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Medieval Wound Man

From The Public Domain Review, The Many Lives of the Medieval Wound Man, a diagram found in many medical texts beginning in the early 1400s.

Living on today in libraries from Copenhagen to Munich, the strange figure of the Wound Man gives modern viewers a glimpse of the worrying injuries that the medieval body could receive through war, accident, and epidemic. But at the same time, it shows that medieval people did not think of themselves as helpless victims in the face of these assaults. Far from reinforcing the common perception of the European Middle Ages as a backwards and bloody period of human history, the Wound Man reminds us that it was in fact a period busy with innovative medical treatments, a vital link between the long-standing cures of the classical world and developments that were to follow in early Renaissance medicine.

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Ryan B.

I mean... we're all one-hundred-thousand-percent thinking this, right?! https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/u18AAOSwTd9fTVlC/s-l1600.jpg

N
Noah (Oregon)

Yes. Me too!

For years I have had my students make drawings like these and then label all the injuries in both languages. The kids LOVE this activity because it combines art with gnarly wounds (and also teaches them how to talk about different body parts in the target language).

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M
Meghan Lowe

The book on this looks excellent: https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691243481/wound-man?srsltid=AfmBOop7fHhpAyEt-ZTn0XfojXFcc2ZptENmcjisuPeJRNyD9QVSD9md

Has anyone read his earlier book? I’m doing a deep dive into medieval books (fiction, non-fiction, retellings, you name it) and it also looks intriguing! (Other recs welcome!) 

S
Sara

Here’s a great interview with Harnell on Wound Man! https://www.patreon.com/CultureStudy/posts/meet-wound-man-140917495

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