S2E1: Wandering Wombs: Greco-Roman Gynecology and Women’s Health

 
 

With Dr. Rebecca Flemming

In this episode, we sit down with Professor Rebecca Flemming  and talk about ancient gynecology, wandering wombs, and what agency, if any, women had over the healing of their bodies.

How did classical medical writers describe a woman’s anatomy and its inner workings? And how did those beliefs influence the treatments they prescribed? You’ll learn the gynecological ideas of people like Aristotle, Galen, and Soranus.

 
[Galen’s] natural world is this kind of normative, ordered hierarchical world.
— Dr. Rebecca Flemming


BIO

Professor Rebecca Flemming is the  A.G. Leventis Chair in Ancient Greek Scientific and Technological Thought at the University of Exeter and is Director of the Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health (WCCEH). Rebecca researches pandemics and disease; gender, bodies, and sexuality; and reproduction and society in the classical world. She has written Medicine and the Making of Roman Women, and co-edited two volumes: Reproduction: Antiquity to the Present Day (with Nick Hopwood and Lauren Kassell) and Medicine and Markets in the Graeco-Roman World and Beyond (with Laurence M. V. Totelin). She has also appeared in a BBC4 documentary on the Justinianic plague. She earned her MA and PhD in the History Department of Kings College London. A forthcoming monograph examines medicine and empire in the Roman World.

 
 

Cover Image:

The doctor Soranus’ treatise Gynecology was one of the most popular medical texts, even into late antiquity and the medieval period. It was copied and translated widely. The images in this ninth-century Latin manuscript show how he viewed the womb as a sack or leather bottle with a flexible neck.

Image Credit: Fetal positions in the womb. Illustration accompanying Soranus’ Gynecology. 9th century CE. Brussels, Bibliothèque Royale, ms. 3701-15, fol. 28r. Image from Wikimedia Commons.

 

Explore More

 

Women Who Went Before is written, produced, and edited by Rebekah Haigh and Emily Chesley. The music is composed and produced by Moses Sun.

Sponsored by the Center for Culture, Society, and Religion, the Program in Judaic Studies, the Stanley J. Seeger Center for Hellenic Studies. at Princeton University

Views expressed on the podcast are solely those of the individuals, and do not represent Princeton University.

 
Previous
Previous

S2E2: Virginity and the Hype About Hymens in Early Christianity

Next
Next

S2E0: Bodily Matters: The Lifecycle of an Ancient Woman