The Temples and Cult of Asclepius, from "The History of Medicine" / Robert Thom

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Record Details

Accession Number
UMHS.5
Title
The Temples and Cult of Asclepius, from "The History of Medicine"
Artist
Robert Thom
Artist Life Dates
1915-1979
Medium and Support
oil on canvas
Object Creation Date
circa 1952
Object Creation Place
North and Central America (continent)
United States (nation)
Michigan (state)
Creation Place 2
United States (nation)
Creation Place 3
Michigan (state)
Dimensions
170.82 cm x 120.65 cm (67 1/4 in. x 47 1/2 in.)
Century
20th century
Primary Object Classification
Painting
Physical Description
Every night for nearly a thousand years (500 B.C. - 500 A.D.), sick and afflicted pilgrims flocked to the Grecian Temples of Asclepius to take part of a ritual called incubation. The ancient kindly god of medicine was expected to visit them during a dream state and either heal or prescribe drugs, diet, and modes of treatment. Only requisites were that they should be clean and "think pure thoughts." To show their appreciation, recipients of Asclepius' favor caused votives (stone or terra cotta images of the afflicted parts which supposedly had been healed) to be made, suitably inscribed, and presented to be hung as testimony on the temple walls. More than 200 such temples existed.
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Technical Details

Record
UMHS.5
Link to this Item
https://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/musart/x-umhs.5/umhs.5.jpg

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Full citation
"The Temples and Cult of Asclepius, from "The History of Medicine"; Robert Thom." In the digital collection University of Michigan Museum of Art. https://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/musart/x-umhs.5/umhs.5.jpg. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 22, 2024.
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