Roman medicine vs. cranial surgery of the Barbars
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Section MISCELLANEOUS ROMAN MEDICINE VS. CRANIAL SURGERY OF THE BARBARS Bereczki Zsolt1 , Paja Lбszlу1,2 , Madбcsy Tamara1 , Pбlfi Gyцrgy1 1University of Szeged, Department of Biological Anthropology, Szeged, Hungary 2Hungarian National Museum, National Heritage Center, Szeged, Hungary Surgical trephination is a tradition known worldwide and it has been practiced since the Upper Paleolithic. <...> Its earliest written evidence dates back to the ancient Egypt. <...> Mostly as a method of wound treatment, surgical trephination was also known in ancient Europe following the works of Hippocrates, Celsus, Heliodorus and Galenus. <...> Despite the written sources and the abundance of bioarcheological remains from the era, very few trephined skulls have been unearthed so far from the territory of the Roman Empire. <...> The earliest evidence derives from the Neolithic. <...> The history of Hungarian trephination research was discussed in details in the works of Lajos Bartucz (1966), Tamбs Grynaeus (1996), Pйter Tomka (2000) and Lбszlу Jуzsa and Erzsйbet Fуthi (2007), but none of these works cite any Roman relics from the province of Pannonia (today Western Hungary). <...> A recently published article (Tóth-Kiss, 2008) describes a possible case of surgical trephination from the Roman Age, but the evidence introduced in the paper better corresponds to the diagnosis of enlarged parietal foraminae. <...> However, earlier publications have already mentioned 3 cases from Barbaricum, the Sarmatian territory partly enclosed by Roman provinces (today Eastern Hungary). 3 other Sarmatian cases of surgical trephination have also come to light during the excavations and the osteological research of the last decade. <...> The authors wish to give a detailed description of these 6 Sarmatian cases, compare them with accessible evidence of Roman trephinations from other imperial territories, and put forward a possible explanation of the controversy between the written resources and the osteological evidence. <...> Key words: surgical trephination, Roman Age, Sarmatians, Hungary, paleopathology, cranial surgery Contact information: Bereczki Zsolt, e-mail: bereczki.zsolt@bio.u-szeged.hu. <...> PREDICTORS OF ACCEPTANCE OF EVOLUTION IN MILWAUKEE, WI, USA Campbell Benjamin, Barone Lindsay Department of Anthropology, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, USA Recent research indicates that less than half of American agree with the idea that modern humans are the result of evolutionary processes that shape <...>
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