Medieval Medicine and the Magical Body: A Six Week Live, Online Class with Art Historian Brenda Edgar, Beginning July 9

Medieval Medicine and the Magical Body: A Six Week Live, Online Class with Art Historian Brenda Edgar, Beginning July 9

from $100.00

Tuesdays, July 9, 16, 23, 30, and August 6, 13, 2024
Time: 6 pm - 7:30 pm ET
Admission: $105 / $100 (Patreon Members)

PLEASE NOTE: All classes will also be recorded and archived for students who cannot make that time.

Medieval scientific thought was based upon the concept of Intelligent Design. In this model, Christ was the ultimate Architect of the Universe, as well as the only True source of healing. However, it was expected that people would pursue the more mundane avenues for healing in addition to appealing to the Divine Doctor himself. In this course, we’ll investigate the medieval understanding of how the world worked, as well as the medical theories and practices of the period.

Equal parts science and esoterica, medicine in the European Middle Ages (roughly 500-1500 AD) was ultimately rooted in Ancient Greek and Roman writings, influenced by Arabic thought, and translated into a Christian framework. We’ll learn the basics, including the theory of humors and the relationships between the elements, months, zodiac signs, winds, lunar cycles, and ages of man. We’ll also look at the primary diagnostic practices and treatments of the period, including urinalysis, bloodletting, and surgery.

Along the way, we’ll discover how medieval people used natural substances, including plants, animals, stones, and metals, to treat various illnesses and humoral imbalances. We’ll also examine religious healing practices such as prayer to healing saints, pilgrimage, and relic veneration, which were often used as adjuncts to purely physical approaches, or as desperate measures when more traditional treatments had failed.

The course will end with an introduction to the major medieval epidemics and pandemics, focusing on leprosy and bubonic plague, with an analysis of how medieval people understood and experienced these scourges.

Each of the six weekly meetings will contain an illustrated lecture as well as suggested readings, homework prompts, and class discussions. The final project will invite you to be your own medieval doctor by devising a complete medieval medical treatment plan for a malady of your choice!

Class Schedule

  1. Medieval Intelligent Design: Christ the Divine Architect and Doctor

  2. The Basics of Medieval Medicine: Humoral Theory and Cosmic Correspondences

  3. Zodiac Man and Friends: Medieval Medical Diagnosis and Treatment

  4. Restoring Balance: Medicinal Plants, Animals, and Gemstones

  5. Last Resort: Healing Saints, Pilgrimage, and Relics

  6. Medieval Scourges: Leprosy and Plague; Final Project Presentations

Brenda Edgar is an Art Historian in Louisville, KY.  Her research interests include relics and reliquaries, medieval medical manuscripts and depictions of disease in medieval art, as well as the historical role of altered states of consciousness in the creation of art. 

In addition to her work for Morbid Anatomy, she teaches Art History courses at Indiana University Southeast. Her free monthly public talk series, “Art History Illustrated,” is presented at the Cultural Arts Center in New Albany, Indiana.

Brenda is also a poet whose work has appeared in numerous literary journals. Her first full-length book of poems, Dead Flowers, was published in late 2023 through the Main Street Rag publishing company.

When she isn’t reading or writing, Brenda is a New York Times Crossword Puzzle addict as well as a yoga instructor.

  1. "Theosophia practica," Johann Georg Gichtel

  2. A woodcut by Leonhard Thurneysser (1531-1596), circa 16th century, depicting the four elements of the Greek humoral theory (blood, phlegm, cholera [yellow bile], and melancholy [black bile]) on which they were based 14th century diets.

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