TWO HIPPOCRATIC TREATISES ON SIGHT AND ON ANATOMY STUDIES IN ANCIENT MEDICINE EDITED BY JOHN SCARBOROUGH PHILIP J. VAN DER EIJK ANN HANSON NANCY SIRAISI VOLUME 33 TWO HIPPOCRATIC TREATISES ON SIGHT AND ON ANATOMY Edited and Translated with Introduction and Commentary BY ELIZABETH M. CRAIK LEIDEN •BOSTON 2006 This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data A C.I.P. record for this book is available from the Library of Congress. ISSN 0925–1421 ISBN-13:978-90-04-15396-7 ISBN-10:90-04-15396-9 © Copyright 2006 by Koninklijke Brill NV, Leiden, The Netherlands Koninklijke Brill NV incorporates the imprints Brill, Hotei Publishing, IDC Publishers, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers and VSP. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Brill provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910 Danvers MA 01923, USA. Fees are subject to change. printed in the netherlands CONTENTS PrefaceandAcknowledgements ..................................... vii part i on sight . Introduction........................................................... 3 I.Title.............................................................. 3 II.TransmissionandReception................................... 4 III.ContentandExpression....................................... 8 IV.PlaceintheHippocratic Corpus:ProvenanceandDate..... 15 V.PlaceintheHistoryofOphthalmology........................ 19 ReferencesandAbbreviations........................................ 29 Bibliography .......................................................... 31 ConspectusSiglorum................................................. 37 TextandTranslation ................................................. 38 Commentary.......................................................... 49 GlossaryofOphthalmologicalTerms ............................... 113 Diagrams.............................................................. 115 1.TheEye:anteriorview.......................................... 115 2.TheHead:lateralview ......................................... 115 3.SectionoftheEyeball........................................... 116 part ii on anatomy . TheHippocratic Treatise OnAnatomy................................ 119 Introduction........................................................ 119 ReferencesandAbbreviations..................................... 121 TextandTranslation ................................................. 124 Commentary.......................................................... 129 Discussion............................................................. 155 I.Background...................................................... 155 II.Anat.andtheHC:content ..................................... 157 III.Anat.andtheHC:expression ................................. 162 IV.TheDemokriteandimension.................................. 164 V.Conclusion ...................................................... 168 vi contents Appendix.............................................................. 169 IndexofAuthorsandTexts .......................................... 171 GeneralIndex ........................................................ 181 PREFACE AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The two short texts published here, both transmitted in the Hippo- cratic Corpus but surely neither by the historical Hippocrates, are very different in nature and origins. On Sight is a sketchy surgical manual on eye afflictions, perhaps originating in North Africa, and On Anatomy anallusiveaccountofbasichumananatomywithevidentDemokritean connections. I am very grateful to Cambridge University Press for permission to republish here with slight alterations in presentation my article ‘The Hippocratic Treatise On Anatomy’ from Classical Quarterly 48 (1998), 135– 167.Theoriginalpaginationisindicated.AnAppendixhasbeenadded totakeaccountofanewBudétext:M.-P.Duminil,Hippocrate:CUFt. 8, Ulc., Oss., Cor, Anat. (Paris, 1998). The ‘background’ to On Sight is dis- cussed in my paper ‘The Hippocratic Treatise Peri Opsios’ in Hippocrates in Context, edited by P.J. van der Eijk (Leiden, 2005), 191–207; I hope readerswillrefertothisforamplification. I need not repeat all the acknowledgements made in note 1 of On Anatomy, but wish to reiterate thanks to the Wellcome Trust for the award of a research leave fellowship, which gave temporary relief from a demanding post at the University of St. Andrews, and facilitated a change in research direction. After a brief return to St. Andrews, I took up a post at Kyoto University in 1997. Work on the treatise On Sight was begun in Kyoto just before retirement in 2002. I have benefited from the comments of participants at several seminars in Japan, especially from those of Professor Noburu Notomi, who sup- ported presentation of the work in its very first and very last stages at Kyushu University in spring 2002 and at Keio University in autumn 2005. From September 2003 to September 2005 I held at the Uni- versity of St. Andrews an Emeritus Research Fellowship, awarded by the Leverhulme Trust, to complete this book. I am most grateful to the Trust for their support, which enabled me to spend some time in London at the Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL and to make brief visits to Cambridge, Oxford, Paris, Flo- rence, Modena, Rome and Venice to collate manuscripts. I express viii prefaceandacknowledgements thanks to all the hard-working librarians who have given indispens- ableaid. Iamparticularlygratefultotwoscholarswhomadetimetoreadand comment on a complete draft: Professor Vivian Nutton and Professor Philip van der Eijk. Professor Nutton saved me from Galenic error and Professor van der Eijk suggested that the work might be published in this series. I owe special thanks also to Dr Thomas Rütten who gave generous help with the manuscript tradition just when I most needed it. Professor Heinrich von Staden provided valuable bibliographical aid. In medical matters, I have been fortunate to be able to call on colleagues in the Bute Medical School, University of St. Andrews: Mr Robin Clark read sections of the commentary at various stages and gave much practical guidance and Dr David Sinclair organized and led a useful seminar on the anatomy of the eye. Above all, Dr Susan Whiten has provided essential information at many points and has very kindly supplied the diagrams, adapted from her book The Flesh and Bones of Anatomy (forthcoming, Elsevier Press). Mr David Spalton, a consultant ophthalmic surgeon in London with a special interest in cataractsurgery,communicatedhisgeneralviews ofthetext. Finally, I wish to thank Dr John Ball of IT services, University of St. Andrews, for adroit rescue from several technological impasses, and to express my gratitude to all at Brill involved in the execution of this complextask. part i ON SIGHT
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