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Learnings: Medieval Christian Medicine: Difference between revisions

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[[File:DTVA - Sick man praying at Cuthbert's Tomb.jpg|thumb|250px|A sick man being healed while praying at Cuthbert's tomb / 12th cent.]]
 
Early [[Middle Ages|medieval]] people believed demons and elves were to blame for some diseases, and would seek supernatural cures for them. In some cases, ailing patients would be prescribed a "religious" remedy. They would be encouraged to fast, pray, or go on a pilgrimage: a religious journey. The pilgrim in this illustration has travelled to the tomb of a saint in the hope of being healed.
Early medieval people believed demons and elves were to blame for some diseases, and would seek supernatural cures for them. In some cases, ailing patients would be prescribed a "religious" remedy. They would be encouraged to fast, pray, or go on a pilgrimage: a religious journey. The pilgrim in this illustration has travelled to the tomb of a saint in the hope of being healed.
 
One could also seek help from the saints: holy figures marked by their closeness to God. It was believed that saints could grant miracles and heal the sick. Christians could seek out something a saint had worn or touched, add it to a mixture, drink it, and hope that the saint's miraculous powers would do the trick.


One could also {{Wiki|Veneration|seek help}} from the saints: holy figures marked by their closeness to [[Christianity|God]]. It was believed that saints could grant miracles and heal the sick. Christians could seek out something a saint had worn or touched, add it to a mixture, drink it, and hope that the saint's miraculous powers would do the trick.
[[Category:Discovery Tour: Viking Age]]
[[Category:Discovery Tour: Viking Age]]

Latest revision as of 11:53, 11 April 2022

A sick man being healed while praying at Cuthbert's tomb / 12th cent.

Early medieval people believed demons and elves were to blame for some diseases, and would seek supernatural cures for them. In some cases, ailing patients would be prescribed a "religious" remedy. They would be encouraged to fast, pray, or go on a pilgrimage: a religious journey. The pilgrim in this illustration has travelled to the tomb of a saint in the hope of being healed.

One could also seek help from the saints: holy figures marked by their closeness to God. It was believed that saints could grant miracles and heal the sick. Christians could seek out something a saint had worn or touched, add it to a mixture, drink it, and hope that the saint's miraculous powers would do the trick.