Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Guest Blogger: Mary Sharratt & Giveaway

I'd like to welcome Mary Sharratt, author of ILLUMINATIONS: A NOVEL OF HILDEGARD VONBINGEN, to Booking Mama. I became a big fan of Ms. Sharratt's a few years ago when I read her historical fiction book called DAUGHTERS OF THE WITCHING HILL -- you can read my review here. I haven't had a chance to read ILLUMINATIONS yet, but this book is already getting fantastic reviews. 

ILLUMINATIONS sounds amazing, and needless to say, I can't wait to read it. My review will be posted in the very near future, but in the meantime, you can learn more about the book's main character, Hildegard von Bingen, in this enlightening guest post.

Hildegard the Healer

Hildegard von Bingen (1098–1179) was a visionary Benedictine abbess and polymath. She composed an entire corpus of sacred music and wrote nine books on subjects as diverse as theology, cosmology, botany, medicine, linguistics, and human sexuality, a prodigious intellectual outpouring that was unprecedented for a 12th-century woman. Her prophecies earned her the title Sybil of the Rhine. 

873 years after her death, Hildegard was canonized in May 2012. On October 7, she was elevated to Doctor of the Church, a rare and solemn title reserved for theologians who have significantly impacted Church doctrine. 

But Hildegard was also a physician and healer who developed her own highly original style of medical treatment and holistic dietary philosophy. 

Saint Benedict of Nursia (480-543), the founder of her order, expressly forbade the study of medicine, which in his era derived solely from texts written by pagans such as Hippocrates and Galen. Benedict believed that prayer alone must suffice in healing Christians.

But by Hildegard’s time, monasteries had become centers of healing and embraced the medical knowledge of the Classical pagan world along with the pioneering work of the Arab and Persian physicians. Nearly every monastic house had its own infirmary, hospice, apothecary, and medicinal garden. Hildegard would have had ample opportunity to train as a physician and apothecarer at Disibodenberg Monastery, a double monastery housing both monks and nuns, where she had lived since the age of eight.

In his essay, “Hildegard’s Medicine: A Systematic Science of Medieval Europe,” Kevin Anthony Hay suggests that Hildegard trained as an infirmarer at Disibodenberg under the guidance of a senior monk before she later took charge of the infirmary. After she and her nuns left Disibodenberg to found their own community at Rupertsberg, she wrote Causae et Curae, her main medical text, possibly so the new infirmarer at Disibodenberg could benefit from her knowledge and expertise. When designing the new abbey at Rupertsberg, Hildegard made sure to include a medicinal steambath. People throughout her region came to Rupertsberg to receive healing.

In the Middle Ages, women freely practiced the medical arts. The School of Salerno, the first medieval European medical school and the epicenter of Western medical science, included both women instructors and students. One such instructor was the 11th century Trotula whose treatise on women’s health that bears her name, de Trotula, was used for centuries after her death. It was not until the mid- 16th century that European women were formally forbidden to study and practice as physicians.  
Hay believes Hildegard was unique among female practitioners of her time because her medicine didn’t focus solely on female complaints and also because she developed a systematic, scientific, and holistic understanding of medicine that rivaled what was coming out of Salerno, even though she had never received any formal university training.

For Hildegard, medicine was an integral part of her religious vocation. Her medicine mirrors her theology—she believed that humans existed as the microcosm within the macrocosm of the universe and, as such, mirrored the splendor of creation. But if one fell into disharmony with the innate wholeness of creation, illness resulted. This could be treated through rest, herbal cures, steam baths, a proper diet, and by making one’s peace with the divine order.

She identified pre-cancerous states and developed herbal remedies to treat them before the cancer could develop. Naturopathic doctors in modern Germany still practice “Hildegard Medizin” and work with her dietary philosophy. She was a big fan of spelt bread. She warned that water could be unhealthy to drink and could cause illness, but that beer was most wholesome and pleasing to God. She was credited for discovering the use of hops to preserve beer.  

If you are visiting Hildegard sites in Germany, be sure to stop at the Hildegard Forum, just across the Rhine from the Saint Hildegard Abbey in Eibingen. The Forum is run by religious sisters who offer outreach for the public to learn more about Hildegard, particularly her philosophy of holistic healing and nutrition. They manage a café and restaurant; offer seminars and retreats; and maintain an orchard and a medieval-style herb garden.

Mary Sharratt’s ILLUMINATIONS: A NOVEL OF HILDEGARD VON BINGEN is published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt and is a Book of the Month and One Spirit Book Club pick. Visit Mary’s website: www.marysharratt.com

Thanks to Ms. Sharratt for such a fascinating guest post.  

Giveaway alert: I have a copy of ILLUMINATIONS to share with one lucky Booking Mama reader. To enter, just fill out the form below before November 7th at 11:59 p.m. ET. I will randomly select and notify the winner the following day. This contest is open to those of you with U.S. and Canada addresses only. Good luck!

5 comments:

bermudaonion said...

It sounds like Hildegard had a long and fascinating life. I can see why Sharratt chose to write about her.

Ruth said...

I love Hildegard! I have studied her life, and this sounds fantastic!

techeditor said...

I'm SO anxious to read this book! I didn't enter your contest because Mary Sharratt very kindly told me a couple of weeks ago that she would send me a copy. I'll review it after I read it.

Sandy Nawrot said...

I really loved The Daughters of Witching Hill, so I really need more of her! I'm going to see about audio options though, since apparently I can't even read one book every two weeks...

Beth F said...

Great guest post. I think people tend to forget that there were periods in history when at least some women had access to education.