Museum of the History of Medicine in Zurich
Warning: This post contains images of historical surgical instruments, as well as pictures depicting diseases. For those who are sensitive, this can be quite a shocking sight.
As a student I worked every summer holiday. I usually went abroad, because the 2 - 3 months seasonal work in my home country was not very well paid. Besides, I was attracted to the unknown, I wanted to learn the language and other cultures. I usually went to Germany or Switzerland. I had the grate pleasure to get to know both countries quite well, but it was Switzerland that I fell in love. I lived near Zurich, in Wollerau. As Zurich was very close - I went there very often on small one-day trips. Usually I had some general plan, but almost always on the way I found something much more interesting. So, one day, by pure chance, I ended up at the University's Museum of the History of Medicine.
The exhibition is not open to regular visitors, so I was very lucky to find such a day. The number of displays is absolutely staggering!
The exhibition rooms are arranged chronologically, so that one can trace the history of medicine from the ancient times up to the present. The exhibits include not only surgical instruments and medicines, but also rooms furnished in the style of the period. We can see the interior of a doctor's office, the interior of a house with a - warning!- birthing chair. There are also instruments for examining the eyes, as well as a dentist's chair with drills which were driven by the power of one's own muscles! Becouse the pictures are very graphic, I have added a lot of pictures of eyeglasses from old times in order not to stress you too much with macabre views of these, so to say, instruments of torture.
It is very difficult for me to say what interested me the most, but I know for sure that I was permanently in shock after this exhibition. Many of the procedures and operations carried out, less than 100 years ago were just doomed to failure. Not only because of the lack of hygiene, but also because of imperfect tools. Don't get me wrong - I am truly in awe of the development of science, and all, but as we all know, it learns best from its mistakes. And historically, there have been an alarming number of those in medicine. I was appalled at how many children and women died in childbirth, how many people died from a simple tooth or ear infection, how it was possible to be burnt by X-ray apparat, etc.
Today I am showing you some of the pictures from this exhibition, some of which I think are a little less shocking, although you may still feel uncomfortable looking at them. I hope, however, that this will be an informative post and shed some light on the infamous past of European medicine.
Hope you Guys are well,
yours,
Strega Azure
Doctors Office
Traditional Swiss House
Domestic birth delivery chair
Some of the first successful X-rays and radiation burns
Surgical instrument cases, often used for home visits, most often in remote villages where there was no regular access to doctors
Rest your eyes - look at those cool glasses!
Not all about eyes is easy for eyes;/
Dentist Chair
Pics are my authorship if not stated otherwise, all rights reserved @strega.azure ©
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Gosh... Lots of things to see right here.
I know, I actually had to split pictures I've taken there, not only because I did hundreds, but it is not easy for eyes at times.
You did well. Thanks for sharing.
Wow. Thanks for taking us on a trip back in history with post.
That has been my first post in #pinmappple. I will soon put together next post about this museum soon enough!
A whole World of information right here. Thanks for walking us through it.
Popped in from #dreemport
Thank you for popping by! Glad you liked it!
Wow!!! Thanks for sharing this. I enjoyed it. If ever I have a chance to visit a museum about health, I would surely love it. It's so educational and informative to know how people do medicine in ancient times.
Popped from @dreemport.
I am very glad you liked it! More coming up soon:)
A very interesting museum. I, who am afraid of the dentist, should consider myself lucky to have been born in this era... Anyway, what struck me the most was the chair for having babies at home! Thanks for sharing these images! !PIZZA
Oh yeah... birthing chair. My skin actually crawled, to be perfectly honest!. At first I wasn't even sure what I am looking at. I was just overwhelmed.
So... Dentist as a profession has really interesting historical origin.
In olden days dental treatments were carried out by no other but a barber. There was also often a person who travelled from town to town, from village to village providing services. Nowadays dental treatment is almost painless, but in the past, not only was it without anaesthetic, but you could not really count on 'treatment' of the teeth as such. Usually it was the pulling out your teeth. If you were wealthy, you could have an artificial jaw or a tooth inserted. And here another horror begins. Various surprising materials were used, such as wood or - beware - animal teeth! Artificial jaws with gold, copper or silver teeth were extremely pricy!
The dentist's chair shown in the pictures was still in use until the late 1950s! My mother used to say that, when she was a child (I come from a very small village), there was such a chair in the office of her family dentist. Fortunately it was no longer in use then, even back then.
Thank you for stopping by, very glad, that you have found my post informative.
Thank you very much for the information on the history of dentists! It is very interesting and indeed, between the lack of treatment for dental problems and how dangerous infections were, it must have been a much more serious and painful condition than it is today.
By pleasure!
And yeah, it was plainly barbaric to be fair. But still - I find it extremally interesting!
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It's truly incredible how far medical science and technology has come in the last 100 years... granted there are some areas where I feel we have become beholden to pharmacology and it's control over our lives due to... you guessed it... MONEY! But there have been some amazing strides forward from the times depicted here in these images. So many people now survive simple ailments that would not have... only 100 years ago. With everything... a blessing and a curse, right? Great share, Strega! Fascinating... not sure I would have enjoyed looking at all the exhibits myself...I don't think have the stomach for it... but very interesting stuff! !PIZZA !ALIVE
I popped in from Dreemport this evening :-)
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What interests me very much in the history of medicine and history in general - are trends. Just like in every other area of life, even medicine has conformed to fashions.
I am talking only about plastic surgery - even though it started relatively early - but drugs that did not make people feel better at all.
Atropine, for instance, is a good example: women used to dripped atropine in their eyes to enlarge their pupils, which was once considered extremely attractive.
Thallium is another such example - it was used for decades in the form of creams, poultices. An element which allegedly cured tuberculosis, mycosis and venereal diseases. Despite the fact that its harmfulness was already known by the manufacturers, they launched a depilatory cream with thallium.
So yeah ... money. The same manufacturers, when a scandal broke out involving their products - people were dying after using thallium products - started to produce - mind you - thallium rat poison. Talking about multipurpose, eh?
What a nightmare.
Couldn't agree more! Thank goodness there is so much more awareness these days and people are more prone to questioning and pushback. There is definitely a place for allopathic medicine but not at the cost of integrity and the very thing it is seeking to secure and protect: good health! !ALIVE !PIZZA !PIMP
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