Imhotep
(b. 27th century BCE, Memphis, Egypt)
Imhotep (Greek: Imouthes) was a vizier, sage,
architect, astrologer, and chief minister to Djoser (reigned 2630– 2611 BCE),
the second king of Egypt’s third dynasty, who was later worshipped as the god
of medicine in Egypt and in Greece, where he was identified with the Greek god
of medicine, Asclepius. He is considered to have been the architect of the step
pyramid built at the necropolis of Saqq˙ ārah
in the city of Memphis. The oldest extant monument of hewn stone known to the
world, the pyramid consists of six steps and attains a height of 200 feet (61
metres).
Although no contemporary account has been found that refers to
Imhotep as a practicing physician, ancient documents illustrating Egyptian
society and medicine during the Old Kingdom (c. 2575– c. 2130 BCE)
show that the chief magician of the pharaoh’s court also frequently served as
the nation’s chief physician. Imhotep’s reputation as the reigning genius of
the time, his position in the court, his training as a scribe, and his becoming
known as a medical demigod only 100 years after his death are strong
indications that he must have been a physician of considerable skill.
Not until the Persian conquest of Egypt in 525 BCE was Imhotep
elevated to the position of a full deity, replacing Nefertem in the great triad
of Memphis, shared with his mythological parents Ptah, the creator of the
universe, and Sekhmet, the goddess of war and pestilence. Imhotep’s cult
reached its zenith during Greco-Roman times, when his temples in Memphis and on
the island of Philae (Arabic: Jazīrat Fīlah)
in the Nile River were often crowded with sufferers who prayed and slept there
with the conviction that the god would reveal remedies to them in their dreams.
The only Egyptian mortal besides the 18th- dynasty sage and minister Amenhotep
to attain the honour of total deification, Imhotep is still held in esteem by
physicians who, like the eminent 19th-century British practitioner Sir William
Osler, consider him “the first figure of a physician to stand out clearly from
the mists of antiquity.”
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