The Birth of the Hospital in the Byzantine EmpireJohns Hopkins Univsersity Press Timothy S. Miller ISBN: 0801856574 price: $19.95 paperback
Medical historians have traditionally claimed that modern
hospitals emerged during the latter half of the nineteenth
century. Premodern hospitals, according to many scholars, existed
mainly as refuges for the desperately poor and sick, providing
patients with little or no medical care. Challenging this view in
a compelling survey of hospitals in the East Roman Empire,
Timothy Miller traces the birth and development of Byzantine
xenones, or hospitals, from their emergence in the fourth century
to their decline in the fifteenth century, just prior to the
Turkish conquest of Constantinople. These sophisticated medical
facilities, he concludes, are the true ancestors of modern
hospitals. In a new introduction to this paperback edition,
Miller describes the growing scholarship on this subject in
recent years.
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