JEFFLINE Forum   Previous Page Table of Contents JEFFLINE Next Page
  by:
  email article     printer friendly version Page 12
Under the Volcano:
TJU's Ancient Surgical Instruments
from Pompeii and Herculaneum

There are currently 46 active volcanoes in the world. With the recent spate of volcanic activity on and off-shore of the Italian peninsula, one is reminded of the most famous eruption of all time: on September 24, in the year 79 C.E., Mount Vesuvius spewed ash and poisonous gases, obliterating the lives of thousands of Roman citizens and obscuring the ancient cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum for 1,500 years.
(click to enlarge)
TJU's Herculaneum Collection of ancient Roman medical instruments
Pliny the Younger (62-113, C.E.) orator and statesman, was an eyewitness to the horror and sent an account to his friend, the historian, Tacitus.

The significance of this event went beyond disaster. The daily life of an entire civilization was buried and therefore preserved for the modern rediscovery, which began in the 1750s and continues today. Among the countless artifacts recovered were several hundred medical instruments. These bronze tools, now encrusted in the patina of antiquity, were made for diagnostic, surgical and drug-dispensing uses. The exact locations where these items were found are not known because the 19th century treasure hunters did not follow the rigor of modern archaeological documentation. Caches of medical tools were found in the House of the Surgeon, the House of the New Doctor, and the house and pharmacy of the physician, A. Pumponius Magonianus.

The University Archives holds a collection of over 40 of these instruments, which were originally purchased by JMC Trustee and amateur archaeologist Daniel Baugh (1836-1921), and came to the medical school by the 1930s.
(click to enlarge)
Daniel Baugh, JMC Board of Trustee and philanthropist
Baugh, an industrialist, funded the eponymous Jefferson institute for the study of anatomy and also served as president of the University of Pennsylvania's University Museum from 1899-1901. Long believed to be genuine, it appears that this beautiful collection of instruments were replicas produced one hundred years ago by J. Chiurazzi and Sons, of Naples. Their catalog also offered convincing copies of ancient vases and furniture. Several U.S. universities have similar copies of these medical instruments in their collections.

Although our replicas do not have the same market value of the ancient items in the National Museum of Naples, they do share the intrinsic educational purpose and the esthetic, which had originally interested Mr. Baugh.

Related Links:

Send comments about this article to Forum.Jefferson@jefferson.edu.

Email this article to a friend     Printer friendly version



Page 12  
Previous Page Table of Contents Next Page
 

Maintained by AISR Education Services (edservices@lists.jefferson.edu)
Copyright © Thomas Jefferson University. All Rights Reserved.

The Thomas Jefferson University web site, its contents and programs, is provided for informational and educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice nor is it intended to create any physician-patient relationship. Please remember that this information should not substitute for a visit or a consultation with a health care provider. The views or opinions expressed in the resources provided do not necessarily reflect those of Thomas Jefferson University, Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, or the Jefferson Health System or staff.

Return to Thomas Jefferson University Home Page