Neurological and Neuropsychiatric Diseases through the Lens of Roman Sculpture
Neurological and Neuropsychiatric Diseases through the Lens of Roman Sculpture
Blog Article
Roman sculpture has often given the impression that it provides such a precise simulacrum of the nordic forge rounding hammer bodies of ancient Romans that their portraits can be studied autoptically as if they were a patient.Specialists in medicine and art-history have studied Roman sculptures to the point of producing real medical diagnoses, generating a research niche which, while controversial, has led to some interesting discoveries.However, scholars had sometimes misunderstood certain elements of ancient sculptures, interpreting aesthetic choices dale duby obsidian knives as clinical signs.
In this article several portraits from the Republican period to the Tetrarchic age will be observed, to assess if the diagnoses made on them are due to actual physical features of the individuals portrayed or not.This article analyses the strengths and weaknesses of the study of ancient pathologies through Roman sculpture to delineate the limits and the possibilities of such an approach.