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Qasr Al-Eini Museum
The first Museum of an Arab Faculty of Medicine
 
The idea of founding the Qasr Al-Eini Museum
was first initiated in 1976 by Dr. Mohammed Almenawi, the surgeon gynecologist
and obstetrician who was general secretary of the Faculty of Medicine
and responsible of the Museum.
The first stage was inaugurated on March 8, 1998 in the presence of representatives
of the world faculties of medicine; the second stage in March 1999 . The
Museum was eventually established in the adequate form appropriate to
the oldest Faculty of Medicine in the Orient.
The Museum narrates the history of medicine
in the Arab Machreq, confirming the historical role played by the Qasr
Al-Eini School of Medicine as a linkage between medicine in pharaonic
Egypt and modern medicine.
The library of the Museum houses the following:
-Numerous rare books and references.
-An encyclopedia on "The Wise Men of Qasr Al-Eini" or the
biographies of 154 professors who lectured in Qasr Al-Eini, with their
photos. Some 64 amongst them go back to the 19th Century.
-Various documents and manuscripts.
-Tableaux of marble.
-Photographic pictures.
-Different statues.
-An original copy of the book " Description de lEgypte " which
was written by the French scholarswho accompanied Bonaparte during his
campaign on Egypt (1789)
The Story of Medicine in Egypt:
The first School of Medicine in Egypt was inaugurated in Feb.1827 following
the decision of Mohammed Ali Pacha, Wali (Ruler) of Egypt to introduce
the European techniques in the Egyptian army through the assistance of
French officers ; he called Klute Bey from France in 1825 to be the first
surgeon in the Egyptian army assisted by a number of physicians and pharmacists.
The School and the hospital were annexed to a training camp at Abu Zaabal
( in the outskirts of Cairo ). It was joined by one hundred students from
Al-Azhar (the oldest theological university ) under Klute Bey , the headmaster
of the School during 1827-1837.
They studied seven subjects: chemistry/physics, anatomy, physiology, pathology,
medicine, hygienics, and pharmacology; they were lectured by seven foreign
physicians assisted by skillful interpreters.
In 1832 Klute Bey selected 12 graduates of the School to study in France
. They travelled wearing their turbans, jubbahs and caftans. They were
highly praised by the head of the French Society of Medicine for their
primacy and merit " being the descendants of Ibn-Sina, Al-Razi, and
other Arab Scholars" as he described them; similar missions were
annually sent to France.
In 1837 the School of Medicine and the hospital were transferred from
Abu Zaabal to Qasr Al-Eini (named after Ibn-Al-Eini who founded it in
1466 over a wide space on the bank of the Nile to be a rest house for
the Egyptian Wali or Ruler. It was used to receive princes and dignitaries,
and for holding the meetings of the Mamelukes.It was later used as barracks,
then a military school until 1837 when it was transferred to the School
of Medicine as aforementioned)
The studying period was, then, five years;
the number of students was 300 fully subsidized by the Government which
paid for their housing, living, dressing, education and pocket money.
The School made a great progress and Qasr Al-Eini became famous all over
the Arab countries; patients came from all parts for medical treatment
in Qasr El-Eini. Many books were translated from French into Arabic language
and copies there-of were sent to Istanbul and Arab countries. Egypt also
offered 10 scholarships to students from the Levant to study in Qasr Al-Eini
at the expense of the Egyptian Government.
One of the prominent devotees, Dr.Essa Pacha Hamdi, father of the modern
school of medicine was Director of the School of Medicine in the 80s of
the 19th Century. He was forced to resign under the pressure of the British
occupation which decided to transfer the studies from Arabic to English
language. But Essa Pacha Hamdi, endorsed by the Minister of Education,
could introduce modern techniques to the School and renovate its labs.
Starting 1887, students lived outside the School and paid for their living
and educational fees.
The first International Conference on Medicine held its sessions in Qasr
Al-Eini in Dec.1902, to be inaugurated on Dec. 18 by the Khedive at the
Opera House with the participation of physicians from Germany, America,
Britain, Austria, France, Italy, Swiss and Spain. In his inaugural speech
, the Khedive stressed the importance of holding the Conference in the
Nile Valley due to its specific geographic position as a link between
the East and the West. The Chairman of the Conference , Ibrahim Pacha
Hassan , speaking in Arabic, referred to the holding of the Conference
in the land of the Pharaohs who attained a high degree in medical knowledge.
In Oct., 1926, the School was transferred to a Faculty associated to the
Egyptian University. The Schools of Dentistry, Pharmacology, Nursery and
mid-wifery were joined to the Faculty of Medicine. In 1928 , female students
were admitted to medical studies.
The International Conference on Tropical Medicine was held in Cairo on
Dec.1928, celebrating at the same time the centenary of founding the School
of Medicine, and the laying of the foundation stone of the new Faculty
of Medicine and its hospital at the vicinity of Qasr Al-Eini on the Rawdah
Island.
In 1929, the genius surgery professor Ali Pacha Ibrahim, disciple of Essa
Pacha Hamdi, was elected Dean of the Faculty of Medicine, and by virtue
of his efforts, the degrees of the Faculty were recognized abroad, and
the Egyptian University created higher specialized degrees in medicine
matching with the highest similar degrees in European universities.
And, back and deep into history, the famous historian Herodotus wrote
that ancient Egyptians practiced medicine at an outstanding skill; nobody
was allowed to practice just one specialized medical branch-one had to
study all medical branches. Physicians in the pharaonic Era enjoyed a
sacred status. There was special temples for delivery, and the mid-wives
were called " The Gods Mothers ". The priests of the deity Sekht
were famous in medicine. Her son Amhoteb was renowned in medicine to the
extent that he was considered God. His father was the deity Betah. Amhotebs
statue is now at the Museum of Berlin.
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