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Tacuinum Sanitatis

Taqwīm aṣ‑Ṣiḥḥa (Arabic: تقويم الصحة, lit.'Maintenance of Health') is originally an 11th-century Arab medical treatise by ibn Butlan of Baghdad.[1] In the West, the work is known by the Latinized name taken by its translations: Tacuinum (sometimes Taccuinum) Sanitatis.[2]

Tacuinum Sanitatis
Ibn Butlan's Tacuinum sanitatis, Rhineland, 2nd half of 15th c.
AuthorIbn Butlan
Original titleTaqwīm as‑Siḥḥa
CountryBaghdad under Abbasid Caliphate
LanguageArabic
Subjectshealth and wellbeing
Genresmedical
Publication date
11th century
TextTacuinum Sanitatis online

The Taccuinum Sanitatis is a medieval handbook mainly on health aimed at a cultured lay audience. The text exists in several variant Latin versions, the manuscripts of which are profusely illustrated. "Neither religious nor scientific motives could explain the incentive to create such an image; only a cultured lay audience [...] could have commissioned and then perused these delightful pages."[3] Numerous European versions were made in increasing numbers in the 14th and 15th centuries.[4]

History edit

 
Tacuinum Sanitatis, Lombardy, late 14th century (Biblioteca Casanatense, Rome).

The British Library possesses in its Oriental Manuscripts collection a presentation copy of Taqwīm as‑Siḥḥa from 1213 copied in Arabic for al-Malik al-Ẓāhir, son of Saladin.[5]

The terse paragraphs of the treatise were freely translated into Latin in mid-13th century Palermo or Naples,[6] which continued an Italo-Norman tradition as one of the prime sites for peaceable intercultural contact between the Islamic and European worlds. One translation was made in King Manfred of Sicily's court between 1254 and 1266.[4] "Magister Faragius" (Ferraguth) in Naples took responsibility for one translation into Latin, in a manuscript in the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris, MS Lat. 15362 (noted by Witthoft 1978:58 note 9).

Four handsomely illustrated complete late 14th-century manuscripts of the Tacuinum, all produced in Lombardy, survive, in Vienna, Paris, Liège and Rome, as well as scattered illustrations from others, as well as 15th-century codices.[7] Carmelia Opsomer published a commented facsimile of the ms 1041 held in the library of the university of Liège.[8] Unillustrated manuscripts present a series of tables, with a narrative commentary on the facing pages. The Tacuinum was first printed in 1531.

The Tacuinum was very popular in Western Europe in the Late Middle Ages; an indication of that popularity is the use of the word taccuino in modern Italian to mean "notebook".

 
Harvesting garlic, from Tacuinum Sanitatis, c. 1400 (Bibliothèque nationale, Paris)

In addition to its importance for the study of medieval medicine, the Tacuinum is also of interest in the study of agriculture and cooking; for example, one of the earliest identifiable images of the carrot—a modern plant—is found in it. Carrots also appears in the Greek herbal encyclopedias of Dioscorides, illustrated by a Byzantine 512 AD.

In 2008, the Spanish publishing house M. Moleiro Editor published the first and only facsimile of the Tacuinum Sanitatis kept at the Bibliothèque nationale de France, in an edition limited to 987 copies.[9] This edition was accompanied by a commentary volume by Alain Touwaide (Smithsonian), Eberhard König (Freie Universität Berlin) and Carlos Miranda García-Tejedor (Doctor in History).

Structure and content edit

Though describing in detail the beneficial and harmful properties of foods and plants, it is far more than a herbal. Listing its contents organically rather than alphabetically, it sets forth the six essential elements for well-being:

  • sufficient food and drink in moderation,
  • fresh air,
  • alternations of activity and rest,
  • alternations of sleep and wakefulness,
  • secretions and excretions of humours, and finally
  • the effects of states of mind.

Tacuinum Sanitatis says that illnesses result from imbalance of these elements.

Depending on the translation, the Tacuinum Sanitatis consists of a number of horticulture remedies for a variety of conditions and circumstances. One compilation of the Tacuinum Sanitatis that combines the text from all four of the existing manuscripts includes forty-eight different vegetables, fruits, and clothes. Each of the sections isolates a single remedy and considers the ways that the remedy is useful, the possible consequences, methods to mitigate the consequences, and the beneficial qualities.[10]

Although the exact taxonomic classification of each plant is uncertain due to differences between manuscripts and errors during translation, the remedies described in the Tacuinum Sanitatiscan still be loosely identified. The manuscripts describe root vegetables, alliums, leafy vegetables, cucurbits, other vegetables, temperate fruits, subtropical fruits, nuts, flowers, herbs, and even clothing material. The exact identity of the plant species are not always certain, as they are often labeled with Arabic words.

There are several categories of vegetables present in the various manuscripts. Root vegetables of the manuscripts include radishes (Rafani), turnips (rappe), parsnips (pastinace), and carrots (also pastinace). The alliums represented are onions (cepe), leeks (pori), and garlic (alea). The leaf vegetables included are kale (caules onati), lettuce (lactuce), and spinach (spinachie). Cucumber (cucumeres et citruli), melon (melones indi et palestini), watermelon (Melones dulces/insipidi), and bottle gourd (cucurbite) are present for the Cucurbitaceae. Other vegetables include asparagus (sparagus), cowpea (faxioli), and eggplant (melongiana).

Another main category within the manuscripts is fruits, including temperate fruits--grape (uve), apple (mala acetosa or mala dulcis), pear (pira), peach (persica), and cherry (cerosa acetosa or cerosa dulcia)--and subtropical fruits--lemon (citra) and pomegranate (granata acetosa).

Other items beyond vegetables and fruits are presented as remedies for conditions, such as nuts, flowers, and herbs. These remedies include chestnut (castanee), hazelnut (avelane), rose (roxe), lily (lilia), violet (viole), sage (salvia), marjoram (maiorana), and dill (aneti). However, the above examples are not a comprehensive list of every remedy included in all of the manuscript editions—some of these items are included in multiple manuscripts, whereas others are missing or additional remedies included.[11][10]

Within each entry of a remedy, a few qualities and uses are explained. The optimal state of the plant for medicinal use is described, such as the quality of the plant leaves. The entries include not only the benefits from the item, but also the potential dangers from using the remedy, similar to a list of side effects from modern medicine. However, the dangers described can be mitigated by a neutralizing element that is also included. Additionally, there is also typically an image corresponding to the item that is prescribed.[10]

The detailed images that accompany each remedy typically offer skewed depictions of the agricultural process, including placing too much emphasis on plant size and production, although these drawings exhibit better quality depictions of agriculture than similar images from that time. Many of the images depict people in the process of harvesting the crop instead of administering the remedy from the plant. Thus, there is a degree to which horticulture is also presented alongside the medicinal qualities of plants, however, the quality of the depictions can make identifying the species difficult.[11]

Notes edit

  1. ^ E. Wickersheimer, "Les Tacuini Sanitatis et leur traduction allemande par Michel Herr", Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance 12 1950:85-97.
  2. ^ Forbes, Andrew ; Henley, Daniel; Henley, David (2013). 'Tacuinum Sanitatis' in: Health and Well Being: A Medieval Guide. Chiang Mai: Cognoscenti Books. ASIN:B00DQ5BKFA
  3. ^ Witthoft, Brucia (January 1978). "The Tacuinum Sanitatis: A Lombard Panorama". Gesta. 17 (1): 50. doi:10.2307/766712.
  4. ^ a b Thomas, Marcel (1980). The Golden Age: Manuscript Painting at the Time of Jean, Duc de Berry. London, England: Book Club Associates. p. 42.
  5. ^ "Taqwīm al-ṣiḥḥah تقويم الصحّة Ibn Buṭlān ابن بطلان". Qatar Digital Library. 2015-03-11. Retrieved 2019-07-24.
  6. ^ Dioscorides Pedanius; of Anazarbos. "On Plants - Historia Plantarum". World Digital Library. Retrieved 2014-06-20.
  7. ^ Witthoft 1978 discusses the Tacuina in the national libraries of Paris and Vienna, and the Biblioteca Casanatense, Rome.
  8. ^ L’Art de vivre en santé. Images et recettes du Moyen Âge. Le « Tacuinum sanitatis » (ms 1041) de la Bibliothèque universitaire de Liège, éd. de C. Opsomer, Liège, 1991.
  9. ^ Albino Mallo, "Moleiro clona códices de los siglos XI y XII con el arte de la perfección", Xornal, January 2, 2009.
  10. ^ a b c "Tacuinum Sanitatis". www.godecookery.com. Retrieved 2020-11-20.
  11. ^ a b Janick, Jules; Daunay, Marie Christine; Paris, Harry (2010-11-01). "Horticulture and Health in the Middle Ages: Images from the Tacuinum Sanitatis". HortScience. 45 (11): 1592–1596. doi:10.21273/HORTSCI.45.11.1592. ISSN 0018-5345.

Bibliography edit

  • Janick, Jules; Daunay, Marie Christine; Paris, Harry (November 2010). "Horticulture and Health in the Middle Ages: Images from the Tacuinum Sanitatis". HortScience. 45 (11): 1592–1596. doi:10.21273/HORTSCI.45.11.1592. S2CID 86510163.
  • Henley, David. 'Tacuinum Sanitatis' in: Health and Well Being: A Primitive Medieval Guide. Chiang Mai: Cognoscenti Books, 2013.
  • Hoeniger, Kathleen. "The Illuminated Tacuinum Sanitatis Manuscripts from Northern Italy ca. 1380-1400: Sources, Patrons, and the Creation of a New Pictorial Genre." In Visualizing Medieval Medicine and Natural History, 1200-1550, eds. Jean Ann Givens, Karen Reeds, Alain Touwaide, 51–81. Aldershot, UK: Ashgate, 2006.
  • Opsomer, C., ed. L’Art de vivre en santé. Images et recettes du Moyen Âge. Le « Tacuinum sanitatis » (ms 1041) de la Bibliothèque universitaire de Liège. Liège, 1991.
  • Wickersheimer, E. "Les Tacuini Sanitatis et leur traduction allemande par Michel Herr", Bibliothèque d'Humanisme et Renaissance 12 1950:85-97.
  • Witthoft, Brucia. "The Tacuinum Sanitatis: A Lombard Panorama." Gesta 17, no. 1 (1978) :49-60.

External links edit

  • Tacuinum Sanitatis site on the M. Moleiro Editor website
  • The Tacuinum Sanitatis in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung
  • Introductory text (Spanish) and some illustrations

tacuinum, sanitatis, taqwīm, aṣ, Ṣiḥḥa, arabic, تقويم, الصحة, maintenance, health, originally, 11th, century, arab, medical, treatise, butlan, baghdad, west, work, known, latinized, name, taken, translations, tacuinum, sometimes, taccuinum, sanitatis, butlan, . Taqwim aṣ Ṣiḥḥa Arabic تقويم الصحة lit Maintenance of Health is originally an 11th century Arab medical treatise by ibn Butlan of Baghdad 1 In the West the work is known by the Latinized name taken by its translations Tacuinum sometimes Taccuinum Sanitatis 2 Tacuinum SanitatisIbn Butlan s Tacuinum sanitatis Rhineland 2nd half of 15th c AuthorIbn ButlanOriginal titleTaqwim as SiḥḥaCountryBaghdad under Abbasid CaliphateLanguageArabicSubjectshealth and wellbeingGenresmedicalPublication date11th centuryTextTacuinum Sanitatis onlineThe Taccuinum Sanitatis is a medieval handbook mainly on health aimed at a cultured lay audience The text exists in several variant Latin versions the manuscripts of which are profusely illustrated Neither religious nor scientific motives could explain the incentive to create such an image only a cultured lay audience could have commissioned and then perused these delightful pages 3 Numerous European versions were made in increasing numbers in the 14th and 15th centuries 4 Contents 1 History 2 Structure and content 3 Notes 4 Bibliography 5 External linksHistory edit nbsp Tacuinum Sanitatis Lombardy late 14th century Biblioteca Casanatense Rome The British Library possesses in its Oriental Manuscripts collection a presentation copy of Taqwim as Siḥḥa from 1213 copied in Arabic for al Malik al Ẓahir son of Saladin 5 The terse paragraphs of the treatise were freely translated into Latin in mid 13th century Palermo or Naples 6 which continued an Italo Norman tradition as one of the prime sites for peaceable intercultural contact between the Islamic and European worlds One translation was made in King Manfred of Sicily s court between 1254 and 1266 4 Magister Faragius Ferraguth in Naples took responsibility for one translation into Latin in a manuscript in the Bibliotheque Nationale Paris MS Lat 15362 noted by Witthoft 1978 58 note 9 Four handsomely illustrated complete late 14th century manuscripts of the Tacuinum all produced in Lombardy survive in Vienna Paris Liege and Rome as well as scattered illustrations from others as well as 15th century codices 7 Carmelia Opsomer published a commented facsimile of the ms 1041 held in the library of the university of Liege 8 Unillustrated manuscripts present a series of tables with a narrative commentary on the facing pages The Tacuinum was first printed in 1531 The Tacuinum was very popular in Western Europe in the Late Middle Ages an indication of that popularity is the use of the word taccuino in modern Italian to mean notebook nbsp Harvesting garlic from Tacuinum Sanitatis c 1400 Bibliotheque nationale Paris In addition to its importance for the study of medieval medicine the Tacuinum is also of interest in the study of agriculture and cooking for example one of the earliest identifiable images of the carrot a modern plant is found in it Carrots also appears in the Greek herbal encyclopedias of Dioscorides illustrated by a Byzantine 512 AD In 2008 the Spanish publishing house M Moleiro Editor published the first and only facsimile of the Tacuinum Sanitatis kept at the Bibliotheque nationale de France in an edition limited to 987 copies 9 This edition was accompanied by a commentary volume by Alain Touwaide Smithsonian Eberhard Konig Freie Universitat Berlin and Carlos Miranda Garcia Tejedor Doctor in History Structure and content editThough describing in detail the beneficial and harmful properties of foods and plants it is far more than a herbal Listing its contents organically rather than alphabetically it sets forth the six essential elements for well being sufficient food and drink in moderation fresh air alternations of activity and rest alternations of sleep and wakefulness secretions and excretions of humours and finally the effects of states of mind Tacuinum Sanitatis says that illnesses result from imbalance of these elements Depending on the translation the Tacuinum Sanitatis consists of a number of horticulture remedies for a variety of conditions and circumstances One compilation of the Tacuinum Sanitatis that combines the text from all four of the existing manuscripts includes forty eight different vegetables fruits and clothes Each of the sections isolates a single remedy and considers the ways that the remedy is useful the possible consequences methods to mitigate the consequences and the beneficial qualities 10 Although the exact taxonomic classification of each plant is uncertain due to differences between manuscripts and errors during translation the remedies described in the Tacuinum Sanitatiscan still be loosely identified The manuscripts describe root vegetables alliums leafy vegetables cucurbits other vegetables temperate fruits subtropical fruits nuts flowers herbs and even clothing material The exact identity of the plant species are not always certain as they are often labeled with Arabic words There are several categories of vegetables present in the various manuscripts Root vegetables of the manuscripts include radishes Rafani turnips rappe parsnips pastinace and carrots also pastinace The alliums represented are onions cepe leeks pori and garlic alea The leaf vegetables included are kale caules onati lettuce lactuce and spinach spinachie Cucumber cucumeres et citruli melon melones indi et palestini watermelon Melones dulces insipidi and bottle gourd cucurbite are present for the Cucurbitaceae Other vegetables include asparagus sparagus cowpea faxioli and eggplant melongiana Another main category within the manuscripts is fruits including temperate fruits grape uve apple mala acetosa or mala dulcis pear pira peach persica and cherry cerosa acetosa or cerosa dulcia and subtropical fruits lemon citra and pomegranate granata acetosa Other items beyond vegetables and fruits are presented as remedies for conditions such as nuts flowers and herbs These remedies include chestnut castanee hazelnut avelane rose roxe lily lilia violet viole sage salvia marjoram maiorana and dill aneti However the above examples are not a comprehensive list of every remedy included in all of the manuscript editions some of these items are included in multiple manuscripts whereas others are missing or additional remedies included 11 10 Within each entry of a remedy a few qualities and uses are explained The optimal state of the plant for medicinal use is described such as the quality of the plant leaves The entries include not only the benefits from the item but also the potential dangers from using the remedy similar to a list of side effects from modern medicine However the dangers described can be mitigated by a neutralizing element that is also included Additionally there is also typically an image corresponding to the item that is prescribed 10 The detailed images that accompany each remedy typically offer skewed depictions of the agricultural process including placing too much emphasis on plant size and production although these drawings exhibit better quality depictions of agriculture than similar images from that time Many of the images depict people in the process of harvesting the crop instead of administering the remedy from the plant Thus there is a degree to which horticulture is also presented alongside the medicinal qualities of plants however the quality of the depictions can make identifying the species difficult 11 Notes edit E Wickersheimer Les Tacuini Sanitatis et leur traduction allemande par Michel Herr Bibliotheque d Humanisme et Renaissance 12 1950 85 97 Forbes Andrew Henley Daniel Henley David 2013 Tacuinum Sanitatis in Health and Well Being A Medieval Guide Chiang Mai Cognoscenti Books ASIN B00DQ5BKFA Witthoft Brucia January 1978 The Tacuinum Sanitatis A Lombard Panorama Gesta 17 1 50 doi 10 2307 766712 a b Thomas Marcel 1980 The Golden Age Manuscript Painting at the Time of Jean Duc de Berry London England Book Club Associates p 42 Taqwim al ṣiḥḥah تقويم الصح ة Ibn Buṭlan ابن بطلان Qatar Digital Library 2015 03 11 Retrieved 2019 07 24 Dioscorides Pedanius of Anazarbos On Plants Historia Plantarum World Digital Library Retrieved 2014 06 20 Witthoft 1978 discusses the Tacuina in the national libraries of Paris and Vienna and the Biblioteca Casanatense Rome L Art de vivre en sante Images et recettes du Moyen Age Le Tacuinum sanitatis ms 1041 de la Bibliotheque universitaire de Liege ed de C Opsomer Liege 1991 Albino Mallo Moleiro clona codices de los siglos XI y XII con el arte de la perfeccion Xornal January 2 2009 a b c Tacuinum Sanitatis www godecookery com Retrieved 2020 11 20 a b Janick Jules Daunay Marie Christine Paris Harry 2010 11 01 Horticulture and Health in the Middle Ages Images from the Tacuinum Sanitatis HortScience 45 11 1592 1596 doi 10 21273 HORTSCI 45 11 1592 ISSN 0018 5345 Bibliography editJanick Jules Daunay Marie Christine Paris Harry November 2010 Horticulture and Health in the Middle Ages Images from the Tacuinum Sanitatis HortScience 45 11 1592 1596 doi 10 21273 HORTSCI 45 11 1592 S2CID 86510163 Henley David Tacuinum Sanitatis in Health and Well Being A Primitive Medieval Guide Chiang Mai Cognoscenti Books 2013 Hoeniger Kathleen The Illuminated Tacuinum Sanitatis Manuscripts from Northern Italy ca 1380 1400 Sources Patrons and the Creation of a New Pictorial Genre In Visualizing Medieval Medicine and Natural History 1200 1550 eds Jean Ann Givens Karen Reeds Alain Touwaide 51 81 Aldershot UK Ashgate 2006 Opsomer C ed L Art de vivre en sante Images et recettes du Moyen Age Le Tacuinum sanitatis ms 1041 de la Bibliotheque universitaire de Liege Liege 1991 Wickersheimer E Les Tacuini Sanitatis et leur traduction allemande par Michel Herr Bibliotheque d Humanisme et Renaissance 12 1950 85 97 Witthoft Brucia The Tacuinum Sanitatis A Lombard Panorama Gesta 17 no 1 1978 49 60 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tacuinum sanitatis Tacuinum Sanitatis site on the M Moleiro Editor website The Tacuinum Sanitatis in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung Introductory text Spanish and some illustrations Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tacuinum Sanitatis amp oldid 1203302259, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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