Health and Wellbeing in the Ancient World
Offered By: The Open University via FutureLearn
Course Description
Overview
Understand Greek and Roman approaches to health and well-being
What did being healthy in ancient Rome or Greece look like? How can we tell what well-being meant in ancient times?
This online course will help you investigate these questions, using both literary and archaeological evidence, to uncover details of real life in ancient societies.
We will divide the body up into organs and systems, using each to explore ancient theories on the structure and function of the human body.
We will discover what ancient societies thought about topics that we still wrestle with today – from the relationship between mind and body, to sexuality, ageing and gender.
There are no special requirements for this course, but an interest in the ancient world or classics might be useful.
Syllabus
- What is health? Using the evidence
- Defining health
- Hearing ancient voices
- Keeping your finger on the pulse
- Health and identity: the face and eyes
- Vision in ancient times
- Healing the eyes
- Modifying the body
- Eating and drinking
- A regimen for everyone
- Archaeological evidence for food and health
- Food and drugs
- Sanitation
- Toilets and waste
- Sewage
- Doctors and excrement
- Conception, generation and sexuality
- Conception
- Birth
- After birth
- The ideal body: disability and wounding
- The ideal body and the real body
- The disabled body
- Recruiting and treating the soldier
Taught by
Helen King
Tags
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