The Medieval Islamic Hospital
The first monograph on the history of Islamic hospitals, this volume focuses on the under-examined Egyptian and Levantine institutions of the twelfth to fourteenth centuries. By the twelfth century, hospitals serving the sick and the poor could be found in nearly every Islamic city. Ahmed Ragab traces the varying origins and development of these institutions, locating them in their urban environments and linking them to charity networks and patrons' political projects. Following the paths of patients inside hospital wards, he investigates who they were and what kinds of experiences they had. The Medieval Islamic Hospital explores the medical networks surrounding early hospitals and sheds light on the particular brand of practice-oriented medicine they helped to develop. Providing a detailed picture of the effect of religion on medieval medicine, it will be essential reading for those interested in history of medicine, history of Islamic sciences, or history of the Mediterranean.
- Discusses medieval Islamic medical practice in detail, revealing how physicians at the time thought
- Explores how Islamic hospitals fit into the larger history of hospitals worldwide
- Considers art and architecture as crucial aspects in the making of hospitals
Reviews & endorsements
'… specialist and non-specialist alike will be enthralled by much of what the author has to tell them, as he unveils a medieval hospital world far too little known even to Islamicists, let alone historians of medieval Europe.' History Today
Product details
April 2018Paperback
9781107524033
281 pages
230 × 153 × 20 mm
0.43kg
8 b/w illus. 1 map 1 table
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- Prologue: a tale of two bīmāristāns
- Part I. Building a Bīmāristān:
- 1. From Jerusalem to Damascus: the monumental bīmāristāns of the Levant
- 2. Reclaiming the past: the (new) bīmāristāns of Egypt
- 3. 'The best of deeds': medical patronage in Mamluk Egypt
- Part II. Physicians and Patients:
- 4. Theory and practice: the reign of the bīmāristān physicians
- 5. 'A house for king and slave': the patients of the bīmāristān
- Conclusion
- Annex: who built the first Islamic hospital?