Antall József szerk.: Pictures from the Past of the Healing Arts / Orvostörténeti Közlemények – Supplementum 5. (Budapest, 1972)

Preface

io logy, had been highly appreciated abroad. Real progress was achieved, how­ever, only after the War of Independence, thanks to the school which developed around J¾«os Balassa, Ignác Semmelweis, Lajos Markusovszky, Sándor Lumniczer, Frigyes Korányi and later with the appearance of József Fodor, Endre Högÿes, Sándor Korányi and Vilmos Tauffer. There was no lack in great physicians, but the state of public health and especially the availability of hospitals was most unfavourable by comparison to the countries of Western Europe. It was due to pecuniary troubles on the one hand and the lack of understanding on the other : the passivity of both leaders and broad masses towards public health. It will perhaps suffice to refer to the report of Kornél Chyzer, medical officer in the county of Zemplén to serve as an example, who speaks about the "regis­tered" midwives being paid a few pennies, some fried dough and half a litre of brandy in return for their services at a child-birth. Vilmos Tauffer struggled for half a century until he could change these utterly backward conditions. Besides the general underdevelopment of public health it is worth while saying a few words about the difficulties that even the greatest minds had to scope with. Ignác Semmelweis had only a few beds at his dieposal for proving his discovery which changed the whole field of obstetrics. But we may also refer to Pasteur who had to bow when entering his "laboratory". When all the world was hostile, how deep were the roots of the "misbeliefs" they undertook to exterminate ! In order to make successful research work in the future we must learn from our predecessors that knowledge combined with intuition ist not enough for creating new theories and their realization in prectice, but constant work, sometimes even courage are required, too, for defeating backwardness. Beyond the sphere of healing, medical history contributes also to a deeper understanding of the deeds and personalities of great historical personalities: leading statesmen, military leaders, representatives of certain branches of art and science. The actions of many historical personalities were influenced by their state of health, e. g. the illness of Nero or Napoleon, the fracture of Em­peror William's arm, etc. Victories of wars were nullified at once when an epide­mic broke out in an army. The recapture of Buda from the Turks was delayed a hundred years, since the liberating army which started from the West in 1594 could reach only Esztergom due to the dysentery which devastated among them. Sándor Korányi reminds us in one of his lectures on medical history that in France there was, in the 16th century great filth and squalor even next to the Royal Palace, as Paris had not yet been paved and provided with sewerage, which contributed to the erection of Versailles Palace. Magellan's long voyage round the world could not have been carried out without the observation that scurvy could be avoided by consuming onion and fresh vegetables. In the Fran­co-Prussian War of 1870-1871 the number of smallpox cases on the French side was higher than that of the wounded, while on the German side - thanks to the introduction of Lister's method - even the rate of recovery of the injured

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