratic works. There is little
interest in these treatises, for instance, in a theory of humours,
except for the occasional reference to a patient being either bilious or
phlegmatic (pp. 216-217), and there was little use of phlebotomy
recorded in their numerous recipes (with the first reference occurring
only on pp. 180-181). In general, there are fewer didactic passages
about disease, and a large proportion of the text consists of
prescriptions and drug-based recipes.
Although there is some overlap between these two treatises, Potter's approach in treating Diseases of Women 2 as a separate treatise rather than as a continuation of Diseases of Women 1 appears
to be justified, considering the differences as well as similarities
between the two works. The first treatise deals with typical
gynaecological disorders, consisting of problems associated with
menstruation, difficulties in conceiving, pregnancy disorders (which
include miscarriage, foetal distress and retention of a dead foetus),
postpartum disorders (including vaginal discharges), abnormalities of
the uterus, and a final section dealing with a mixed bag of
gynaecological and other ailments, including remedies for sepsis, gout,
anal prolapse, and eye ailments. Potter's headings (pp. 3-6) are a
useful guide to the contents of each chapter, but his subdivided
headings are somewhat arbitrary; e.g. there is considerable overlap
between his subdivision of 'postpartum disorders' and 'disorders of the
uterus'. Moreover, among the well-known scheme of four humours, only
excessive phlegm features regularly as an active agent in women's
diseases. Diseases of Women 2 focuses primarily
on the uterus, highlighting abnormal discharges, abnormal movements of
the uterus within the body, and a variety of pathologies associated with
the uterus, such as inflammation, dropsy, and bile (see Potter 257-260
for a list of chapter themes).
Some
general comments about the importance of these treatises for the
history of ancient medicine are in order. Perhaps most important is the
first-hand observation of the physician that women's diseases need to be
treated differently than those of men; as Potter translates,
'physicians too may err in not inquiring carefully about a disease
cause, and in treating them like diseases in men: indeed, I have seen
many women perish in such cases.' The author concludes that 'there is a
great difference in the treatment of women's diseases and those of men'
(Potter p. 131). This observation probably reflects a prevalent view of
ancient medicine, that gynaecology represents a deviation from the norm,
i.e. male physiology, which means that most discussions of anatomy and
symptoms reflected that of male patients. In this respect, female bodies
are contrasted with those of men, in being warmer, more moist, and less
solid (Potter p. 13). A variation on this theme is taken up in the
second of the women’s diseases treatise, which views the relative warmth
and moistness of women as a function of age, rather than in comparison
with men’s bodies. The association between moistness in women and
menstruation is clear, since older women are considered to be drier and
presumably colder, since they have less blood (after menopause). On the
other hand, fair women are considered to be moist while those with
darker complexions are thought to be drier (Potter p. 269). The precise
logic behind such general assumptions is not well elaborated in either
treatise.
As
for the actual diseases of women, one of the key questions regards who
the informants were and how the author(s) were privy to intimate
information about women's bodies. It is worth noting that there is only a
single reference in these treatises to a midwife, who assists at a
difficult delivery (Potter p. 151), and the general view appears to be
that a male physician could have had full access to a woman patient's
genital organs. For instance, Diseases of Women 1 stipulates
that, 'if on examining with a finger you find the mouth of the uterus
to be shrunken and very full of moisture', the physician can safely
diagnose uterine dropsy (Potter's translation p. 125). As for the
(presumably male) physician's own competence, Diseases of Women 2 advises with confidence, ‘give the drinks you know by experience will be best received’ (p. 363).
The
utility of Potter's edition and translation for historians of medicine
is greatly enhanced by the extensive indices at the end of the volume
(pp. 453-491), which provide glossaries of materia medica in
both English-to-Greek and Greek-to-English, as well as a comprehensive
subject index. Apart from being able to compare the use of materia medica in
gynaecology with other Hippocratic treatises, it also allows these
treatises to be compared with ingredients of recipes in other systems of
medicine. One of the intriguing types of medical ingredient is Dreckapotheke,
which takes various exotic forms in these treatises, such as mouse
droppings (p. 197-199), cow excrement (pp. 225-29, 417-19), ass’s
excrement (p. 413), wolf excrement (used in fumigation, p. 173), and
goat excrement (p. 231, 433). How realistic were these substances as
medical ingredients? Recent studies of Dreckapothekewithin Babylonian medicine have shown that such ingredients are actually Decknamen or
secret names for ordinary plants and minerals, as elaborated in a
recent but still unpublished Freie Universität Berlin dissertation
(2015) of Maddalena Rumor, Babylonian Pharmacology in Graeco-Roman 'Dreckapotheke', with an Edition of Uruanna III 1-143.
Other
specific comparisons can be made with Babylonian recipes, such as the
use of Egyptian alum in both Greek and Babylonian tampons. A late
Babylonian tablet from Ur, roughly contemporary with early Hippocratic
writings, bears some striking similarities to a specific passage
within Diseases of Women 1 (Potter 186-191). The
Greek text concerns suppositories to expel a dead foetus or a placenta,
but within this passage is a list of tampons, usually pieces of wool or
linen, that have no delineated purpose, but these occur after two tests
for pregnancy (or as Potter prefers, fertility, see p. 187). The
Akkadian tablet from Ur likewise offers recipes to expel a placenta or
dead foetus, but within this context the Ur tablet also gives a list of
tampons that were clearly diagnostic tests for pregnancy. The similarity
between the Greek and Akkadian passages can be easily demonstrated by
respective statements in both texts describing tampons. The Greek text
reads (in Potter’s translation p. 189), ‘Wrap Egyptian alum in a piece
of wool and apply it’. The Akkadian text, which prescribes tampons
specifically for pregnancy testing reads, ‘If ditto (= a test for
pregnancy), [wrap] Egyptian alum [..., insert it into her womb in a wad
of wool, if it] looks like seaweed, that woman [is pregnant …].’ The
latter recipe advocates inserting a tampon wrapped in Egyptian alum into
the woman’s vagina, and when removed the colour (in this case like that
of seaweed) would indicate whether the woman is pregnant or not. A
close comparison between these the Greek and Akkadian passages (which
cannot be done within a short review) will not only show a remarkable
degree of similarity in both structure and contents, but it will also
clarify the diagnostic usage of the tampons listed in the Greek text,
which is not clearly specified. (For an edition of the Babylonian
tablet, see Erica Reiner, ‘Babylonian Birth Prognoses‘, Zeitschrift für Assyriologie 72, 1982, 124-138, and a re-edition by J. Scurlock, Sourcebook for Ancient Mesopotamian Medicine, 2014; the text will be re-edited by U. Steinert in a forthcoming volume on Babylonian women's diseases).
There
are many such parallels throughout these two Hippocratic treatises that
bear comparison with Babylonian medical texts of a similar vintage. The
following is a typical example of another Hippocratic recipe in this
corpus (p. 205, translation Potter), chosen virtually at random:
If after the birth of a child, a flux (roos)
develops and food does not remain in the mother’s belly: pound dark
raisins and the insides of a sweet pomegranate, dissolve in dark-colored
wine, grate over this goat’s cheese, and sprinkle it with toasted wheat
meal: dilute and give.
Although
there is no exact duplicate to this recipe in Akkadian, the individual
elements of the recipe are all familiar to Babylonian gynaecology. The
problem in this recipe is two-fold, that the mother suffers from a
‘flux’ (lit. a stream or flow of fluid), and that her bowels are loose.
Although these conditions do not occur together in Akkadian recipes,
Babylonian women after giving birth can suffer from a flux (nahšātu), such as noted in a medical incantation with the rubric, MUNUS ša nahšáte GIG bulṭu [latku] , ‘[tested] recipe for a woman ill with a flux’ (see Scurlock, Sourcebook, 573, cited above). Alternatively, a woman having given birth can suffer from redût irri, ‘a streaming of the bowels,’ or irri šūšuri ‘loosening
of the bowels’ (Ibid., 610, 614). There are many other details which
could also be subject to comparison between Greek and Akkadian
gynaecological recipes, such as the Akkadian recipe beginning with a
phrase, '[if a woman] is ill with allutu' (translated as ‘crabs’ in Scurlock, Sourcebook, 576); however, a much more likely match would be Greek karkinos, ‘cancer’ (see e.g. Potter p. 314), reflecting a tumour rather than venereal lice.
Comparisons
between Greek and Babylonian gynaecology raise some uncomfortable
questions, with which historians of ancient medicine have not yet
properly grappled. We may need to assume that ancient gynaecology
operated along similar lines and with similar procedures throughout the
Near East (including Greece), or alternatively that some recipe-based
procedures were far more widespread than has been previously recognised.
In any case, Potter's excellent edition of these texts affords us the
opportunity to ask whether the study of a medical technē restricted
to one language and one region, without considering neighbouring
practices, might turn out in future to be too limited in scope.
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