Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x24gv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-01T18:52:34.631Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Early History of the Baghdād Boil

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 March 2011

Extract

The last few years have seen a great and almost universal interest in the history of medicine. It is strange that, in spite of the researches that have been made in the epidemics and diseases of ancient times, none of the writers who have worked on the various aspects of Cutaneous Leishmaniasis, as the Baghdād Boil is called in medical languagehas been able to trace the history of the disease before the nineteenth century. It is not as though it were a disease that could have escaped the notice of the ancients. Cutaneous Leishmaniasis is characterized by a superficial ulcer, sometimes as large as the top of a coffee cup, which runs a slow and protracted course. It is not as though it were a disease confined to some distant and uncivilized part of the globe. It is found in South America, North Africa, and all over the Middle and Near East. Why, then, is there no history of the disease ? Where did it start ? Who can claim the honour of introducing the Bouton de Biskra into Moroccothe Baghdād Boil into 'Irāq, the Delhi Boil into India, and the Tropical Sore into non-tropical Persia ?

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Asiatic Society 1934

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

1.Manson-Bahr, . Tropical Diseases. Third edition, p. 134.Google Scholar
2.Khān, Muẖammad A'zam. Iksīr-i-A'zam, vol. iv, p. 432. Lucknow edition, 1885.Google Scholar
3.Al-Qamarī, . Al-Ghannī wa al-Mannī. Discourse II, folio 304b, from the MS. in my possession.Google Scholar
4.Sīna, Abū 'Alī ibn (Avicenna). Qānūn, Book iv, 7, 3. Teherān edition.Google Scholar
5.Sobhy, . Glossary to Al-Dakhīra of Thābit ibn Qurrah, p. 22. Cairo, 1928.Google Scholar
6.Al-Harawī, . Baẖr-ul-Jawāhir, p. 201. Teheran edition.Google Scholar
7.Yūsuf, . Jāmi'-ul-Fawā'īd, p. 110. Meshed edition.Google Scholar
8.Uṣaybi'a, Ibn Abī. Ṭabaqāt-il-Aṭibba, vol. ii, p. 14. Leipzig, 1882.Google Scholar
9.al-Jurjānī, Isma'īl. Dhakhra-i-Khwārazmshāhī, Book ii, 1, 8, from the MS. in my possession.Google Scholar
10.Dhakhra-i-Khwārazmshāhī, Ibid., Book vii, 3, 8.Google Scholar
11.Ilyās, ManṣQūr. Kifāya-i-Manṣūrī, folio 183b of the MS. in the possession of the India Office, London.Google Scholar
12.Al-Harawī, . Baẖr-ul-Jawāhir, p. 71. Teherān edition.Google Scholar
13.Yūsuf, . Jāmi'-ul-Fawā'īd, p. 110, verse 248. Meshed edition.Google Scholar
14.Arzānī, Muẖammad Akbar. Ṭibb-i-Akbari, chap, xxiv, 36, of the MS. in the possession of the India Office, London.Google Scholar
15.Khān, Mīrza 'Abdul Ḥussain. Maṭraẖ-ul-Anẓār fī Tarājim-i-Aṭibba, vol. i, p. 266. Tabriz, 1916.Google Scholar
16.'Imād-ul-Dīn, . Risālah-i-Ātishak. Translated in the Annals of Medical History, vol. iii, 5, p. 466.Google Scholar
17.al-Rāzī, Bahā'-ul-Douleh Nūrbakhsh. Khulāsat-ul-Tajārib, chap, vii, folio 291, of the MS. in my possession.Google Scholar
18.Adler, . Journal of Tropical Medicine. 07, 1927.Google Scholar
19.Ditto, . 04, 1929.Google Scholar
20.Sykes, . History of Persia, vol. ii, p. 84.Google Scholar
21.Morier, . The Adventures of Hajji Baba Ispahani, p. 384.Google Scholar
22.Schlimmer, . Terminologie Medico-Pharmaceutique, p. 82. Teherān, 1872.Google Scholar
23.Adler, . Journal of Tropical Medicine, 04, 1929.Google Scholar