Mental Illness In Medieval Europe

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Mental health is a difficult topic to understand in today’s society. We are privileged to have a wide range of research on the topic, but the people of Europe during medieval times were just beginning to learn about the phenomenon that they broadly categorized as “madness”. The reason it is difficult to understand mental illness, especially in medieval Europe, is because it isn’t determined just by physical symptoms, but also the social and cultural label of “normal”. In his article entitled “Insanity in Byzantine and Islamic Medicine” Michael Dols (1984) states that “mental illness is then, more intimately dependent on social attitudes and beliefs than is physical illness.” He continues to say that, as a result of this, the care and treatment …show more content…

Using the DSM-5 we are able to identify the different types of mental illnesses, their hallmark features, and the symptoms required for diagnosis. The people medieval age had no such book for mental illness. This is not to say that they had no theory of mental illness because the people of the time did try to explain what exactly mental illness was. The main theory of the time stemmed from the writings of Galen during the Roman Empire in the second and third centuries (Dols 1992). Galen’s studies were inspired by Greek physician Hippocrates who came about 500 years before him (Dols 1992). Galen believed that the humoral theory suggested by Hippocrates is a valid explanation toward human physiology (Dols 1992). The theory states that the four elements of air, earth, fire, and water, exist within the human body as the four humors of blood, black bile, yellow bile, and phlegm (Dols 1992). Galen expanded on Hippocrates’s work and was able to have an extremely long-lasting impact on human anatomy and physiology (Dols 1992). This explains why medieval people, who are part of a very distant era, used Galen’s work as their main guide to explaining …show more content…

For instance, Galen believed that having little “psychic activity” could result in poor health of the mind (Dols 1992). Additionally, medieval Muslim physicians believed excessive alcoholic drinking could cause madness (Dols 1992). Other physicians suggested coffee could result in melancholia because the “cold and dry” quality of coffee could greatly affect those predisposed to the illness (Dols 1992). Another physician from the Middle East, az-Zarkashī, suggests that cannabis attributed to many illness including those that “destroy the mind” (Dols 1992). Furthermore, there were spiritual explanations toward madness. Both Muslim and Christian societies believed that madness could be a result of demonic possession, which displays that there is a cultural component to the idea of madness (Wallis 2010; Dols

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