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These healing priests were educated in schools associated with their
temples. The method of instruction included practical hands on training,
similar to apprenticeship patterns we will study in Europe and early
America, and the memorizing of the hundreds of clay tablets that contained
the bulk of Mesopotamian medical knowledge. These priest‑physicians
administered mostly to the court, the nobility, and the upper classes. The
lower‑classes, that constituted the great majority of the populace, had to
rely on the early barber‑surgeons to care for their illnesses, along with
following local folk remedies.
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