Medical Instruments - Not for the Faint-Hearted
An exhibition at Caerphilly Castle shows some of the not so nice aspects of the Middle and Early Modern Ages: medical instruments. Some of them might look more like torture devices, and if you consider that anaesthesia was pretty much inexistant except for the rare and expensive case of access to opiates from the East, treatments like amputations or later, the extraction of a bullet from a wound, must have been a horrible experience for the patient. Nor do those enema syringes look invitating. *grin* Enema and bloodletting were pretty common due to the theory of humorism which requiered the four 'humors', the body fluids blood, phlegm, yellow bile and black bile to be in an equilibrum, and that many illnesses were caused by one of them dominating the others. Hence the purges.
Another view of Caerphilly CastleAs I already mentioned, the day I visited Caerphilly Castle there were fencing demonstrations, archers and musketeers in the yard, but entertainment was also going on in the great hall. The time was Civil War, not really Medieaval, but it was very interesting. Too bad I forgot to grab a flyer of the reenactment group.
The Great Hall, interiorOne lady made butter (tasted yummy), another showed how to card and spin wool, a third made soaps and scented lotions, to name some examples. One of the guys was a surgeon, and he brought some tools of his trade. Ouwie.
The omnipresent enema syringe, and bullet removal tongsIn the foreground are tongs for removing bullets from a wound. The surgeon would first poke around with the lancet and when he found the bullet, he'd insert the tong which worked a bit like a reverse screw driver. The bullet was caught and drawn into the metal stick and dragged out that way. No aneasthesia in sight except for filling the victim up with wine or stronger spirits. Mwuhaha. Chance that the wound channel would get infected was pretty strong.
Amputation knivesAmputations were common since often severe infection or gangrena would set it, and in case a limb was afflicted, cutting it off was a chance to save the patient's life. For some reason, the survival rate of an amputation was a bit higher. The knives were used to cut through skin and muscle down to the bone.
Bone sawThe really nasty part. Sawing through a bone hurts
worse than hell, as anyone who'd had a broken bone can attest (I can't *knocks on wood* and I don't want to try; my love for research has its limits, lol).
So I rewrote the end of the
innibränna scene to give the treatment of Thorgil more realism, and all scenes with Roderic after the torture in the dungeon of the Avodrite have been rewritten, taking into account he's left with several stiff fingers from the thumb screws and problems with his left shoulder due to the
strappado. Which makes for a lot of fun if he tries to use a sword. Evil, me? Nooo.