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brenden2014

Maya Medicine - 0 views

  • Three clinical diseases, pinta, leishmaniasis, and yellow fever, and several psychiatric syndromes were described, Athletes' foot and diarrhea were very common and fast cured with herbal medicine.
  • and turquo
  • The ancient Maya  perceived health as “balance”, whereas illness and disease were “imbalance”. Balance, however, was influenced by season and varied by age, gender, personality and exposure to environmental temperature extremes. A central medical-related theme held that balance was effected favorably or adversely by diet.
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  • Three clinical diseases, pinta, leishmaniasis, and yellow fever, and several psychiatric syndromes were described, Athletes' foot and diarrhea were very common and fast cured with herbal medicin
  • The Mayan culture also was preoccupied with science, art, government, marketing, philosophy, letters and health.
  • cities or the rituals of blood sacrifice by the leader/kings or priesthood.
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    Maya medical dieases
briantrevino

Health Issues - Ancient Maya - 0 views

  • The Maya thought that being sick was a punishment for a mistake or transgression.
  • Abdominal Pain
  • . Medicine Men relied a lot on what colour the plant was for what it was going to be able to cure e.g. Red leaves and plants for problems categorized with blood.
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  • ; Asthma; Colds; Disease of the Lungs and Breathing Passages
  • Diseases
  • of Women;
  • Bowel Complaints
  • Hair and Disease of the
  • Chills and Fever;
  • being hurt or sick was just as bad as having a criminal record.
  • Vertigo
  • Insomnia; Dislocations and Complaints of the Bones;
  • ; Fainting and Unconsciousness
  • Depression,
  • Scalp;
  • Insanity;
  • Poisoning
  • Skin Diseases,
  • Cancer and Tumour's;
  • Sunstroke
  • Ruptures.
  • being hurt or sick was just as bad as having a criminal record.
  • The Maya thought that being sick was a punishment for a mistake or transgression.
  • Medicine Men relied a lot on what colour the plant was for what it was going to be able to cure e.g. Red leaves and plants for problems categorized with blood
  • The average life expectancy for a Mayan man was between 50-55 and for Women was between 55-60. These are almost all of the health problems the Maya had :
  • Aches and Pains
  • illi pepper, c
  • Disease of the Lungs and Breathing Passages
  • Disease of the Lungs and Breathing Passages
  • Skin Disease
  • Headache; Hiccough; Inflammation
  • yellow fever.
  • sic way of purification was the sweat bath.
  • he most ba
  • Jaundice;
  • Sweating; Teeth and Gums; Urine (bladder problems); Wounds, Cuts, Bruises, and
  • The Maya related sickness with being possessed of their soul by supernatural beings.
  • being hurt or sick was just as bad as having a criminal record.
  •  
    The main health problem that the Maya's had was the "Yellow Fever"
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  •  
    Good Health Issues
  •  
    Health Concerns
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    The Maya related sickness with being possessed of their soul by supernatural beings.  
blakeg5

THE INCA STRUGGLE - disease, defeat, religion - 10 views

shared by blakeg5 on 04 Sep 13 - No Cached
  • illnesses such as smallpox, measles, typhus, scarlet fever and influenza
    • kastgre19
       
      HERE IS A GOOD NOTE!
  • A smallpox epidemic accompanied the Spanish conquest of Mexico and then continued south where it ravaged Inca communities and killed the reigning Inca ruler in 1525
  • A smallpox epidemic accompanied the Spanish conquest of Mexico and then continued south where it ravaged Inca communities and killed the reigning Inca ruler in 1525.
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  • A smallpox epidemic accompanied the Spanish conquest of Mexico and then continued south where it ravaged Inca communities and killed the reigning Inca ruler in 1525.
  • smallpox, measles, typhus, scarlet fever and influenza
  • illnesses such as smallpox, measles, typhus, scarlet fever and influenza
  • l of their vast Inca empire, as the ‘navel of the world’. It was the place of all major idols and temples of Inca civilisation and had been designed by the ninth Inca king, Pachacuti Inca Yupanque.
  • f the pestilence was an acceptance of European superiority and obedience to the commands of priests, landowners and tax collectors. The Spanish achieved their wealth and superior position through the labour of the Indians and established an oligarchy in South America. The Spanish colonial system
  • illness was sent by t
  •  
    Good List
jfelix2019

Maya medicine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 0 views

  • the Maya equated sickness with the captivity of one’s soul by supernatural beings, angered by some perceived misbehavior
  •  
    sickness
brenden2014

USC Dana and David Dornsife College of Letters, Arts & Sciences > Blog - 0 views

  • A hemorrhagic fever, which was called Cocoliztli,
  • Two epidemics of Cocoliztli, occurring in 1545 and 1576 respectively, killed a total of 13 million people.
  • Symptoms ranged from headache and fever to dementia, nodule formation, and bleeding from all orifices before eventual death. Interestingly, the more severe symptoms of Cocoliztli only affected the native inhabitants of Mesoamerica;
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  • here is no evidence supporting any single explanation for this dramatic population loss. The severe decrease may have been caused by decline in agriculture, social or political issues, or natural causes such as drought to name a few. Whatever the cause, it is certain that the Maya civilization had collapsed.
  • While there are obvious differences between the collapses during the Terminal Classic Period and the sixteenth century, both occurred during similar environmental conditions. Evidence indicates that during the years before both population declines, the region was facing a period of severe drought. As indicated by data from tree rings, a long drought happened from AD 700 to AD 900 that stretched as far north as the Southwestern United States
  • A hemorrhagic fever, which was called Cocoliztli,
  • Two epidemics of Cocoliztli, occurring in 1545 and 1576 respectively, killed a total of 13 million people.
  • Cocoliztli outbreaks
  • As is widely known, the Mayan people saw a significant loss in population starting around AD 770. There is no conclusive evidence indicating one specific cause of this collapse; most
  • likely, it was a combination of several contributing factors. Centuries later, Mesoamerica faced another widespread population decline in the 1500s. Again, it is nearly impossible t
  • pinpoint what caused this occurrence. The data indicate that disease may have been a causative factor in the Maya collapse, though the identity of the disease itself is a mystery
  • due to the lack of preserved human remains.
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    Tells about a fever that caused many deaths. 
tklinkefus

Climate, Not Spaniards, Brought Diseases That Killed Aztecs - The Crux | DiscoverMagazi... - 0 views

  • Acuna-Soto also had access to exhaustive diaries kept by Francisco Hernandez, the surgeon general of New Spain who witnessed the second catastrophic epidemic in 1576.
  • He described a highly contagious and lethal scourge that killed within a few days, causing raging fevers, jaundice, tremors, dysentery, abdominal and chest pains, enormous thirst, delirium and seizures.
  • hemorrhagic fever
tjmumm10

How the Aztecs cared for their diseases - 0 views

  • plants and herbal medicines
  • that were to be found.
  • its own special diseases, and syphilis came supposedly from the New World.
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  • treated by imploring the gods and using magical remedies, the Aztecs also had knowledge based on research and experience.
  • Among other things these gardens were used for medical research;
  • Aztec medical knowledge.
  • “laudable pus”
  • ‘In my own studies (Ortiz de Montellano 1990), I have shown that the Aztecs could produce the physiological effects (vomiting, diaphoresis, etc.)
  • that their ideas about the cause and cure of disease
  • folk medicines, in animal or laboratory tests, and even in clinical trials.
tklinkefus

What led to the Mayans collapse? | In a Realm of my Own - 0 views

  • Peregrinus maidis
  • The insect, Peregrinus maidis, is proposed to have been blown great distances and is known to wipe out entire crops (Brewbaker 1979). It is only deadly in places where maize is cultivated all year long. The spreading of the maize mosaic virus (MMV) can be noted by monumental date inscriptions from southern lowlands Mayan centres (Brewbaker 1979). The last inscribed date at the site known as Palenque comes in the year 799 while on the other hand; the final date at Piedras Negras comes in the year 795 A.D. (Brewbaker 1979).
  • In the humidity of tropical areas, the cultivation of maize is never free from pests and crop diseases. Pests include borers, worms of all natures and the weevils who harm stored grains (Brewbaker 1979). On the other hand, viruses and diseases that negatively affect the harvest include rusts, blights, stalk and ear rots and downy mildews (Brewbaker 1979).
brenden2014

Mayan Decline :: The Mayan Kingdom - 0 views

  • The causes for the Maya's decline are numerous, but one of the central causes is that the demands they placed upon their environment grew beyond the capacity of the land. At it's peak, there were about 15 million people occupying the Mayan world. Over-population of Mayan metropolises are suspected to have gone beyond levels that the Mayan political and social networks were able to support, resulting in social unrest and revolution. Frequent skirmishes by warring clans, such as the Toltec invasion of Chichen Itza, are suspected to have forced the Mayan populace to flee their cities. Recent studies have discovered evidenc
  • of severe droughts, deforestation, and a decline in large game animals that began around 800 A.D., coinciding with a sharp drop in new construction. Human bones found from this time show signs of severe malnutrition, which would have been a driving factor behind raids. While Maya civilization did go through a brief renaissance after this period, ongoing environmental constraints played a large role in their eventual decline.
kastgre19

Inca Food - 0 views

  • guinea pig which were often cooked by stuffing hot stones inside them
  • . The entrails would often be used as an ingredient in soups along with potatoes, or made into a sauce.
johansen19

An Incan Feast Before Death | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views

  • Now, a chemical analysis of four Incan mummies finds that children were fattened before being sacrificed
  • Andes have found shrines containing the frozen, mummified bodies of children adorned with necklaces, headdresses, and bracelets.
  • Others appear to have been left to die in the cold.
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  • 15-year-old girl, a 7-year-old boy, and a 6-year-old dubbed Lightning Girl because her corpse had been struck by lightning.
  • researchers found more sacrificed children on top of Argentina's Llullaillaco volcano: a
  • 15-year-old girl, a 7-
mullpres

Inca Encyclopedia Block C [licensed for non-commercial use only] / Medicine - 2 views

  • he Inca were very skillful people in medicine. The Incas believed that being sick was either a punishment from the gods or evil magic. The only way to cure the sickness was to go to a doctor or by magic. Every year disease and evil would be banished from Cuzco during the Situa Festival. The Situa Festival consisted of several day
  • The Inca medicine was amazing. The Inca doctors were consistently finding new herbs, minerals and trying new remedies and improving the old ones. The Inca doctors were in search for many new answers for great medical development and the healing power of the Inca medicine was extraordinary. As well as the religion and magical spells had a great part of treatment, which helped the patient believe he/she was cured. The fact that the person believed that they were cured freed endorphins in the blood stream, helping the body heal. 
klefeber

Aztec medicine - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - 1 views

  • the Aztec system recognised three main causes of illness and injuries—supernatural causes involving the displeasure of the gods or excess and imbalance with the supernatural and natural worlds, magical causes involving malevolent curses and sorcerers (a tlacatecolotl in Nahuatl),
  • and natural or practical causes. Establishing a treatment for any given ailment depended first upon determining the nature of its cause.
  •  
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