Wound Man

{{Short description|Illustrated, annotated diagram of the human body}}

Image:gersdorff p21v.jpg's Feldtbuch der Wundartzney (Strasburg, 1519).|alt=]]Image:ketham p24.jpg (Venice, 1495).|alt=]]

The Wound Man is a surgical diagram which first appeared in European medical manuscripts of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries.{{Cite journal|last=Hartnell|first=Jack|date=2017-06-29|title=Wording the Wound Man|url=http://britishartstudies.ac.uk/issues/issue-index/issue-6/wound-man|journal=British Art Studies|language=en|issue=6|doi=10.17658/issn.2058-5462/issue-06/jhartnell|issn=2058-5462|doi-access=free}} The illustration acted as an annotated table of contents to guide the reader through various injuries and diseases whose related cures could be found on the text's nearby pages. The image first appeared in a printed book in 1491 when it was included in the Venetian Fasciculus medicinae, likely Europe's first printed medical miscellany. Thereafter it circulated widely in printed books until well into the seventeenth century.{{Cite web|url=http://blog.wellcomelibrary.org/2016/08/wound-man-part-2-afterlives/|title=Wound man Part 2: afterlives|last=Hartnell|first=Jack|date=18 August 2016|website=Wellcome Library Blog|publisher=|language=en-us|access-date=2016-09-08}} The Wound Man has since become a recognisable figure in popular culture.

Description

The Wound Man illustrates various injuries that a person might receive through war, accident, or disease: cuts and bruises from multiple weapons, rashes and pustules, thorn scratches, and the bites of venomous animals. The figure also includes some schematic anatomical outlines of several organs within his unusual, transparent abdomen.{{Cite web|url=https://circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov/2014/07/22/the-wound-man-in-two-recent-acquisitions/|title=The "Wound Man" in Two Recent Acquisitions|date=2014-07-22|website=Circulating Now|access-date=2016-10-14}}

File:Wound-man with injuries, legend in German. Wellcome L0000839.jpg

In earlier manuscript versions, the figure is surrounded by numbers and phrases which indicate where in the accompanying treatise a healer might find a particular helpful procedure. For instance, in [https://wellcomelibrary.org/item/b19684915#?c=0&m=0&s=0&cv=72&z=-0.561%2C-0.0666%2C2.122%2C1.3329 a German Wound Man] now in the Wellcome Library, London (MS 49), the spider crawling up the man's thigh is labelled "Wo eine spynne gesticht, 20" ("When a spider bites, 20"), directing the reader to paragraph 20 of the book for an appropriate cure. Similarly, written along the large spear piercing the figure's left side and penetrating into his stomach is the legend "So der gross viscus wund wirt, 14" ("If the large intestine is injured, 14"). Turning to the corresponding cure number 14, the reader finds:

{{blockquote|14. Item: If the groze darm [large intestine] or the magen [stomach] or the gederme [entrails] are injured, you can heal it thus: sew it together with a fine thread and sprinkle rot puluer [red powder] on it. The same powder is good for all wounds, and the best can be made thus. Take 9 parts of swartz win [black wine] that is the very reddest and 1 lot of hematite, 1 lot each of nutmeg and white frankincense, 3 lots of gum arabic, 1 lot each of sanguinem draconis [dragon’s blood, sap from the Dracaena cinnabari tree] and mumie [mummy]. Pound that all together, make a powder out of it, and keep it as needed.}}

Despite these injuries, however, the Wound Man is still depicted as standing defiantly alive.{{Cite book|title=Medieval Bodies|last=Hartnell|first=Jack|publisher=Wellcome Collection / Profile Books|year=2018|isbn=9781781256794|location=London|pages=175-179}} This reaffirms the fact that the figure was not intended as a threatening one: instead it explained and glorified the cures and medical treatments available in the texts that he accompanied.{{Cite web|url=http://blog.wellcomelibrary.org/2016/08/wound-man-part-1-origins/|title=Wound man Part 1: origins|last=Hartnell|first=Jack|date=12 August 2016|website=Wellcome Library Blog|publisher=|language=en-us|access-date=2016-09-08}}

Further reading

{{Library resources about}}

  • Jack Hartnell, "Wording the Wound Man", British Art Studies (6), 2017: http://britishartstudies.ac.uk/issues/issue-index/issue-6/wound-man
  • Cahill, Patricia A. Wound-man Walking: Visceral History and Traumatized Bodies in A Larum for London Unto the Breach: Martial Formations, Historical Trauma, and the Early Modern Stage

References