01565nas a2200301 4500000000100000008004100001260001600042653001200058653001000070653001700080653002300097653002100120653001100141653002100152653001100173653001300184653000900197653001200206653001200218653001000230653002600240100001500266245004400281300001000325490000800335520090600343022001401249 1977 d c1977 Sep 0110aAnimals10aBible10aChristianity10aFoodborne Diseases10aHistory, Ancient10aHumans10aHydrogen Cyanide10aIsrael10aJaundice10aJews10aJudaism10aleprosy10aQuail10aReligion and Medicine1 aTullis J L00aAnnual discourse--don't eat the quails. a472-50 v2973 a
Physicians were the first individuals recorded by name in history. Their attempts to define disease influenced fundamentally the cultures and religions of the world. Surgical skills, although highly developed in ancient times, appear to have been less well documented historically than medical disorders. Because of the greater threat to survival that diseases posed, they became incorporated into religious customs. Contagious diseases also influenced greatly the laws, traditions and historical events of the Bible. Leprosy provided a physical example that presumably represented an image of sin, but it probably was no more prevalent as a disease during Biblical times than at present. Many of the Biblical stories assumed to be allegorical may have been founded on medical fact. For example, it appears likely that the quails that poisoned the wandering Jews were contaminated with cyanide.
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