CHAPTER IV
GREEK MEDICINE AT THE DAWN OF HISTORY
It is from Greece and from Greece alone, says Daremberg,
that our modern medicine derives its origin.
It has come down to us, in a direct line, through the sheer force
of its inherent excellence, and with little or no aid from outside
sources. Harvey, Bichat and Broussais are as much the legitimate
heirs of Hippocrates, Herophilus, Galen, Berenger de Carpi and
Vesalius, as Hippocrates is the heir of Homer, and as this divine
singer of the anger of Achilles is himself the product of a civilization
that existed before his day and that was in all probability the
creation of Hindu influences.
It is to the development of medical knowledge in Greece,
therefore, that our attention should next be directed, and
more particularly to that period which belongs to the dawn
of history—the pre-Homeric period.
The pre-Homeric Period of Medicine in Greece.—The poems of Homer, the Iliad and the Odyssey, furnish us with the earliest and almost the only written evidence of the state of medicine in Greece during that period of time. They were probably written, according to the authority of the Earl of Derby, somewhere about 800 B. C., and modern investigations show that the siege of Troy, the theme of the Iliad, occurred between the years 1194 and 1184 B. C. These investigations also show that in this region, and especially in the Island of Crete and in Mycenae on the neighboring mainland of Asia Minor, at this time and probably several hundred years earlier, there existed a high degree of civilization. Specimens of a written language, for example, were found among the objects recovered from the ruins of the palace of King Minos at