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A Reappraisal of Psychiatry in the Middle Ages
Jerome Kroll, MD
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1973;29(2):276-283.
Abstract
Many popular histories of psychiatry accept prejudices equating the Middle Ages as the Dark Ages and thereby focus unduly on insanity as demonology. They fail to distinguish lay notions and professional approaches of the times, and ignore an unbroken tradition of medical empiricism.
Review of the origins of the Inquisition corrects the notion that it was established to persecute witches, hysterics, and lunatics. All natural events were viewed simultaneously as having natural and supernatural significances, and mental illnesses were not singled out from the entire range of private and public misfortunes, ranging from illness, accidents, famines, plagues, and the disasters of war. It was not until the Renaissance and the Enlightenment that the mass witchburnings and incarceration of the mentally ill occurred.
Author Affiliations
Orangeburg, NY
From the Rockland State Hospital, Orangeburg, NY.
Footnotes
Accepted for publication April 13, 1973.
Reprint requests to Rockland State Hospital, Orangeburg, NY 10962 (Dr. Kroll).
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