Artículos de revistas
Jesuits' medical and pharmaceutical manuscripts and the diets recommended for the sick (Brazil and Goa, 18th century)
Fecha
2021-07-01Registro en:
Antiteses. Londrina: Univ Estadual Londrina, v. 14, n. 28, p. 404-432, 2021.
1984-3356
10.5433/1984-3356.2021v14n28p404
WOS:000756076500001
Autor
Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)
Institución
Resumen
The corporal treatment of the people occupied a central place in the Jesuits' missionary activity. In addition to attending to patients in hospitals and infirmaries, religious from the Society of Jesus produced and recorded their medical and pharmacological knowledge in documents that, roughly speaking, can be called notebooks or collections of recipes. Amidst the manuscript documents of such typology that can be found in the Portuguese possessions in America and Asia, three of them, produced in the Eighteenth century, will be analysed: an anonymous one - which describes the Jesuit's apothecaries from the four corners of the world, another on from Goa, India and, finally, one attributed to the Jesuits, found in Brazil. The dietary recommendations that accompanied these drug formulas will be scrutinized, seeking to underline what should be consumed, avoided, or prohibited for patients during treatments. By considering these indications, the main objective of this brief essay is to perceive their understanding about illness and cure - including the most frequent ailments, as they deserved attention, and the references that supported their prescriptions -, in addition to the elements available to heal the sick.