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OverviewThey rode into battle with lances and prayers. Someone else stayed behind with a knife. The Crusades are remembered for their kings, their sieges, and their saints. They are not remembered for the men who worked in the blood and dust behind the fighting line, setting broken bones by torchlight, extracting crossbow bolts from muscle and stone, managing the dysentery that killed more soldiers than any sword ever did. This book is their story. Drawing on medieval surgical texts, Islamic medical manuscripts, Crusade-era chronicles, and the bone evidence recovered from excavated Crusader sites, A Sword for the Surgeon reconstructs the practice of war medicine across nearly two centuries of Crusading warfare. It moves from the organized hospital wards of the Knights Hospitaller in Jerusalem, the largest medical institution in the twelfth-century world, to the improvised field stations of the siege of Antioch, the epidemic camps of Damietta, and the blood-soaked beach at Jaffa where Richard I's surgeons worked through the night after the battle. Here is the arsenal of instruments that a Crusade-era surgeon carried: the probes and arrow extractors, the cautery irons, the soporific sponge soaked in opium and mandrake that served as the closest thing to anesthesia the medieval world possessed. Here is the medical encounter between Latin and Islamic traditions, between the empirical surgery of Salerno and the theoretical sophistication of Ibn Sina's Canon of Medicine, conducted on the same battlefields by practitioners who sometimes collaborated and sometimes watched each other make fatal mistakes. Here is the disease that defined every campaign, the dysentery, the typhoid, the scurvy at Damietta that rotted men's gums and left them unable to stand, treated with fresh fruit when it could be found and prayer when it could not. And here, recovered from the archaeological evidence at sites like Jacob's Ford in northern Israel, is the proof that some of it worked: the healed fractures, the old surgical interventions visible in bone, the bodies of men who took wounds that should have killed them and did not, because someone with a knife and a measure of hard-won knowledge decided they were worth saving. A Sword for the Surgeon is the first full account of Crusade-era medicine written for the general reader, and it restores to history a cast of practitioners whose names were never recorded and whose work has never been adequately recognized. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Edmund HalcourPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 0.50cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.145kg ISBN: 9798259359482Pages: 102 Publication Date: 29 April 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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