6.1.3

Institutions - The Church

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The Church

The Church exerted a huge influence in society. This included in the field of medicine.

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Dissections

  • The Church forbade dissections on almost all bodies. It only allowed them on criminals that had been executed.
  • This meant that Claudius Galen's mistaken beliefs about the anatomy (holes in the heart and blood being absorbed not circulated) could not be corrected.
  • Muslims held the same beliefs.
  • Conclusion: The Church's opposition to dissections made it hard for those such as Galen to prove their theories.
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Supernatural beliefs

  • In medieval times, beliefs that illnesses could have supernatural causes stemmed from Ancient Greek, Roman and Egyptian ideas.
  • Within the Church, exorcisms were performed to remove spirits.
  • Astrology, witches and God were all supposed supernatural causes of illness. This was common during the Black Death (1348).
  • Supernatural beliefs were common until humanist thinkers such as Erasmus started to argue against them.
  • Conclusion: As late as the 1800s, supernatural beliefs can be blamed for slowing progress within medicine.
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Hospitals and universities

  • Christians believed in creating hospitals with good hygiene to care for the sick.
  • Lots of doctors trained at universities that were set up by the Church. Most of these were based in Italy (e.g Bologna and Padua).
  • Conclusion: The medieval Church was one of the main providers of medical service and training.
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Vaccinations

  • Many in the Church opposed vaccinations (e.g. Jenner's smallpox vaccine). They created the Anti-Compulsory Vaccination League in 1866.
  • Conclusion: Opposition to vaccinations was one of the ways the Church had a negative impact on medicine in Britain.

Jump to other topics

1Medicine in Medieval England

2The Medical Renaissance in England

3Medicine in 18th & 19th Century Britain

4Medicine in Modern Britain

5Treatment in WW1

6Themes in Medicine

7Some Extra Context (Not Compulsory for Exam)

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