
Archives of Medical Science
This anatomical specimen dating to the 1200s is the oldest known in Europe.
By Stephanie Pappas
LiveScience
In the second century, an ethnically Greek Roman named Galen became doctor to the gladiators. His glimpses into the human body via these warriors'wounds, combined with much more systematic dissections of animals, became the basis of Islamic and European medicine for centuries.
Galen's texts wouldn't be challenged for anatomical supremacy until the Renaissance, when human dissections — often in public — surged in popularity. But doctors in medieval Europe weren't as idle as it may seem, as a new analysis of the oldest-known preserved human dissection in Europe reveals.
The gruesome specimen, now in a private collection, consists of a human head and shoulders with the top of the skull and brain removed. Rodent nibbles and insect larvae trails mar the face. The arteries are filled with a red "metal wax" compound that helped preserve the body. [Gallery: Historic Images of Human Anatomy]
The preparation of the specimen was surprisingly advanced. Radiocarbon dating puts the age of the body between A.D. 1200 and A.D. 1280, an era once considered part of Europe's anti-scientific "Dark Ages." In fact, said study researcher Philippe Charlier, a physician and forensic scientist at University Hospital R. Poincare in France, the new specimen suggests surprising anatomical expertise during this time period.
"It's state-of-the-art," Charlier told LiveScience. "I suppose that the preparator did not do this just one time, but several times, to be so good at this."

Archives of Medical Science
The skullcap and brain of this man were removed in preparing the anatomical specimen.
Myths of the middle ages
Historians in the 1800s referred to the Dark Ages as a time of illiteracy and barbarianism, generally pinpointing the time period as between the fall of the Roman Empire and somewhere in the Middle Ages. To some, the Dark Ages didn't end until the 1400s, at the advent of the Renaissance.
But modern historians see the Middle Ages quite differently. That's because continued scholarship has found that the medieval period wasn't so ignorant after all. [Busted! 10 Medieval Myths]
"There was considerable scientific progress in the later Middle Ages, in particular from the 13th century onward," said James Hannam, an historian and author of "The Genesis of Science: How the Christian Middle Ages Launched the Scientific Revolution" (Regnery Publishing, 2011).
For centuries, the advancements of the Middle Ages were forgotten, Hannam told LiveScience. In the 16th and 17th centuries, it became an "intellectual fad," he said, for thinkers to cite ancient Greek and Roman sources rather than scientists of the Middle Ages. In some cases, this involved straight-up fudging. Renaissance mathematician Copernicus, for example, took some of his thinking on the motion of the Earth from Jean Buridan, a French priest who lived between about 1300 and 1358, Hannam said. But Copernicus credited the ancient Roman poet Virgil as his inspiration.
Much of this selective memory stemmed from anti-Catholic feelings by Protestants, who split from the church in the 1500s.
As a result, "there was lots of propaganda about how the Catholic Church had been holding back human progress, and it was great that we were all Protestants now," Hannam said.
Anatomical dark ages?
From this anti-Catholic sentiment arose a great many myths, such as the idea that everyone believed the world to be flat until Christopher Columbus sailed to the Americas. ("They thought nothing of the sort," Hannam said.)
Similarly, Renaissance propagandists spread the rumor that the Medieval Christian church banned autopsy and human dissection, holding back medical progress.
In fact, Hannam said, many societies have banned or limited the carving up of human corpses, from the ancient Greeks and Romans to early Europeans (that's why Galen was stuck dissecting animals and peering into gladiator wounds). But autopsies and dissection were not under a blanket church ban in the Middle Ages. In fact, the church sometimes ordered autopsies, often for the purpose of looking for signs of holiness in the body of a supposedly saintly person.
The first example of one of these "holy autopsies" came in 1308, when nuns conducted a dissection of the body of Chiara of Montefalco, an abbess who would be canonized as a saint in 1881. The nuns reported finding a tiny crucifix in the abbess' heart, as well as three gallstones in her gallbladder, which they saw as symbolic of the Holy Trinity.
Other autopsies were entirely secular. In 1286, an Italian physician conducted autopsies in order to pinpoint the origin of an epidemic, according to Charlier and his colleagues.
Some of the belief that the church frowned on autopsies may have come from a misinterpretation of a papal edict from 1299, in which the Pope forbade the boiling of the bones of dead Crusaders. That practice ensured Crusaders' bones could be shipped back home for burial, but the Pope declared the soldiers should be buried where they fell.
"That was interpreted in the 19th century as actually being a stricture against human dissection, which would have surprised the Pope," Hannam said.
Well-studied head
While more investigation of the body was going on in the Middle Ages than previously realized, the 1200s remain the "Dark Ages" in the sense that little is known about human anatomical dissections during this time period, Charlier said. When he and his colleagues began examining the head-and-shoulders specimen, they suspected it would be from the 1400s or 1500s.
"We did not think it was so antique," Charlier said.
But radiocarbon dating put the specimen firmly in the 1200s, making it the oldest European anatomical preparation known. Most surprisingly, Charliersaid, the veins and arteries are filled with a mixture of beeswax, lime and cinnabar mercury. This would have helped preserve the body as well as give the circulatory system some color, as cinnabar mercury has a red tint.
Thus, the man's body was not simply dissected and tossed away; it was preserved, possibly for continued medical education, Charlier said. The man's identity, however, is forever lost. He could have been a prisoner, an institutionalized person or perhaps a pauper whose body was never claimed, the researchers write this month in the journal Archives of Medical Science.
The specimen, which is in private hands, is set to go on display at the Parisian Museum of the History of Medicine, Charlier said.
"This is really interesting from a historical and archaeological point of view," Charlier said, adding, "We really have a lack of skeletons and anthropological pieces."
Email Stephanie Pappas or follow her @sipappas. Follow LiveScience on Twitter @livescience, on Facebook or Google+. Original article on LiveScience.com.
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I can just see these 12th Century 'physicians'standing around this thing. . .
"Inside the skull, we find the brain. . .it's where all the ill humors are filtered. Now here we have the spleen, which is the seat of all emotion. Further down here. . . . ."
Gotta love this christian revisionist article. Of course they learned about the human body during this time, the church was certainly a leader in things like judas cradles, brazen bull, heretics fork, lead sprinkler.. etc.
Yes, christians led the way in science during the dark ages.. what utter BS.
Funny the article mentions Copernicus who's discoveries were disavowed by that very same catholic church when Galileo picked up where he left off.
Yes, very progressive.
Myths of the middle ages
With the Dark Ages resuming in the Late 20th and Early 21th Century before we lost track altogether.
I love the way they sneak in "Islamic" without mentioning that Muslim science is STILL in the Dark Ages.
How would that be relevant to the subject of the article?
Also, do you know anything about Muslim science in the Middle Ages?
rachetl-
Check up on the House of Wisdom to some idea of how much the Europeans have a debt to the Muslim people's ancestors.At a time when the most important libraries of Western countries only contained perhaps a few dozen books, and were struggling, that library had 400,000! *With it's ruler inviting scholars to come from all places to learn the latest science,mathematics, astronomy, (including ideas which influenced Copernicus), Philosophy-(preserving the works of Plato and Aristotle for modern times), medicine,historical records, etc.This library literally changed European countries futures by forming the basis for the Renaissance that followed. Scholars came from around the world, invited to learn. Bringing books to be copied, while copying books there to bring back.Included in this group, were a few Christians. If this were to have happened in modern times, it would be like us having the USS Enterprise from Star Trek, the Movie show up.
How pathetic you think they "sneaked" in Islamic, when the world owes so much to what these people's ancestors did for humanity. There has been a cycle of learning, gaining great knowledge, only to have it lost time and again. Ages of enlightenment, followed by great collapse and darkness, cruelty and inhumanity, evil works done upon man to his fellow man.Problem is, we haven't been able to change the heart of men, so easily tempted to retain hatred and prejudice.
How tragic that with all of man's getting, he has not been able to gain and sustain wisdom.For always, evil and war follow.No matter what label or guise the mask put on in front and label. Power and its twin corruption is to be found in politics, economics, religion, ethic race divisions, social class struggles, land disputes, and what ever else we think of.
It looks like man has been trying to figure out how his body works for some time, same with his brain, leading to ways helping him live longer and think better, when illnesses strike him.But I don't think he will ever be able to figure out the human heart, and a way to protect it from the evil which allows intolerance, prejudice, hatred and other feelings that cause so much death, suffering,intolerance and ugliness to exist.Something that no doubt, the ancients never found a cure for either. Which frustrated them I am sure every bit as much as it does for so many in our day.
* It is estimated Alexander's Great Library was perhaps 500,000.But many of these would have been duplicates, spread out among several buildings.Where as the House of Wisdom collection was held in just one building. Existed 9th-13th Century
Just think how much with interest a late fee would be?
Another attempt of eurocentric ideology rewriting their history while stealing the legacies of the rest of the world.
The DarK Ages are a culmination of europes history, europes science, europes philosophy and european religion and superstitious beliefs. One article and one privately owned artifact (suspect) doesn't amount to anything but more lies.
I suspect that once this guys skull was split open by the barbaric culture of fights and sacrifices, natural curiosity just followed and folks started exploring his open brain.. thats how science was born.