If you heroically browse through the medical manuscripts and loose illustrations of the small shops in the Istanbul book bazaar, you will wander through more circles of hell than Dante...
Islamic dentistry leads back its origins to Mohammad, who instructs the believers in a special hadith
to wash their teeth at least twice or thrice a day. He is also referred
by the great 10th-century Arabic physician, Ibn Sina or Avicenna, whose
famous Al kanun fi al-tibb (The canon of medicine) gives
instructions for treating teeth, drilling, pain relief, and fixing
dentures with gold wire to the jaw...
The first Ottoman medical manuscripts, Bereket’s Tuhfe-i Mubrizi, Ahmadi’s Tarvih al-ervah and Hacı Paşa’s Müntehab al-şifa, all come from the 14th century, and they also deal with the treatment and anatomy of teeth.
There are numerous illustrations at
Poemas del Rio Wang.
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