KissMeGoodnight
eLearning Series: White Teeth & Smile
I Want White Teeth and a
Natural, Healthy Looking Smile
someone please tell me the secret already...
( 21 pages )
The
History Of Dentistry
Before
you can begin to appreciate what the advances in modern dentistry
mean to us in the modern world, we must take a look at dentistry
throughout the ages.
Sumerian
tablets recovered from 5,000 BC tell us that these ancient
people took their dental care very seriously using the first
known toothbrush. It was fashioned from a tree branch and
they used it to rid themselves of "tooth worms."
Jump
ahead to just 100 BC and we find a Roman medical writer named
Celsus. Believe it or not, he gave treatment advice for toothaches,
jaw fractures and even oral hygiene.
By
the middle ages, medicine began to emerge as a vocation.
Monks were the surgeons and dentists of the day because they
were usually the only "educated" people in their
location. They practiced from around 900 AD up
until 1163 when "The Church" decided to forbid
the practice.
Fortunately,
barbers were privy to the knowledge once held by monks only.
During that period in history, barbers visited the monasteries
frequently. Monks required shaved heads then and that was
a service provided by the local barber. Because of their
close association, the barbers frequently assisted the monks
in their medical and surgical duties. It was a natural transition
for them to pick up the slack after the monks forbidden edict.
From
around 1200 AD barbers eventually branched off into two separate
entities. One arm continued to do routine services such as
shaving, bloodletting and the extraction of teeth.
The
other branch was the basis for more sophisticated medical,
dental and surgical services that eventually comprised the
medical community.
By
the 18th Century the medical profession
had fully evolved. In 1760, the earliest medically-trained
dentist arrived in
America from England. His name was John Baker and his was
the first American dental practice.
Perhaps
you have had an opportunity to view one of the movie “westerns”
where you often see the town barber called upon to extract
a tooth for an ailing cowboy. Even that is a far cry from
modern dentistry. With the advances in science and dental
medicine it is now possible for someone to have a total dental
makeover, no matter what condition their teeth may be in.
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