Lingue di serpi“, „Natternzungen“ und „Glossopetrae“: Streiflichter auf die Geschichte einer populären „kultischen“ Medizin der frühen Neuzeit

In the 16th, 17th and 18th century „Glossopetrae“, popularly known as „Lingue di Serpi“, found on the Mediterranean island of Malta, were extensively used for medical purposes as antidotes. These fossil teeth, including specimens of the „Carcharodon Megalodon“ (an extinct variant of the great white...

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Veröffentlicht in:Sudhoffs Archiv 1997-01, Vol.81 (1), p.62-83
1. Verfasser: Freller, Thomas
Format: Artikel
Sprache:ger
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Zusammenfassung:In the 16th, 17th and 18th century „Glossopetrae“, popularly known as „Lingue di Serpi“, found on the Mediterranean island of Malta, were extensively used for medical purposes as antidotes. These fossil teeth, including specimens of the „Carcharodon Megalodon“ (an extinct variant of the great white shark), were ground to powder or used as amulet pendants and „credence“ and exported to pharmacies and shops in various cities of Europe. In antiquity, authors like Plinius or Solinus, excluding any religious connotations, had regarded „Glossopetrae“ as objects „fallen from heaven on dark moonless nights“. However, from the beginning of the 16th century the miraculous antidotic power of the specimens found at Malta was very strongly connected with the Pauline cult there. This cult owed ist origin to the excerpt of the shipwreck of the Apostle of the Gentiles on this island, as recorded in the New Testament. As in so many cases found in medieval and early modern medicine and pharmacy, the renown, collection, distribution and use of the antidote „Glossopetrae“ or „Lingue di Serpi“ was never limited to its real chemical and pharmaceutical properties. In the period of enlightenment and secular thinking mythic medicine as „Glossopetrae“ had lost ist „magical“ power. Consequently, with beginning of the late 18th century also the Maltese „Glossopetrae“ featured in literature merely as exotic objects of curiosity or symbols of an age bound to medical superstition.
ISSN:0039-4564