| History of conjoined twins |
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| Written by admin | |
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The United States National Library of Medicine has a fascinating online
exhibit about the history of conjoined twins, titled "From 'Monsters' to Modern Medical Miracles". Seem here is a
plate from a 1499 book by Jacob Locher, Carmen heroicum de partu monstrifero,
"one of the earliest printed illustrations of a set of conjoined twins
and the earliest printed work devoted entirely to the subject."
From
medieval times through the Enlightenment conjoined twins were viewed as
monsters. Their existence simultaneously horrified and amazed the
common person. The established medical explanation of the day, from
Hippocrates, reasoned that a conjoined twin was simply the result of
there being too much seed available at conception for just one child,
but not enough for two distinct beings. Even so, popular theories
fueled the public's fear and wonder by suggesting that conjoined twins
were the result of impure conception or the witnessing of some evil or
traumatic event during pregnancy.
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