1st Edition

Arabian Medicine and its Influence on the Middle Ages: Volume I

By Donald Campbell Copyright 1926
    226 Pages
    by Routledge

    228 Pages
    by Routledge

    This is Volume II of six in the Arabic History and Culture collection. Originally published in 1926, this text is volume one of Arabian Medicine and its Influence on the Middle Ages and attempts to place before the reader the origin and development of Arabian Medicine and its subsequent cultivation among the Arabistae of the Latin west. The latter half of this volume is on Mediaeval Medicine, which is but a modification of Arabian Medicine as understood by the scholastics who based their systems on what are shown to be indifferent Latin versions of the Arabic writings of Islam, which in turn were versions of ~he Syriac translations of the Greek texts.

    Chapter 1 Greek Medicine in its Relation to the Arabians; Chapter 2 Arabic (Medical) MSS; Chapter 3 The Historiography of Islam, with Special Reference to the Development of Arabic Medical and Philosophical Literature; Chapter 4 Arabic Medical Writers and their Works; Chapter 5 Arabic Medical Writers and their Works; Chapter 6 The Age of Early Arabian Rumours in the West; Chapter 7 The Tide of Arabism in the Intellectual Currents of Mediaeval Europe; Chapter 8 The Latin Translators and the College at Toledo; Chapter 9 The Transmuters and the Arabist Dominancy in Latin Europe; Chapter 10 The Experimenters and the Effect of their Work on Arabist Tradition in Europe; Chapter 11 Hellenism and Arabism in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries; Chapter 12 A Review of European Literature and the Medical Curricula of European Universities in the Later Middle Ages;

    Biography

    Donald Campbell, Captain late Royal Army Medical Corps, and formerly Indian Army, Reserve of Officers, Infantry Branch.