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A medieval soldier suffers a catastrophic fall from Rhuddlan Castle scaffolding in 1282. His shoulder is dislocated three inches out of place. This is what medieval surgery looked like - and it's absolutely brutal. In medieval England, medical care was divided into three classes: university-trained physicians (who only treated nobility), professional guild surgeons (who worked in major cities), and barber-surgeons. For common soldiers in castle garrisons, you got the barber-surgeon - the same person who cut hair and pulled teeth. The procedure: Patient restrained by two soldiers Barber-surgeon plants boot on chest Pulls dislocated arm with full force while patient is fully conscious No anesthesia, no painkillers, no sedation Cost: 4 pence (4 days of wages) Infection risk: 60% due to no understanding of germ theory Compare this to modern medicine where you'd receive morphine, propofol sedation, antibiotics, a sling, and physical therapy. In 1282? You got a leather strap to bite down on. ⬆️ WATCH THE FULL IMMERSIVE HISTORY See the complete brutal day in the life of a medieval soldier at Rhuddlan Castle - from the construction accident to the nightmarish medical procedure and beyond. Every detail is historically accurate based on primary sources. 🎥 Full story: [ • Immersive History | Why You Wouldn't Last ... ] #shorts #medieval #surgery #medicine #medievalmedicine #history #barbersurgeon #1282 #historicalfacts #educational #brutal #documentary #anesthesia #medievalengland #medicalhistory #healthhistory #edwardi #rhuddlancastle #historytok #painful #survival #orthopedic #shouldersurgery #historical