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17.12.08 - 15:52 -

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A group of archaeologists has found in the northern region of León a ceramic lamp dating from the beginning of the 1st century that shows a representation of the gynaecological exam performed on a sick woman.
Archaeology professor at Madrid's Universidad Complutense Ángel Morillo, told Efe that this is a "unique find without parallel in the Roman world."
Morillo on Tuesday night in León city will present the results of the investigation that has lasted six years during a conference entitled "From the Legions to the Barbarians: New perspectives on Roman Archaeology."
The find is of an oil lamp, "an exceptional piece that illustrates the presence of doctors in the city," and - specifically - a military hospital, the expert said.
On the lamp's surface "appears a very slender woman, possibly affected by a serious illness, like cancer, and a doctor who is performing a gynaecological exam with a vaginal speculum," Morillo said.
Possibly the image is of a specific examination that one of the Roman doctors performed, he said.
"We know that during that period there were vaginal speculums, which are practically the same as the ones we have (now), but ... representations of them have come down (to us) on very few occasions and never - so far - in the case of a lamp," he said.
Currently, the piece "is in the hands of private individuals" but it will be sent to the León Provincial Museum, he added.
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