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2014 | 35 | 4 | 175-184

Article title

Znaczenie terminu „epidemia” w starożytnej literaturze grecko-rzymskiej (Próba analizy na wybranych przykładach)

Authors

Content

Title variants

EN
The meaning of the term epidemic in ancient greek and roman literature. An attempt at an analysis of chosen examples

Languages of publication

PL

Abstracts

EN
The article discusses the meaning of the term ‘epidemic’ in the literary sources of ancient Greece and Rome. It presents an attempt at tracing the semantics of the words no/soj, loimo/j and e)pidemi/a in Greek literature and illustrates various usage of e)pidemi/a before Hippocrates. It also shows what terms were used by Roman scribes to define pestilence or points out that Homer used the word in Illiad in the meaning of: “this one who liked passionately the frightening civil war”. Sophocles used ‘epidemios’ in King Oedipus referring to dissemination and propagation of the king’s fame. The authors before Hippocrates applied this term almost to any phenomenon (people, rain, war) except for disease. Hippocrates was the first one to adapt it to medical terminology. (P. Martin, E. Martin, 2,500-year …).

Keywords

Year

Volume

35

Issue

4

Pages

175-184

Physical description

Dates

published
2014-11-30

Contributors

References

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-25fa888c-86e4-4e6e-8a26-8d9365cca255
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