Zusammenfassung der Ressource
How did the Middle Ages halt
medical progression in Europe?
- Poor communication
- Due to wars, travel was dangerous
- This meant that many doctors couldn't
travel to share their ideas or theories
- Education
- Training of doctors was abandoned as
money was focused on armies to participate
in wars
- Religion
- The rise of Christianity
- People were taught that God, planets and Satan
affected their health rather than the logical
explanations favoured by the Romans
- The English Church
- They disagreed with the ideas of both
Galen and Hippocrates and therefore
banned many of their books
- Human dissection was banned by the church, meaning
that nobody could improve or correct Galen's work
- War
- The collapse of the Roman Empire led to wars that
destroyed many universities and libraries that contained
Galen/ Hippocrates' work
- This meant much of the knowledge
gathered by Roman and Greek
doctors was lost
- Some of Galen's work, however,
was translated into Arabic and saved
- Many Roman people were killed, meaning that there was no one
left with the knowledge to rebuild or repair much of the Roman
infrastructure
- Government
- After the fall of the Roman Empire,
there were many little villages and
towns rather than big cities
- This means that there was
little need/ focus on public
health systems
- No governments had a taxation system like the
Romans which could be used to fund public
projects