Only Online Auction

Geneva, Apr 07, 2021

LOT 316

Hauptmann
Veterinary surgeon's scarifier; wrought-iron and brass

CHF 250 - 500

EUR 250 - 500 / USD 300 - 550 / HKD 2,100 - 4,200

Medical instrument, known as a scarifier, used by veterinary surgeons to perform bloodletting and scarification, made of wrought-iron and brass, engraved with the cypher “B. G.”.


Grading System
Grade: AA

Very good

Brand Hauptmann, Germany

Year first half of the 19th century

Material wrought-iron and brass

Length 98.3 mm.

Width 48.2 mm.

Thickness 23.1 mm.

Weight 160 gr. (approx.)

Notes

Bleeding

Bleeding (or phlebotomy) is an ancient term for a blood sample taken from a patient to improve his or her condition. Known since antiquity, it was mainly from the 16th to the 18th century that it occupied a predominant place among therapeutic blood practices.

It is recommended by Hippocrates of Kos (c.460 BC – c.370 BC) and Galen (Aelius Galenus or Claudius Galenus; 129 AD – c.210 AD), in connection with the theory of moods (humoral theory). From the Renaissance onwards, it experienced a resurgence in popularity until it became a real panacea in the 17th century. However, some surgeons criticised it, such as Antoine Lambert (early-17th c. – c.1699) from Marseille, who considered it dangerous because it weakens the patient, being useless in many cases, such as the healing of ulcers. In Le Malade imaginaire (1673), Molière (1622-1673) satirizes the pedantic doctor, in the guise of Diafoirus, who treats all illnesses by bleeding, purging and clysters.

It was heavily criticised from the 18th century onwards, and its practice tended to disappear in the wake of humoral theory at the beginning of the 19th century, except for a few treatments such as that for gout. Pierre-Charles-Alexandre Louis (1787-1872) demonstrated its uselessness, particularly in the treatment of inflammatory diseases. In France, it was the alienist Philippe Pinel (1745-1826) who suppressed the practice of bleeding in the parisian hospitals of Bicêtre and La Salpétrière. The Austro-Polish physician Józef Dietl (1804-1878) is known to have demonstrated experimentally the harmfulness of the bloodletting practised by default.

Bleeding is still practised today in four medical indications: haemochromatosis, polyglobulia or Vaquez disease, skin porphyria and acute oedema of the lung.

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