Roman Cataract Surgery

We most often think of the ancient world as a completely barbaric place - strictly speaking, it was of course - what with the freedom with which the Romans labeled everyone else, but that is beside the point here. People were not different people back then. They were the same types of people we have now, just in a different cultural and technological situation. It does not surprise me that the ancients had many “advanced” activities, constrained only by their relative technology.

Case in point, Roman doctors performed cataract surgery:

“Interestingly the Roman author Celsus described cataract extraction surgery using a specially pointed needle - and possible cataract needles (specilla) have been found in Britain as well as elsewhere in the Roman Empire.”

If you are one of those people who stay up at night stressing over what exactly the apostle Paul’s thorn in the side was, perhaps now you can rule out cataracts, since there was apparently a remedy for that.  Just trying to be helpful…

Posted by blestou on February 14th, 2008 — Illustration, Science, News, Culture, Doctrine, Tech, Uncategorized

No Comments

No comments yet.

Comments are welcome, but are loosely moderated. Please keep your speech clean and your tone respectful.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.