Vial Physical Object


Accession Number
1986.008.2298b
Category
Creation Date
circa 1622
Materials
Description
6.8 x 6.0 x 0.6 cm. 29.69 grams. Base fragment (3 pieces cross-mended). Green glass. One of eight pieces. See also 1986.008.2298a, c--e.
Dimensions

6.8 x 6.0 x 0.6 cm. 29.69 grams.

Exhibition Label
Case Caption (2023):

The Surgeon

Both Cecilio de Ribera aboard the Nuestra Señora de Atocha and Juan de Mercado on the Santa Margarita were ship’s surgeons. At this time, a surgeon was often a barber who had acquired a few additional skills rather than a man with medical training.

He would have few medicines to offer. His resources would include basilicum powder (made from basil) to speed the healing of a wound and poultice ingredients for sores or strains. The lack of fresh food in sailors’ rations would lead to digestive problems in the short term or even scurvy during a long voyage. Many minor illnesses were treated with enemas, whether truly appropriate or not.

In addition, the surgeon would know how to clean a sword cut, dig out a musket ball, or even pull a tooth. He might have to go as far as amputating the limb of an injured sailor. Dipping a man’s freshly severed stump in hot pitch to seal the wound would be as close to hygiene as the operation might come.
Object Caption (2023):

Bottle Fragments
Glass (Spain, c.1610)
Gift of Jamestown Inc.
1986.006.2298a-b