Clasificación geográfica

Europa > Turquía

Movimientos socio-culturales

Antigüedad > Cultura romana > República

Grupos por ámbito de dedicación

Sanitarias > Médicas

Sanitarias > Farmacéuticas

Personaje
Lápida

Antiochis of Tlos

Tlos s. I a.e.c. ‖ Tlos s. I a.e.c.

Periodo de actividad: Desde 100 a.e.c. hasta 1 a.e.c.

Clasificación geográfica: Europa > Turquía

Movimientos socio-culturales

Antigüedad > Cultura romana > República

Grupos por ámbito de dedicación

Sanitarias > Médicas

Sanitarias > Farmacéuticas

Contexto de creación femenina

There is evidence that women carried out some medical and gynecological practices in the ancient world. Archaeological, epigraphic, papyrological, and literary testimonies prove it.

In Egypt, there were already female doctors or surgeons and around -1500 the schools of Sais and Heliopolis were open to women. The names of Sephorá and Queen Hatshepsut, among others, have come down to us.

In the Athens of the 4th century B.C., some women practiced medicine. There is a funerary stela from c.-350 that mentions a certain Phanostrata, of whom it is said that she was iatros (“physician”) and maia (“midwife”). Although in this city. They were prohibited from practicing, accusing them of performing abortions. Thanks to Agnodica, the medical profession was accessible to women who began to specialize, although not exclusively, in women's diseases.

After the conquest of Greece by Rome in -146, some doctors from the Greek world ended up practicing their profession in Roman territory where they excelled in their trade. Tradition has recalled some names such as Elephantis, Laïs, Olympias of Thebes, Antiochis, Metrodora, and Aemilia Hilaria... who not only acquired their knowledge practicing the profession but also wrote treatises making them available to their colleagues. They also enjoyed a certain social prestige and earned income from their professional activity.

Among the women who wrote on gynecology and obstetrics, the texts of Cleopatra, Aspasia, and Metrodora stand out, which were the most important until the work of Trótula in the s. XI.

 

 

 

 

 

Reseña

Physician of recognized prestige who practiced her profession around 100 B.C. in the same way as her male colleagues, treating both women and men and practicing the medicine of her time at a high level. Her contributions in the medical and pharmacological field earned her the respect of her fellow professionals, who recognized her and cited her as an authority on the subject. Her reputation survived over time. She played a prominent public role in her hometown.

Actividades

Justificaciones

  • Physician of recognized prestige for her contributions to the field of medicine. Her colleagues recognized her and cited her as an authority on the matter.
  • She practised in the Hippocratic tradition treating both men and women.
  • She had a prominent public role in his hometown.

Biografía

Antiochis lived in the 1st century BC. C. in Tlos, a city that was in the Roman province of Lycia and Pamphylia, south of present-day Turkey. The little that we know about her comes from a text inscribed on a statue base that she dedicated to herself in her hometown and from information provided in two of her books by Galen of Pergamum, the great physician of the imperial era. Both sources […] coincide in transmitting the image of a woman who acquired a position of respect thanks to the practice of medicine.

Antiochis was the daughter of Diodotos of Tlos, a physician quoted by Dioscorides in his work On Medicinal Matter. It is very possible that she was educated in the art of medicine by her father, following the custom of transmitting and maintaining iatric knowledge within the family circle. Over time, she independently developed these abilities. The text inscribed on the base of her statue indicates the public notoriety she enjoyed, as she had received recognition from the Council and the people for her expertise in the art of medicine. ("Antiochis of Tlos, daughter of Diodotus, praised by the council and people of Tlos for her expertise in the art of healing, has erected this statue of herself"). The fame that she had of her in her homeland of origin was extended to her professional colleagues in different places and times. Antiochis is not only one of the few women that Galen mentions in his work, but she is the one he quotes on most occasions. In one of them, she does it to reproduce the recipe for a medicine that this woman had invented, and which was indicated to cure diseases of the spleen, dropsy, sciatica, and arthritis. The usefulness of the recipe is endorsed by Asclepiades of Bithynia, a famous doctor established in Rome and a contemporary of Antiochus, of whom we know that he used this remedy to cure his patients. Another famous physician of the time, the empirical Heraclides of Taranto, dedicated several of his treatises to Antiochus on the most diverse clinical issues. Its medical activity was not limited to female illnesses but was applied to ailments shared by women and men.[...] It is an example of how, in Roman times, women could get involved in healthcare activities in fields other than gynecology and obstetrics.[…] 

María de los Ángeles Alonso. “Antioquis”, 250 mujeres de la Antigua Roma

 

Obras


Bibliografía

-Alonso Alonso, María de los Ángeles (2011). “Medicae y obstetrices en la epigrafía latina del Imperio romano. Apuntes en torno a un análisis comparativo”, Classica & Christiana, Nº 6, 2 pp. 267-296. 

-Alonso, María de los Ángeles (2022). “Antioquis”, 250 mujeres de la Antigua Roma, Sevilla: ed. Pilar Pavón.

-Dimopoulou, Athina (2001). “Medica, obstetrix, nutrix: les femmes dans les métiers médicaux et paramédicaux dans l’Antiquité grecque et romaine”, Saitabi, pp. 273-287.

-Moral Lozano, Maria de la Sierra (2011). “Mujer y medicina en la Antigüedad clásica: la figura de la partera y los inicios de la ginecología occidental,” Fronteiras: Revista de História, vol. 13, Nº 24, Universidade Federal da Grande Dourados, pp. 45-60.

-Pavón, Pilar (dir.), (2022). “Exposición Virtual: 250 mujeres de la antigua Roma” en Conditio feminae I: Marginación y visibilidad de la mujer en el Imperio Romano. Universidad de Sevilla, (retrieved on 10/11/2022), <https://grupo.us.es/conditiofeminae/index.php/2022/03/02/44-antioquis/>

 

Enfoque Didáctico

-CUC: Block Classical roots of today's world. Everyday life; Block Continuity of cultural heritage.  Literature, art and science.

-Latin 4th ESO: Legacy and heritage block.

-Latin Baccalaureate: Legacy and heritage block.

-History 1st ESO: Societies and territories block, referring to Rome.

Documentos