Bibliography
Sciences and learning
grammar
Hiberno-LatinIrish: Auraicept, bardic grammatical tracts, early modern, FranciscanWelsh, Brittoniccomputistics and astronomy
computisticsastronomyHealth and medicine
IrelandScotlandWalesBrittanyMagico-medical learning (properly belongs to some other list)
medical charmsprognosticationsHealth issues and medicine in Scotland
Results (2)
Grace, Pierce A., “Medicine in Gaelic Ireland and Scotland, c.1350–c.1750”, Irish Historical Studies 44:166 (November, 2020): 201–223.
abstract:
Between c.1350 and c.1750 a small group of professional hereditary physicians served the Gaelic communities of Ireland and Scotland. Over fifty medical kindreds provided advice regarding health maintenance and treatment with herbs and surgery. Their medical knowledge was derived from Gaelic translations of medieval European Latin medical texts grounded in the classical works of Hippocrates and Galen, and the Arab world. Students studied in medical schools where they copied and compiled medical texts in Irish, some for use as handbooks. Over 100 texts are extant. Political upheaval and scientific advances led to the eclipse of this medical world. Through examination of the Gaelic medical manuscripts and other sources this article provides an assessment of medicine in Gaelic Ireland and Scotland from the mid-fourteenth to the mid-eighteenth centuries.
Bannerman, John, The Beatons: a medical kindred in the classical Gaelic tradition, Edinburgh: John Donald (Birlinn), 1986.