The Inca healer: Empirical medical knowledge and magic in pre-Columbian Peru

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Abstract

The role of medical practitioners among the Incas is addressed, based on archeological findings and especially the writings of the Spanish chroniclers. In Inca medicine a large role was reserved for religion and magic but at the same time an extensive knowledge of medicinal plants was available. As a consequence there were several types of healers who cured with a mixture of medicinal plants and religious-magic ceremonies. The hampicamayoc or 'official in charge of medicines' was the one who resembled somewhat the European physician of that time and was the most important type of healer. He relied largely but certainly not exclusively on the use of medicinal plants. There were also healers who cured mainly with religious-magic procedures. Surgery must have been important for the Inca healer but this is hardly reflected in the work of the Spanish chroniclers.

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Elferink, J. G. R. (2015). The Inca healer: Empirical medical knowledge and magic in pre-Columbian Peru. Revista de Indias, 75(264), 323–350. https://doi.org/10.3989/revindias.2015.011

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