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   » » Wiki: Barber Surgeon
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The barber surgeon was one of the most common European of the , generally charged with caring for soldiers during and after battle. In this era, was seldom conducted by physicians. Instead, , who possessed and dexterity, were responsible for tasks ranging from cutting hair to pulling teeth to amputating limbs.

In this period, surgical mortality was very high due to blood loss, shock and infection. Yet, since doctors thought that to balance "humours" would improve health, barbers also used bloodletting razors and applied . Meanwhile, physicians considered themselves to be above surgery.

(1985). 9780070450875, McGraw Hill. .
Physicians mostly observed during surgery and offered consulting, but otherwise often chose academia or working in universities.


Middle Ages in Europe
Due to religious and sanitary monastic regulations, monks had to maintain their (the traditional baldness on the top of the head of Catholic monks). This created a market for barbers, because each monastery had to train or hire a barber. They would perform bloodletting and minor surgeries, pull teeth and prepare ointments. The first barber surgeons to be recognized as such worked in monasteries around AD 1000.

Because physicians performed surgery so rarely, the Middle Ages saw a proliferation of barbers, among other medical "paraprofessionals", including cataract couchers, , , , and pig gelders. In 1254, Bruno da Longobucco, an Italian physician who wrote about surgery, expressed concern about barbers performing and .


Barbers in France and Italy
In 16th century , barber-surgery was divided into two categories: "Surgeons of the Short Robe" and "Surgeons of the Long Robe." "Surgeons of the Long Robe", a qualification offered in institutions such as the College of St. Cosme, required students to take a formal exam. This was opposed to "Surgeons of the Short Robe", who did not need to take an exam to qualify and, alongside barbering, would perform minor surgical procedures. However, despite the different education requirements, both types of surgeons were called "barber-surgeons". This distinction between "short coat" and "long coat" continued in surgery until relatively recently. Eventually, in 1660, the barber surgeons recognized the physicians' dominance.

France
From the 1540s in France, the translation into French of the works of ancient authors allowed progress in the transmission of knowledge: barber-surgeons could add to their manual skills, and ancient surgical knowledge could be conformed to actual practice.

New problems arose in war surgery, without equivalents in the past: wounds caused by firearms and mutilations caused by . The barber-surgeon was required to treat all the effects on the surface of the body, the doctor treating those on the inside.

(1997). 9782020221405, Seuil.

There was already social mobility between surgeons and barber-surgeons. A surgeon's apprenticeship began with the practice of shaving. The young surgeon could thus have a source of income before mastering the surgery of his time. In the context of Renaissance humanism, this practical experience took place outside of academic scholasticism. The action is clearly sanctioned by the results, visible to all. For Michel de Montaigne, compared to medicine:


Italy
In Italy, barbers were not as common. The Salerno medical school trained physicians to be competent surgeons, as did the schools in Bologna and Padua. In Florence, physicians and surgeons were separate, but the Florentine Statute concerning the Art of Physicians and Pharmacists in 1349 gave barbers an inferior legal status compared to surgeons.


Barbers in Spain
Surgical practices in the Iberian Peninsula date back to the Megalithic era (2000 BC), with evidence of . Until the Renaissance, Spanish surgery followed Greek, Arab, and medieval traditions, with significant progress in the 16th century through anatomical studies. Despite this, military, naval, and barber-surgeons performed operations, as physicians distanced themselves from surgery. A regulated barber-surgeons in . There were active barber surgeons operating in in the 15th century. The barber surgeons of Valencia in the fifteenth century Https://www.researchgate.net/publication/51557192_The_barber_surgeons_of_the_city_of_Valencia_in_the_fifteenth_century_through_the_book_of_criminal_justice< /ref> One notable practitioner was Antonio Fernando de Medrano, a professional barber surgeon active in during the 17th century.

The establishment of surgical chairs in Spanish universities in the late 16th century gave surgery social and academic recognition, but a standardized system emerged only in the 18th century with the Reales Colegios de Cirugía (Royal Colleges of Surgeons), founded by military surgeons. The first institutions in Cádiz (1748) and Barcelona (1764), led by Virgili, were followed by Madrid (1780), founded by Antoni de Gimbernat. These colleges formally integrated surgery into medical education, solidifying its scientific status.


Barbers in the British Isles in the early modern period
Formal recognition of surgeons' skills (in England at least) goes back to 1540,Physicians Act 1540 (32 Hen. 8. c. 42) when the Fellowship of Surgeons (who existed as a distinct profession but were not "Doctors/Physicians" for reasons including that, as a trade, they were trained by apprenticeship rather than academically) merged with the Company of Barbers, a London , to form the Company of Barber-Surgeons. However, the trade was gradually put under pressure by the medical profession and in 1745, the surgeons split from the Barbers' Company (which still exists) to form the Company of Surgeons. In 1800 a was granted to this company and the Royal College of Surgeons in came into being. Later it was renamed to cover all of England—equivalent colleges exist for Scotland and as well as many of the old UK colonies (e.g., Canada).


Barbers in medieval Finland
There are few studies on barber surgeons in . The first known account is that of Hinzikinus from 1324 to 1326, originating from (Åbo), a city in the southern region of the country, who provided medical preparation and wound care for Viceroy Matts Kettilmundson. The second barber surgeon documented was Henrik Bardskärare, who worked in the castle of in Finland (Vyborg, now part of ). Each company of 400–500 men in the Swedish Army was assigned a barber during the rule of King Gustav I Vasa in the 16th century. A barber surgeon was available to tend to the injured in almost every division. In 1571, the barbers organized into a professional guild that governed their training, jobs, pay, and the number of barbers. Barbers from other countries could join the guild as well. The guild mandated that barber surgeons receive their training from established masters as apprentices, and in order to receive their degrees, the apprentices had to pass an exam. The guild provided guidelines for the barber surgeons' fees or pay, which varied and occasionally depended on how many patients were treated and surgeries were carried out.


Traditions in the 21st century
Few traces of barbers' links with the surgical side of the medical profession remain. One is the traditional red and white barber's pole, or a modified instrument from a blacksmith, which is said to represent the blood and bandages associated with their historical role.

In the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, and South Africa, another vestige is the use of the titles Mr, Ms, Mrs, or Miss rather than Dr by physicians when they complete their surgery qualifications by, for example, the award of an MRCS or FRCS diploma. This practice dates back to the days when surgeons were not required to obtain a university education in medicine, and is retained despite the fact that all surgeons in these countries must earn a medical degree and spend additional years in surgical training and certification.


Historic barber surgeons
  • Martín de Porres — a 16-17th century Peruvian of the , barber surgeon, and . He is the of barbers.
  • Ambroise Paré — a pioneering surgeon of 16th century when barbers also performed surgery.
  • Johanna Hedén — a who, in the late 19th century, became the first female barber surgeon in .
  • Magdalena Bendzisławska — a 17th century barber-surgeon in and the first woman surgeon there.
  • — the 16th century barber of Sir Francis Walsingham who became Master of the Worshipful Company of Barbers and Lord Mayor of London.
  • Hernando de Bustamante — a 16th-century sailor and barber surgeon who is best known as one of the few survivors of the first of the globe. He sailed on the Magellan expedition from 1519 to 1522.
  • Antoni de Gimbernat — an 18th-century surgeon and . He is known for laying the groundwork for modern techniques of inguinal hernia repair.
  • Antonio Fernando de Medrano — a 17th-century barber-surgeon and a pioneer of medical professionalism in .
  • Magdalena Bendzisławska — a 17th-century barber surgeon for miners of the Wieliczka Salt Mine and their families.
  • — a 16th-century barber-surgeon, active during the reign of .
  • The Barber surgeon of Avebury — a skeleton discovered in 1938 at henge monument in , England.
  • Diego Álvarez Chanca — a 15th-century barber surgeon who accompanied Christopher Columbus on his second voyage.
  • — an 18th-century barber surgeon and poet. He was an important supporter of Welsh cultural organisations and was known by the pseudonym Dafydd Ddu Feddyg.


Organizations and fellowships
  • Worshipful Company of Barbers
  • Royal College of Surgeons of England, formally known as the Company of Barber-Surgeons
  • Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh, originally the Edinburgh Guild of Barbers and Surgeons


See also


External links
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