About This Book
A posthumous study and accompanying biography present a close reading of a thirteenth-century medical compendium attributed to Gilbertus, explaining its scholastic-humoral framework and dense, authority-driven method. The analysis outlines an elaborate medieval nosology of fevers with many archaic categories and describes therapeutic practice that stresses dietetics, complex compound remedies, preparatives and evacuatives, and a guarded use of bloodletting. The commentary highlights the coexistence of learned theory and folk procedures, the authorial preference for subtle distinctions and citations of predecessors, and provides contextual notes that clarify the text's language and clinical reasoning for contemporary readers.
About the Author
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