Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt
Ancient Egyptian dentists come into the spotlight in this dissertation. While some scholars doubt their existence, it is indisputably shown that not only did they exist as a profession, but evidence is offered as to the various diagnoses and treatments they rendered. The Ebers medical papyrus togeth...
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Online Access: | Greeff, Casparus Johannes (2013) Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13366> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13366 |
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-uir.unisa.ac.za-10500-133662018-11-19T17:14:30Z Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt Greeff, Casparus Johannes Vermaak, P. S. Ancient Egyptian dentists Dentistry Medical papyri Dental diseases Dental wear 617.60932 Dentistry -- Egypt Dentists -- Egypt Teeth -- Diseases -- Egypt Ancient Egyptian dentists come into the spotlight in this dissertation. While some scholars doubt their existence, it is indisputably shown that not only did they exist as a profession, but evidence is offered as to the various diagnoses and treatments they rendered. The Ebers medical papyrus together with other ancient similar medical ‘textbooks’ are analysed and prescriptions dealing with dental maladies are presented. Dentistry as a profession is elucidated in all its facets: diagnosing and treating dental diseases; prevention and care; and restorative and surgical treatment. This dissertation discusses dental anthropology as a vital part of bioarchaeology, which is the study of human remains in archaeological contexts in ancient Egypt. Dental enamel is the hardest material in the human body, and teeth are often preserved even when bones are not. Teeth are one of the most informative parts of the human body, and are incredibly well preserved archaeologically. Teeth provide insight into numerous issues that palaeodemography and historians are concerned with, including diet changes, general stress, how closely groups were related, and markers of social identity Biblical and Ancient Studies M.A. (Ancient and Near Eastern Studies) 2014-04-17T11:43:40Z 2014-04-17T11:43:40Z 2013-07 2014-04-17 Dissertation Greeff, Casparus Johannes (2013) Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13366> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13366 en 1 online resource (xx, 218 leaves) |
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Ancient Egyptian dentists Dentistry Medical papyri Dental diseases Dental wear 617.60932 Dentistry -- Egypt Dentists -- Egypt Teeth -- Diseases -- Egypt |
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Ancient Egyptian dentists Dentistry Medical papyri Dental diseases Dental wear 617.60932 Dentistry -- Egypt Dentists -- Egypt Teeth -- Diseases -- Egypt Greeff, Casparus Johannes Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt |
description |
Ancient Egyptian dentists come into the spotlight in this dissertation. While some scholars doubt their existence, it is indisputably shown that not only did they exist as a profession, but evidence is offered as to the various diagnoses and treatments they rendered. The Ebers medical papyrus together with other ancient similar medical ‘textbooks’ are analysed and prescriptions dealing with dental maladies are presented. Dentistry as a profession is elucidated in all its facets: diagnosing and treating dental diseases; prevention and care; and restorative and surgical treatment.
This dissertation discusses dental anthropology as a vital part of bioarchaeology, which is the study of human remains in archaeological contexts in ancient Egypt. Dental enamel is the hardest material in the human body, and teeth are often preserved even when bones are not. Teeth are one of the most informative parts of the human body, and are incredibly well preserved archaeologically. Teeth provide insight into numerous issues that palaeodemography and historians are concerned with, including diet changes, general stress, how closely groups were related, and markers of social identity === Biblical and Ancient Studies === M.A. (Ancient and Near Eastern Studies) |
author2 |
Vermaak, P. S. |
author_facet |
Vermaak, P. S. Greeff, Casparus Johannes |
author |
Greeff, Casparus Johannes |
author_sort |
Greeff, Casparus Johannes |
title |
Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt |
title_short |
Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt |
title_full |
Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt |
title_fullStr |
Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt |
title_full_unstemmed |
Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt |
title_sort |
dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient egypt |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
Greeff, Casparus Johannes (2013) Dentists, dentistry and dental diseases in ancient Egypt, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13366> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13366 |
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