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Appendices

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 November 2023

Chiara Thumiger
Affiliation:
Cluster of Excellence Roots, Christian-Albrechts Universität zu Kiel, Germany

Summary

Type
Chapter
Information
Phrenitis and the Pathology of the Mind in Western Medical Thought
(Fifth Century BCE to Twentieth Century CE)
, pp. 370 - 389
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2023
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Appendix 1 The ‘Sun Disease’

In his discussions of semiotics, Galen was well aware of the risks involved in attributing robustness and cogency to pathological signs which were general and common to several states. His discussions of this topic, as we have seen,Footnote 1 were often occasioned by signs that belong to the domain of fever and are associated with heating and related physiology (perceived extreme temperatures, sweating, trembling, dryness, thirst, confusion). These can be understood medically and medical-historically, but they can also be framed in a different, cultural and iconographic sense. It is in these terms that I believe it is useful to speak of a ‘sun disease’ or ‘summer disease’, whose story is not identical to that of phrenitis, but which sometimes cuts through it or is entwined with it.Footnote 2 This is a long history that involves different Mediterranean and Near Eastern medical and social cultures, in places where high fevers with neurological consequences must have been frequent and often observed in homologous terms, perhaps because of the naturally hot climates in which they occur and the endemic nature of diseases such as malaria, on which much has been written (and reconsidered) over the past hundred years by historians of medicine.Footnote 3

Perhaps the chronologically earliest scholarly parallel to phrenitis based on this feverish quality is to be found in Babylonian medicine. Although it is important to be deeply sceptical about strong claims of identity between Babylonian and Greek medicine in the case of phrenitis, given the lack of detailed support for the thesis, a syndrome found in this material can be taken to connect with an overarching ‘sun disease’. Scurlock, who argues for a firm Babylonian antecedent, claims that phrenitis is ‘a clear example of the transformation undergone by Mesopotamian material in the process of transmission’,Footnote 4 identifying it with a precise Near Eastern disease whose name in Akkadian is setu.Footnote 5 In this spirit, Scurlock identifies a predecessor of Hippocrates in many respects in the twelfth-century bce Assyrian doctor Esagil-kīn-apli. Phrenitis is her example:

The ancient Greek mystery disease (sic !) phrenitis makes a nice illustration of the transformations undergone by Mesopotamian material in the process of transmission. Phrenitis is one of the four ‘thick’ diseases, a literal translation of Akkadian murus kisirti, which means illnesses characterized by thick sputum. One thinks immediately of pleurisy and pneumonia, which are indeed two of the ‘thick’ diseases.

She then mentions a passage in the Hippocratic Internal Affections where a disease (not referred to as phrenitis) caused by ‘heat of the sun’ is described in ways that closely resemble descriptions of peripleumonia and kausos elsewhere:

As for phrenitis (Internal Affections 48), it is unmistakably the Ionian Greek equivalent for Mesopotamian ‘hand of ghost’. It is presumably the original attribution of this condition to affliction by a ghost that led the author of Internal Affections 48 to assert that phrenitis ‘usually attacks abroad, if a person is traveling a lonely road somewhere, and fear seizes him’.

Note first of all that Int. 48 does not mention phrenitis, but only the phrenes as the affected part; Scurlock’s imprecision is not a problem here, however, since we are considering the ‘sun disease’ as a more general, somehow ‘aural’ category. Scurlock then moves on to scrutinize diverse Hippocratic passages, categorizing them in terms of how successfully they ‘disentangle the Mesopotamian causal agents to whom diseases of the upper respiratory tract and lungs were attributed’, which are the same diseases – on her reconstruction – as those which cause meningo-encephalitis.Footnote 6 In this way, the confusing syndromes described by the Hippocratics, with their mix of respiratory and encephalic ailments, are explained by the fact that they were ‘not innovators but were instead attempting to build indirectly on the foundations laid by Mesopotamian physicians’.

This reasoning might be historiographically flawed, but it usefully exposes the nosological ‘megatext’ that connects heat and heating with disease and derangement.Footnote 7 As much as one must avoid retrospective biomedical investment in these ancient stories, there is certainly some degree of medico-biographical truth to be extracted from them, namely the well-known fact that high fevers must have been endemic and dangerous around the Mediterranean for millennia. This also helps explain the appeal and ‘catchiness’ of phrenitis as quintessential to these elements of human pathology.

The connection between heating and life, not only as vital functions but as spiritual and mental life,Footnote 8 is evident in a variety of cultural associations between heat and psychology which see heating as both necessary to life and potentially morbid, depending on its degree. Several of these functions were explored in Chapter 1, but Stefanelli’s work deserves renewed mention, and in particular her suggestive proposal of an etymological link between phren- and an Indo-European root for ‘burn’;Footnote 9 the phren(es) would then be the upper cavity in the chest which works as a ‘steamer’ or ‘burning chamber’ in the body. A long tradition of natural philosophy associates heating with life, as notably in Aristotle’s conception of digestion as a kind of ‘coction’, on which there is no need to dwell here, and in ThemisonFootnote 10 as discussed at Caelius Aurelianus, On Chronic HeadacheFootnote 11 (De capitis passione, quam Graeci Cephalean nominant, Morb. Chr. 1, 1 446.33–448.5 Bendz):

The head is naturally lacking in flesh, but has an abundance of fibres and is covered with tough skin and hair and pores that do not naturally permit easy breathing. It is also the site of all the senses and rests upon the body and receives all the vapours from it. For the pneuma naturally seeks higher levels and carries these vapours from the lower parts through to the windpipe and the oesophagus, which are, so to speak, the major chimneys (veluti maiora fumaria) of the body.

As Wright observes, it is also relevant to phrenitis to mention the natural ‘coldness’ and phlegmatic nature of the brain, as opposed to the ‘hotness’ of the heart from Aristotle onwards.Footnote 12 A cardiocentric definition of fever beginning with overheating in the heart is also evident in the Peripatetic De febribus.Footnote 13

As for pathology, heating, thirst and feverish complaints are everywhere in Hippocrates, although he mostly categorizes phrenitis as a winter ailment akin to peripleumonia and pleuritis;Footnote 14 the heat of the sun (thermasiē tou hēliou) is also declared responsible at Int. 47 (226–31 Potter = 7.281–84 L.), despite the fact that the reference is neither to phrenitis nor explicitly to the affected phrenes. In his discussion of phrenitis, on the other hand, Asclepiades is said by Caelius (Morb. Ac. I, 2, 38–39 Bendz) to have regarded the summer season and heat as important factors when he discussed individuals considered labiles, prone to the disease phrenitis:

Some physicians, among them Asclepiades and his followers, also consider in this connection the weather, the season … They speak of the weather and the danger of it becoming very hot, for that causes many cases [of this disease]. They speak of the season too, especially the end of summer or autumn, for they say that this disease is common at those times. They speak of antecedent causes, such as … and exposure to heat (iuges adiustiones).

In a non-technical context, Lucian reports an interesting episode of deranged summer fever in Quomodo historia conscribenda sit, 1.1.14:Footnote 15

They say that an epidemic of the following sort occurred at Abdera … It began with the whole population exhibiting feverish symptoms (pyrettein), strongly marked and without intermission from the very first attack. About the seventh day, the fever was relieved, in some cases by a violent flow of blood from the nose, in others by a no less violent perspiration that overcame them. The mental effects (pathos … tas gnōmas autōn), however, were quite absurd; they undertook tragic performances, mouthing iambic lines and ranting at the top of their voices. Their favourite text was the Andromeda of Euripides, and one after another they would go through the speech of Perseus; the whole city was full of pale presences and seventh-day tragedians crying out in a loud voice:

O Love, who lord’st it over gods and human beings,

and the rest of it. This continued for a long time, until the coming of winter put an end to their madness with a sharp frost (kryos de mega genomenon epause lērountas autous). I find the explanation of the form it took in the fact that the tragic actor Archelaus, who was famous in that period, had performed the Andromeda there in mid-summer during some very hot weather (mesountos therous en pollōi tōi phlogmōi). The consequence was that many of them caught the fever in the theatre, and after they convalesced, there was a relapse into tragedy, with the Andromeda haunting their memories for a long time and Perseus hovering, Gorgon’s head in hand, before the mind’s eye of every individual.

This passage and this illness will be mentioned in modern times by Van Swieten in his discussion of phrenitis,Footnote 16 in which he readily identifies it with our disease. For him, the passage from Lucian is a good illustration of what he takes to be the obvious connection between sun, summer and disease already in ancient times. The hallucinatory experiences, fever and epidemic character of the ailment are explicitly connected with the heat – a ‘mass possession’ quality that also belongs to the popularization of phrenitis.Footnote 17

The idea recurs in Galen as well:Footnote 18 at On the Affected Places 3.7 (8.166.5–9, 167 K.), we read that memory can be affected by drying and overheating agents, as in the case of the vineyard worker exposed to the sun, or the man who devoted himself too intensely to his studies. At Com. Hipp. 2.7 (186.4–8 Mewaldt = 7.651.2–6 K.), Galen writes that

it is under the same constitutions and causes that both the kausoi and the phrenitis, assuredly, multiply in the summer and in hot regions (pleonazousi tēn therinēn kai en chōriois thermoterois kai en hēlikiai tēi tōn akmazontōn kai en physesi thermoterais) and in the prime of life and in those whose natures and adopted regimes and activities are likewise most hot.

So too at Comm. Hipp. Prorrh. I.17 (33 Diels = 16.552 K.) Galen comments on a Hippocratic statement including crusty eyes as signs of mania, adding that phrenitic and putrefying persons share these symptoms, which arise in the summer as a result of extreme heat.Footnote 19

Regarding the connection between phrenitis and summer heat, an additional cultural suggestion is found in ps.-Alexander of Aphrodisias, where a passage discusses the example of dogs maddened in the summer and evokes phrenitis (Probl. 1.76):

Why do only dogs become mad in the summer (en therei)? Because of the prolepsis of the dry mixture (tēs xēras kraseōs): for they are dry by nature, and especially during the summer heat (en tois kaumasi), and therefore the humid component and krasis in them burns ardently when they are heated and dried. They accordingly rave as if they were phrenitic (kathaper phrenitiōntes).

The susceptibility of animals to the summer heat, the canicola, brings in other popular elements of pathology that also provide background for phrenitis: the madness of dogs, the canine-looking lyssa or rabies that can possess a patient.Footnote 20 Paul of Aegina also writes, in the conclusion to his section on phrenitis, that ‘one should accompany the recovery of these patients by making them avoid too much wine, powerful emotional alterations, spoiling of food and most of all exposure to the sun (hēliokaïas)’ (3.6.2, 146.15–18 Heiberg).

This idea remained in the tradition of phrenitis, as the reference in Van Swieten has already shown: in the medieval Isagoge Ioannitii ad Tegni Galieni (Hunayn’s Introduction to the Art of Galen), in the section ‘about the characteristics of diseases deriving from heat’ (de modis morborum ex calore precedentium) ‘sun exposure’ (expositio ad solem) is mentioned, while Avicenna specifies that phrenitic patients often shrink from sunlight (abhorrent radios, et avertunt se ab ipsis). Gentile da Foligno (fourteenth century) in his commentary on Avicenna’s Canon speaks in the section on phrenitis (karabitus) of ‘boldness and anger’ of these patients, which are a consequence of heat (audacia et ira propter fervorem caloris). A long passage is also devoted to the pathological relationship of these patients to drinking water (folio 58), while at folio 64 we read, as a comment on Avicenna’s warning against the ‘hot and malignant winds’ (ventis malis et calidis) and the ‘sun of the high summer days’ (canicularibus diebus et solem), that the passage is obvious and needs no exegesis: hec pars est clara. For Bernard de Gordon (beginning of the fourteenth century),

young age with a choleric temperament, the summer season – the fact that he exerted himself during the days of the Dog especially (tempus aestivum, et quia laboravit in diebus canicularis), and stayed in the sun without a hat, as well as eating hot and other similarly warming food, which can heat up the body and cause it to dry (quae corpus calefaciunt et desiccant),

can all play a role in determining phrenitis.

Workers such as farmers are especially exposed: Van Swieten recalls the case of two reapers/mowers who were extremely healthy (messores sanissimos certe & robustissimos) but died two days after having fallen asleep in the sun on a stack of hay. As we have seen in Chapter 8, De Vries also mentions sun exposure, while Hooper distinguishes as ‘exciting factors’ exposure to sun and ‘exercise in warm water’.Footnote 21 Reference GeeGee (1876) 15 also had cases of phrenitic children where exposure to heat played a role. One sub-type of phrenitis in the final decades of its active existence is precisely Phrenitis Calentura, heatstroke.

There is thus what we may call a ‘sun disease’ that characterizes Mediterranean and Near Eastern cultures (and might have parallels in other cultural contexts as well) and that continues to be observed by European medical authors in modern times. This disease brings together a panoply of ‘feverish’ physiological signs; hallucinatory experiences; mental confusion; the summer season and hot weather; the concept of ‘inflammation’, phlegmonē, of a specific body part;Footnote 22 meteorological determination; and a sense of epidemic or mass experience, to which everyone is equally exposed.Footnote 23 Assonance also plays a role: phrenesia, frantic and related terms, and effervescence and fervour as terms for ‘boiling’, are semantically distinct, but are evoked together as part of the pathological experience of phrenitis in its popular reception. This branch of the story as well, despite its diffuse, anti-philological character, is part of a cultural history and works as an episodic, sporadic vehicle for the persistence of our disease.

2 That heat and fevers are a central datum in ancient medical observations is obvious and expected; see Reference HamlinHamlin (2014) on the topic. Compare the Hippocratic Internal Affections 39, where we have a discussion of typhus: ‘This disease comes on in summer, when the Dog Star rises, because of bile being set in motion through the body’ (175 Potter = 7.262 L.). The pseudo-Aristotelian Problemata 1.19 and 1.29 offer a good summary of ancient medical views of heating, seasonality and pathology, and ps.-Alexander of Aphrodisias wrote a treatise On Fevers (De Febribus, περὶ πυρετῶν), on which see Reference van der Eijkvan der Eijk (forthcoming); the focus is on the concept of heat, ‘natural heat’ and ‘heat contrary to nature’ (esp. in Chapter 10); see also the chapters in Reference Bartoš and KingBartoš and King (2020) on heat in ancient biology. Reference Nyord and WeeNyord (2018) 25–40 has important methodological remarks starting from a case study of the phenomenology of ‘heat’ in ancient Egyptian medical language and ‘conceptual patterns’.

3 On malaria, see Chapter 1, p. 25. Reference JonesJones (1909) set the precedent for radical retrospective-diagnosis of malaria in the history of ancient medicine, on which see Reference van der Eijk and Michaelidesvan der Eijk (2014); see also Grmek (1983/1989) 265–66, 289–92 on fevers and the like in ancient Mediterranean settings; Reference Flemming and PetitFlemming (2018) in a discussion of the Antonine plague and Galen’s time as a ‘pestilential age’; Reference SallaresSallares (2002); Reference Scheidel, Edwards and WoolfScheidel (2003), (Reference Scheidel2009) on Rome; Reference NuttonNutton (2004) 32–34 for a general assessment; Reference HamlinHamlin (2014) 1–21 for definitions and problems in studying ancient fevers, and the pitfalls of essentialism, since ‘it is tempting to see fever as independent of language and culture and to assume that persons in the past were identifying the same conditions and features that we do, only in qualitative terms, but caution is in order’ (7); Reference CraikCraik (2020).

5 I thank Ulrike Steinert for her invaluable help with this material.

6 Reference ScurlockScurlock (2004) 28, see 29 for a bio-medical retrospective interpretation in terms of Bornholm disease.

7 For a more helpful take on the retrospective diagnosing of ‘hand of ghost’ in particular, see Reference Kinnier Wilson and ReynoldsKinnier Wilson and Reynolds (1990); already Reference Kinnier WilsonKinnier Wilson (1965).

11 A disease caused by extreme temperatures, whether cold or hot through exposure to the burning sun (solis exustione, 430.13–16 Bendz).

14 See above, p. 323.

15 On this passage and medical influences, from the particular angle of Aristotle’s theory of tragic katharsis, see Reference 403Langholf and HaaseLangholf (1996).

16 See Chapter 8, pp. 323–24.

17 Cf. Chapter 6 on the Christian trope of humanity as a ‘possessed’, phrenitic mob.

18 In this, Galen seems to differ from the Hippocratic interpretation of phrenitis as a winter ailment, and at Comm. Hipp. Epid. I, 2.74 (17a.177 K.) he comments on the Hippocratic claim that ‘there were a few cases of phrenitis also in the summer’ (which seemed to imply that the majority were in the winter). On the classification of phrenitis as a ‘hot’ disease, see Reference DevinantDevinant (2020) 219 n. 48, 220.

19 See Chapter 5, n. 153.

20 It is no coincidence that Euripides described the mad Bacchants as ‘bitches of Lyssa’ in their flight to the mountain: ἴτε θοαὶ Λύσσας κύνες, ἴτ’ εἰς ὄρος, Ba. 977). Heat, summer, symbolic and real, and the astronomical Canis are all combined together. See Reference MetzgerMetzger (2011), esp. 155–70 on lycanthropy and the dog element associated with mental disorder (in this case mostly melancholy).

22 On fever and phlegmonē, see the early discussion attributed to Antiphon quoted by Galen in On Medical Names, d28 (IX.45 Laks–Most).

23 One can invoke here a folk parallel, the tarantismo, forms of recursive dance-epidemics studied by anthropologists (see famously Dodds 1951, 76–79, 270–75, 279 Footnote n. 9). Attacks of tarantismo are characterized by a heightened sensibility to music and spastic dance movements; they occur in the summer at midday. See the classic study by Reference De MartinoDe Martino (1961) and afterwards Reference De GiorgiDe Giorgi (1999). Reference De MartinoDe Martino (1961) 98, 101, 148 also notes that these attacks tend to be triggered by ‘a mezzogiorno’; see 76–77, 118–19, on interpretations connecting these phenomena with cases of ‘heatstroke’.

Appendix 2 Naming, Nomenclatures, Dictionaries

As a general matter, names are central to identity, and nosological entities are no different from other concepts, individuals and objects in this regard.Footnote 1 Indeed, as part of a doctrinal and professional institution, disease may represent an even more significant instance of the power of naming: the persistence of a concept in nosology and medicine, and its existence as part of a recognized system and network of references, and as a legitimate participant in a course of medical events and human actions, is entirely dependent on nomenclature. In this appendix, I present observations on and examples from the terminology related to phrenitis throughout its history, with the aim of offering an impression rather than an exhaustive survey.

The root phren- (φρεν-) in the Greek world

Nosological discussions of phrenitis in ancient medicine were very sensitive to the problems posed by the etymology from phrēn-phrenes, further qualified by cognates and compounds. The discussion of phrenes in De morbo sacro is perhaps the earliest we have, followed by Plato’s Timaeus, Aristotle’s Parts of Animals, Anonymus Londinensis and Galen (at least twice).Footnote 2 This discussion was felt to be relevant throughout the medieval and early-modern receptions of the disease, in which it was often reported on at length.Footnote 3

Throughout the Greek-speaking and Greek-reading worlds of antiquity, the root φρεν- is synonymous with ‘mind’ in the general sense. Cognates of phrēn/phrenes refer to the sphere of thinking, judging, being of sound mind, wisdom, mental pathology and mental and emotional states. The group includes a number of very common words.

A selection: φρονέω: ‘to think, to be minded’; φρόνημα, -ατος, τό: ‘mind, spirit, thought’; φρόνησις, -εως, ἡ: ‘purpose, intention’; φρονητικός, -ή, -όν: ‘concerned with thought’; φρόνιμος, -ον: ‘in one’s right mind’; φροντίζω: ‘to consider, reflect’; σωφρονέω: ‘to be of sound mind’; σωφρόνημα, -ατος, τό: ‘self-control’; σωφρονίζω: ‘to recall a person to his senses’; σωφροσύνη: ‘soundness of mind, prudence’; σώφρων: ‘of sound mind, prudent’; παραφροσύνη: ‘derangement’; ἀφρονέω: ‘to be silly, act foolishly’; καταφρονέω: ‘look down upon, despise’; δυσφρόνη, ἡ / δυσφροσύνη, ἡ: in pl. ‘anxieties, troubles’; δύσφρων, -ον: ‘sad at heart, sorrowful’. Compounds largely convey damage, disturbance or pathology, for instance: φρενοβλαβέω, φρενοβλαβής, φρενοβλαβεία: ‘to cause damage to the mind’, ‘damaged in mind’, ‘mind-damage’; φρενογηθής: ‘heart-gladdening’, in the magical papyri; φρενοδαλής: ‘ruining the mind’; φρενοδινής: ‘charming the heart’ (Nonn. 1.406); φρενοθελγής: ‘charming the mind’; φρένοθεν: ‘of oneʼs own mind’; φρενόληπτος: ‘possessed, mad’; φρενολυπέομαι: ‘to suffer in the mind’; φρενομανής: ‘distracted, maddened’; φρενομόρως: ‘struck in the mind by calamity’; φρενοπληγής: ‘striking the mind’; φρενοπλήξ: ‘struck in the mind’; φρενόπονος, ‘pain in the soul’; φρενοτέκτων: ‘building with the mind, ingenious’; φρεναπατάω: ‘to deceive someone’s mind’.

The Term phrenitis in the Vocabulary of Ancient Graeco-Roman Medical Texts and Their Tradition

The nomenclature of phrenitis in Greek and Latin sources is fairly limited and consistent:

Greek

  • φρενῖτις/φρενίτις = phrenitis

  • φρενιτικός, -ή, -όν = phrenitic

  • φρενιτιάω = to be phrenitic

  • φρενιτίζω = to be phrenitic

  • φρενιτισμός, ὁ = phrenitis, phrenitic attack

  • ΦΡΗΝΗΣΙΣ (Celsus, hapax) = phrenitis

Classical Latin

  • ph/frenesis = phrenitis

  • ph/frenitis = phrenitis

  • ph/freneticus-ph/freniticus = phrenitic

Medieval, Modern Latin

  • ch/karabitus = phrenitis

  • ph/frenesis = phrenitis

  • ph/frenitis= phrenitis

  • ph/freneticus = phrenitic

  • ph/freniticus = phrenitic

  • ph/frenesia = phrenitis

  • phrenetiasis = phrenitis

  • phrenismus = phrenitis

Arabic

  • farāniṭis = phrenitis

  • qarānīṭis = phrenitis

  • sirsām/sarsām/sirsen = phrenitis

  • birsām/barsām/birsen = phrenitis

  • ikhtilāṭ = confusion, delirium, phrenitis

Medieval and Modern European Languages: Medical and Lay Uses

The etymological group is used both medically and, hyperbolically, to indicate heightened states, fantasy or general madness of the intense, aggressive, frenetic kind, as well as folly and ethical flaw.

  • Middle English frenesye

  • Old French frenaisie

  • Italian frenesia, frenetico, frenitico; frenico, farneticare

  • Spanish frenesí, frenético

  • French ph/frenesie, ph/freneticque, ph/freniticque

  • German ph/frenetisch, ph/frenitisch

  • English ph/frenzy, ph/frensy, ph/frenesy, ph/frenetic, ph/frenitc, ph/franticke,

    • ph/frantick, ph/frantickness, ph/frantic, ph/franticness

    • ph/frenalgia, ‘pain in the diaphragm’

    • ph/frenologia, ‘the science of localization of mental traits in the brain-skull’

A Glimpse at Medical Dictionaries

It is instructive to observe what can be seen as an almost exact point of expiration of phrenitis in the nomenclature by considering the genre of ‘medical reference books’: lexica, dictionaries, lists and classifications intended for the medical profession or for medical students.

Medical texts of this kind are a useful source due to the specific quality of the evidence they offer, which has to do not exclusively and not even primarily with the concept and its description, but with its position within a system of reference. A reasonable starting point for the medical vulgate of the seventeenth century might be the 1679 German Lexicon Medicum by Stephanus Blancardus (Steph. Blancardi Lexicon medicum renovatum), where under PHRENITIS we find: ‘Phrenitiasis, seu Phrenesis, est delirium cum febre continue, saepe cum furore et excandescentia (non autem a cerebri inflammatione, quae anticuis placuit) producta. … a φρήν mens, quia mens laborat. German: Große raserei in hitzigen Fieber’. Here phren- is ‘the mind’, and the disease is emphasized as mental, localized in the inflamed brain.

In examples restricted to the Anglo-Saxon world, the 1807 Edinburgh Medical and Physical Dictionary offers a reflection of the important disease taxonomies produced in the eighteenth century, Cullen’s most of all: PHRENITIS (φρενιτις, from φρήν, the mind) is ‘phrenzy or inflammation of the brain; a genus of disease in the class pyrexiae, and other phlegmasiae of Cullen’. The 1826 London Medical and Surgical Dictionary goes more explicitly in the same ‘cephalic’ direction and lists Phrenitis. Phrenesis. Phrenetiasis. Phrenismus. Cephalitis. Sphacelismus. Chephalalgia inflammatoria. By the Arabians Karabitus: ‘phrenzy, or inflammation of the brain’. The 1834 Cyclopaedia of Practical Medicine (London) also offers the lemma PHRENITIS. ‘Brain, inflammation of the’.

By the first decades of the nineteenth century, the inadequacy of the term begins to be felt. Robert Hooper’s Medical Dictionary (London, 1839) intriguingly notes: ‘PHRENITIS. (is, idis, f. φρενιτις, from φρήν, the mind). Phrensy. Inflammation of the brain. A very faulty term [my emphasis]. See Encephalitis.’ Harris’s Dictionary of Medical Terminology (1855) also has ‘PHRENITIS. From φρήν, mind, and itis, inflammation. Inflammation of the brain’, subtly accepting an equation between the two terms. Mayne’s Expository Lexicon (Reference Mayne1860) offers an entry for phrenes, as well as listing phrenesis, phrenetiasis and phrenitis. At Phrenes, we read:

(φρήν, the mind). Anat., Physiol. Ancient term for the praecordia, which was supposed to be the seat of the mind. Fr. syn. praecordie, f. Ger. Syn. Herzgrabe, f. Also for the diaphragm, or, according to some, the two heads of the diaphragm descending into the loins, likewise supposed to be the seat of the mind. Fr. syn. Diaphragme, m. Germ. Syn. Zwerchfell, n.

PHRENITIS, idis, f. is defined:

(φρήν, the mind; terminal -itis). Med. Pathol. A term improperly used [my emphasis] for inflammation of the brain and its membranes; for, strictly it does not express this, but even if allowed, the brain being the seat or organ of the mind, it certainly has no connection with the membranes; phrenzy; a genus of the Ordo Phlegmasiae; Cl. Pyrexiae of Cullen’s nosology. See Encephalitis, Karabitus, Phrenesis, Phrenitiasis, Sibare. Fr. Anal. Phrénite, f. G. Syn. Hirnentzündung.

The diaphragmatic interpretation and the ancient mental view of the phrenes are retained, while the ‘actual’ disease is interpreted as entirely encephalic. Reference FowlerFowler’s 1875 Medical Vocabulary (London) treats ‘phrenetic’ and other cognate terms as all indicating something ‘that affect the mental faculties’. In particular, ‘phrenetic’ means ‘applied adj. and subs. to a person subject to strong, or violent, sallies of imagination or excitement, which in some measure pervert the judgement and cause the person to act as if partially mad’. Phrenitis is ‘inflammation of the brain, or of its membranes’.

Significantly, the 1888 New Sydenham Society’s Lexicon of Medicine and the Allied Sciences (Reference Power and SedgwickPower and Sedqwick 1881–92) now has only the English ‘frenzy’. The entry reads: ‘FRENZY: (Mid. E. Frenesye; Old F. Frenaisie; L. Phrenensis; Gr. φρένησις for φρενῖτις, inflammation of the brain. F. Frenesie; I. Frenezia; S. Frenesi; G. Wahnsinn, Raserei). Madness, delirium, great agitation of the mind’. Mayne’s Medical Vocabulary (London, 1889) offers the brief: ‘PHRENITIS. (φρήν, the mind …) Pathol. Inflammation of the brain; phrenzy’. Reference QuainQuain’s 1890 A Dictionary of Medicine also treats the term as anachronistic:PHRENITIS. (φρήν, the mind) – An obsolete term, [my emphasis] formerly associated with all forms of acute inflammations of the brain or its meninges, but especially the latter’. The 1892 Dictionary of Terms Used in Medicine by Richard Dennis Hoblyn (London) begins:

PHRENES: (plural of φρήν, the mind). The diaphragm; so called because the Ancients supposed it to be the seat of the mind. Hence the terms: 1. Phrenic (a designation of the internal respiratory nerve, which goes to the diaphragm 2. Phrenitica Diseases affecting mental faculties, the first Order of the class Neurotica of Good. Also Medicines which affect the mental faculties, as narcotics, inebriants, & c. 3. Phrenitis. Phrensy; inflammation of the brain. A term under which have been confounded arachnoïtis and encephalitis. It constitutes the third genus of the order phlegmasiae of Cullen. φρενῖτις is strictly a fem. Adjective, and requires the addition of νόσος to complete its meaning.

The 1899 edition of Mayne’s Medical Vocabulary (London) also inserts a notice of the anachronistic character of the term:

Phrenitis: (an inflammation of the brain which causes madness; from φρήν, φρένες, the seat of the mental faculties.) A term improperly used [my emphasis] for inflammation of the brain and its membranes. Phrensy; a Genus of the Order Phlegmasiae, Class Pyrexiae of Cullen’s nosology.

The dictionary quotes a variety of subtypes, bringing to full light the development of the disease into a syndrome or set of clusters of signs related to derangement, odd behaviour and ‘nervousness’ with disparate causes: ‘Phrenitis Calentura (A term for Sunstroke), Phrenitis latrans (Hydrophobia). Phrenitis Potatorum (Delirium tremens). Phrenitis verminosa (A form of phrenitis formerly supposed to be due to the presence of a “worm” in the brain)’. The spelling Phrensy is also used here: ‘Phrensy: (Phrenesis) The same as Frenzy; also used in the same sense as phrenitis’.

At the turn of the twentieth century, in The American Illustrated Medical Dictionary (Reference CattelCattel 1910), Phrenitis is simply ‘delirium of frenzy’, with what had once been a disease now completely transformed into the syndrome or the symptom. In the 1925 and 1932 editions, as phrenitis progresses towards ‘archaeological’ status, the reference to the Greek diaphragmatic origin returns with ‘1. Delirium or phrenzy 2. Inflammation of the diaphragm’. The 1910 Lippincott’s New Medical Dictionary (Philadelphia and London) also refers to both the Greek medical construct and the modern, medical frenzy and inflammation of the brain. It is thus evident that by the middle of the twentieth century the label phrenitis and its etymological implications were still recognized and included. In Skinner’s The Origin of Medical Terms (Reference Skinner1949), only the adjective phrenic is included, with cultural-historical discussion:

In Homer the use of φρήν is for the parts about the heart, even the heart itself. Later it was restricted to the parts between the heart and the liver, thus the abdominal diaphragm. As this area was generally considered the seat of the emotions, and was also very properly considered to have some association with speaking, the term φρήν came to have the metaphorical significance of soul or mind, a sort of affective centre. Thus the word frenzy, which is derived from φρήν, originally had the significance of an emotional disturbance but became identified more and more with mental disturbance. The importance of the diaphragm was further enhanced by the knowledge that wounds of the diaphragm were generally fatal.

In the 1951 Medical Dictionary by Newman Dorland (Philadelphia and London), phrenitis is defined as ‘1. Inflammation of the brain 2. Delirium or frenzy 3. Inflammation of the diaphragm’. In Wain’s 1958 American historical dictionary The Story behind the Word, only ‘Frenzy’ is found, and there is no mention of phrenitis: ‘Τhis term designating a violent mania is a corruption of the older spelling of this word which was “phrensy”. This is derived from the Latin and the Greek word “phrenesis” meaning madness or delirium, and in turn comes from the Greek word “phren” or mind.’ Wakeley’s Faber Medical Dictionary (1962) lists:

phrenesis (G[reek], inflammation of the brain) ‘delirium, insanity’; phrenetic (G[reek] Phren, midriff) ‘maniacal’; phrenic ‘(G[reek] phren, midriff). 1. Relating to the diaphragm … 2. relating to the mind’; and phrenitis, ‘(G[reek] phren, midriff or mind) 1. Inflammation of the brain. 2. Inflammation of the diaphragm 3. Delirium.

Black’s Medical Dictionary, from 1981, represents yet another development, including ‘phrenic nerve’ (for the one ‘which chiefly supplies the diaphragm’) and ‘phrenology’ as an ‘old term’ for physiognomic approaches to the relationship between head-shape and character, but not ‘phrenitis’.

It is significant that phrenology – by then, much more factually absurd – is included, but not phrenitis, a testament to the still recent validity of the latter. The 1981 Psychiatric Dictionary by Robert J. Campbell mentions various terms in phren-, and under phrenitis explains that ‘This term was used by Hippocrates for inflammation of the brain’, which was precisely not the case, as we have seen. The 1986 Oxford Companion to Medicine likewise avoids phrenitis, but again accepts ‘phrenology’, defining this as a ‘pseudoscience’; the reality of phrenitis seems confirmed as both still too close to be dismissed as archaeology and too distant scientifically to be treated as medically valid. The Radcliffe European Medical Dictionary (1991) includes only the adjective ‘frenico (Italian, ‘diaframmatico, mentale’) = phrenic (English) = diaphragmatisch, Zwerchfell- (German), frénico (Spanish), psychique (French)’. Stedman’s Medical Dictionary (1995) also offers ‘phrenic’: ‘1. Diaphragmatic 2. Of the mind’ and ‘phrenology’ as ‘obsolete doctrine’, but not phrenitis, while the 2006 Mosby’s Dictionary has the adjective ‘phrenetic’ for ‘frenzied, delirious, maniac’, and phren- again referring to ‘1. Diaphragm 2. The mind’. But we find no phrenitis here. Discomfort with the label and its bulky history is also visible, finally, in the 1999 A Dictionary of the History of Medicine, which keeps phrenitis somewhat distant, describing it as ‘Ancient Greek term for disease of the mind’, while offering a longer section on ‘phrenology’.

This partial, episodic and patently patchy survey shows that sometime towards the middle of the nineteenth century the term phrenitis became (or began to become) obsolete and non-viable in official medicine. But the adjectives associated with it and its general ‘mental’ and ‘diaphragmatic’ meanings were remembered, as were its connections with the brain, more or less precisely traced back to various authors of the ancient past. The concreteness and clinical appeal of the term were still felt well into the nineteenth century, when several dictionaries consider it passé but its copyright had not yet expired, so to speak: while phrenology can be comfortably placed in the Museum of the History of Medicine, phrenitis cannot yet be handled so cavalierly. As far as phren- is concerned, the root’s meanings ‘mind’, ‘diaphragm’ and ‘brain’ are still felt, and more or less in this order of importance. Today, however, the vast majority of doctors and general readers ignore what phrenitis once was.

1 I discuss some of these issues in Reference ThumigerThumiger (2013); Reference Thumiger and SingerThumiger and Singer (2018a) 1–6. See also the studies in Reference SteinertSteinert (2020). On naming and new diseases, see Chapter 1, and Reference HarrisHarris (2022).

2 See pp. 13, 17, 34 n. 33, 43, 44, 52–53, 103–09. above.

3 See above, pp. 235–38, 249, 253, 278–80, 319.

Appendix 3 Phrenitis from the Fifth Century bce to the Twentieth Century ce: A Synoptic Table

Bodily localizationCause
Hippocrates (fifth century bce) (Summary)
  • (not really a localization)

  • Diaphragm

  • Head

  • Blood

  • Stomach

  • Bile, phlegm

  • Pressure on the diaphragm?

  • Heating of the blood

Morb. 1.30Heating of the patient’s blood (haematocentrism)
Morb. 1.34Cause of death: lack of nourishment, wasting, excessive phlegm, cold, death
Hipp. Fragment in APBrainThe brain is damaged by the blood around the chorioid meninx, which usually feeds it, being corrupted by bile
Aff. 10DiaphragmBile settling against the diaphragm
Aff. 12Random part (ᾗ ἂν τύχῃ)Accumulation of phlegm and bile
Diocles (fourth century bce)Inflammation of the diaphragm (φλεγμονὴ τοῦ διαφράγματος); thick, cold phlegm gathering around the offshoots that grow from the heart (καρδία)Inflammation
Praxagoras (fourth century bce)Inflammation of the heart (φλεγμονὴν τῆς καρδίας); thick, cold phlegm gathering around the offshoots that grow from the heart (καρδία)
Anonymus Londinensis (fourth century bce)Logistikon
Heraclides of Tarentum (third–second centuries bce)
  • Head

  • The stomach can also be involved

  • Congestion of the head

  • Heaviness when food is in the stomach

  • Decomposition of the humours

Erasistratus (third century bce)Meninx (κατά τι πάθος τῶν κατὰ τὴν μήνιγγα ἐνεργειῶν)
Asclepiades (second century bce)
  • Meninges, membranes in general

  • Stomach

  • Brain

  • Sensorial channels

  • Generally delocalized

Stoppage or obstruction of the corpuscles in the membranes of the brain, as it becomes overheated; overflow of corpuscles and blockage. Thus: holistic, delocalized circumstances more than an individual cause (overheating is the sole starting point)
Thessalus (first century bce)Inflammation of the heartDenial of antecedent causes
Celsus (first century bce-ce)Body as a whole; non-specific fever
Galen (second-third century ce)Brain, nerves, hēgemonikon (diaphragm via sympathy; lungs may be involved)
  • Inflammation of the brain

  • Overflow of yellow bile in brain or meninges

  • Accumulation of malignant humour

  • Summer heat

  • Bad lifestyle

  • Also overflow of blood in the brain caused by various factors

Anonymus Parisinus
  • Doxographic survey:

  • Head

  • Meninx

  • Brain

  • Diaphragm

Inflammation, affection of the various parts; descriptive rather than scientific
Aretaeus (first-second century ce)
  • Diaphragm

  • Heart

  • Head

  • Neura

Oreibasius (fourth century ce)Brain
Aetius of Amida (sixth century ce)Meninges, brain; some relation to the chest
Paul of AeginaMeninges and brain
[ps.-] Alexander of Aphrodisias (second-third century ce)Brain
Alexander of Tralles (sixth century ce)Brain/meninges; but controversial localizationOchre bile; yellow bile; overcooked yellow bile
Nemesius of Emesa (fourth century ce)Brain
Caelius Aurelianus (fifth century ce?)No fixed localization
Byzantine authorsBrain (diaphragm)Inflammation, humoral unbalance
Ḥunayn (ninth century ce)Brain and meninges Diaphragm
al-Rāzī (ninth–tenth centuries ce)Brain
Haly Abbas, Pantegni/ Viaticum
  • Membranes of the brain or the brain matter

  • Diaphragm

Hot complexion of the brain or apostema in the membranes of the brain or in the brain
Ibn Sīnā (Avicenna), (tenth–eleventh century)Brain/meninges (Diaphragm)
  • Hot apostema/abscess of the head

  • Blood, pure yellow bile, pure red bile, or bile burnt black

Arnau de Vilanova (fourteenth century)Membranes/Brain (Diaphragm, chest)Hot apostema of the membranes
Gilbertus Anglicus (thirteenth century)Anterior portion of the brain or its membranes (= frenes)Inflamed apostema born in the anterior portion of the brain or its membranes; accumulation of liquid in the brain due to (1) its many vessels, (2) its sponginess, which sucks in moisture
Gentile da Foligno (fourteenth century)Brain (Diaphragm)
Ibn Zuhr (Avenzoar) (twelfth century), Taysir
  • Head

  • Brain, membranes

  • Apostema

  • Humours

  • Humours rising from the stomach

Bernard de Gordon (beginning of the fourteenth century)Brain or membranes of the brain
  • Hot apostema

  • Overheating

Talmud (Kordiakos/Qordiakos)Heart?
  • New wine

  • A daemon

Rabbi Jonah (tenth–eleventh centuries ce)Brain/mind/diaphragm
Maimonides (twelfth century ce)Brain/mind/diaphragm
Syriac Book of Medicines (fourth–twelfth centuries?)Brain/chest/diaphragm/membranes
Salernitan school (tenth century CE- )Brain/head/membranes (Diaphragm)Apostema calidus
Parcelsus (fifteenth–sixteenth century)The spiritusThe tartari can be cause
Antonio Beniveni (sixteenth century)Head, brain
André du Laurens (sixteenth–seventeenth centuries)
  • Brain and membranes of the brain

  • Diaphragm

Daniel Sennert (seventeenth century)Brain, meninges
Giovanbattista Morgagni (seventeenth–eighteenth centuries)Brain and membranes of the brain (lungs can be involved)Inflammation, heating; various circumstances
Herman Boerhaave (seventeenth–eighteenth centuries)Brain and membranes of the brain (lungs and other organs may also be involved)
Gerard van Swieten (eighteenth century)Brain and membranes of the brain (lungs and other organs may also be involved)
Ferdinand Saalman (eighteenth–nineteenth centuries)
  • Brain and membranes of the brain

  • Lungs

Contagious infection, lack of hygiene and cleanness, bad air
Philippe Pinel (nineteenth century)Brain and membranes of the brainInflammation, heating
Physicians and veterinaries (seventeenth–nineteenth centuries)Brain and membranes of the brainInflammation, heating; various circumstances
nineteenth–twentieth-century medical consensusBrain and membranes of the brain (meningo-encephalitis)Inflammation, heating; various circumstances

Footnotes

2 That heat and fevers are a central datum in ancient medical observations is obvious and expected; see Reference HamlinHamlin (2014) on the topic. Compare the Hippocratic Internal Affections 39, where we have a discussion of typhus: ‘This disease comes on in summer, when the Dog Star rises, because of bile being set in motion through the body’ (175 Potter = 7.262 L.). The pseudo-Aristotelian Problemata 1.19 and 1.29 offer a good summary of ancient medical views of heating, seasonality and pathology, and ps.-Alexander of Aphrodisias wrote a treatise On Fevers (De Febribus, περὶ πυρετῶν), on which see Reference van der Eijkvan der Eijk (forthcoming); the focus is on the concept of heat, ‘natural heat’ and ‘heat contrary to nature’ (esp. in Chapter 10); see also the chapters in Reference Bartoš and KingBartoš and King (2020) on heat in ancient biology. Reference Nyord and WeeNyord (2018) 25–40 has important methodological remarks starting from a case study of the phenomenology of ‘heat’ in ancient Egyptian medical language and ‘conceptual patterns’.

3 On malaria, see Chapter 1, p. 25. Reference JonesJones (1909) set the precedent for radical retrospective-diagnosis of malaria in the history of ancient medicine, on which see Reference van der Eijk and Michaelidesvan der Eijk (2014); see also Grmek (1983/1989) 265–66, 289–92 on fevers and the like in ancient Mediterranean settings; Reference Flemming and PetitFlemming (2018) in a discussion of the Antonine plague and Galen’s time as a ‘pestilential age’; Reference SallaresSallares (2002); Reference Scheidel, Edwards and WoolfScheidel (2003), (Reference Scheidel2009) on Rome; Reference NuttonNutton (2004) 32–34 for a general assessment; Reference HamlinHamlin (2014) 1–21 for definitions and problems in studying ancient fevers, and the pitfalls of essentialism, since ‘it is tempting to see fever as independent of language and culture and to assume that persons in the past were identifying the same conditions and features that we do, only in qualitative terms, but caution is in order’ (7); Reference CraikCraik (2020).

5 I thank Ulrike Steinert for her invaluable help with this material.

6 Reference ScurlockScurlock (2004) 28, see 29 for a bio-medical retrospective interpretation in terms of Bornholm disease.

7 For a more helpful take on the retrospective diagnosing of ‘hand of ghost’ in particular, see Reference Kinnier Wilson and ReynoldsKinnier Wilson and Reynolds (1990); already Reference Kinnier WilsonKinnier Wilson (1965).

11 A disease caused by extreme temperatures, whether cold or hot through exposure to the burning sun (solis exustione, 430.13–16 Bendz).

14 See above, p. 323.

15 On this passage and medical influences, from the particular angle of Aristotle’s theory of tragic katharsis, see Reference 403Langholf and HaaseLangholf (1996).

16 See Chapter 8, pp. 323–24.

17 Cf. Chapter 6 on the Christian trope of humanity as a ‘possessed’, phrenitic mob.

18 In this, Galen seems to differ from the Hippocratic interpretation of phrenitis as a winter ailment, and at Comm. Hipp. Epid. I, 2.74 (17a.177 K.) he comments on the Hippocratic claim that ‘there were a few cases of phrenitis also in the summer’ (which seemed to imply that the majority were in the winter). On the classification of phrenitis as a ‘hot’ disease, see Reference DevinantDevinant (2020) 219 n. 48, 220.

19 See Chapter 5, n. 153.

20 It is no coincidence that Euripides described the mad Bacchants as ‘bitches of Lyssa’ in their flight to the mountain: ἴτε θοαὶ Λύσσας κύνες, ἴτ’ εἰς ὄρος, Ba. 977). Heat, summer, symbolic and real, and the astronomical Canis are all combined together. See Reference MetzgerMetzger (2011), esp. 155–70 on lycanthropy and the dog element associated with mental disorder (in this case mostly melancholy).

22 On fever and phlegmonē, see the early discussion attributed to Antiphon quoted by Galen in On Medical Names, d28 (IX.45 Laks–Most).

23 One can invoke here a folk parallel, the tarantismo, forms of recursive dance-epidemics studied by anthropologists (see famously Dodds 1951, 76–79, 270–75, 279 Footnote n. 9). Attacks of tarantismo are characterized by a heightened sensibility to music and spastic dance movements; they occur in the summer at midday. See the classic study by Reference De MartinoDe Martino (1961) and afterwards Reference De GiorgiDe Giorgi (1999). Reference De MartinoDe Martino (1961) 98, 101, 148 also notes that these attacks tend to be triggered by ‘a mezzogiorno’; see 76–77, 118–19, on interpretations connecting these phenomena with cases of ‘heatstroke’.

1 I discuss some of these issues in Reference ThumigerThumiger (2013); Reference Thumiger and SingerThumiger and Singer (2018a) 1–6. See also the studies in Reference SteinertSteinert (2020). On naming and new diseases, see Chapter 1, and Reference HarrisHarris (2022).

2 See pp. 13, 17, 34 n. 33, 43, 44, 52–53, 103–09. above.

3 See above, pp. 235–38, 249, 253, 278–80, 319.

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  • Appendices
  • Chiara Thumiger, Cluster of Excellence Roots, Christian-Albrechts Universität zu Kiel, Germany
  • Book: <i>Phrenitis</i> and the Pathology of the Mind in Western Medical Thought
  • Online publication: 16 November 2023
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  • Appendices
  • Chiara Thumiger, Cluster of Excellence Roots, Christian-Albrechts Universität zu Kiel, Germany
  • Book: <i>Phrenitis</i> and the Pathology of the Mind in Western Medical Thought
  • Online publication: 16 November 2023
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  • Appendices
  • Chiara Thumiger, Cluster of Excellence Roots, Christian-Albrechts Universität zu Kiel, Germany
  • Book: <i>Phrenitis</i> and the Pathology of the Mind in Western Medical Thought
  • Online publication: 16 November 2023
Available formats
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