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In the [[Renaissance]] context: the four essential body fluids.  
In the [[Renaissance]] context: there are four essential body fluids. [[Image:Humours.gif|right]]
In Greek, Medieval, and Renaissance thought, four traditional elements constitute the basis for a theory of medicine and later psychological typology generally referred to as the theory of the four humours. This theory is the western equivalent of the Chinese five states of change. Each of the humours is associated with various correspondences  and particular physical and mental characteristics.  


The four humours are closely related to the four elements (fire, air, water, earth). Water is associated with phlegm (produced in the lungs), earth with black bile, fire with yellow bile and air with blood. Ideally, the four humours should be in balance in the body. If not, they determine people's characters: too much blood makes one sanguinic, too much phlegm phlegmatic. A choleric is someone with a surplus of yellow bile; a melancholic someone with too much black bile.
The four humours are closely related to the four elements: fire, air, water, earth. Water is associated with phlegm (produced by the lungs), earth with black bile (believed to be produced by the gall bladder), fire with yellow bile (believed to be produced by the spleen) and air with blood (believed to be produced by the liver). Ideally, the four humours should be in balance in the body. If this was not the case, they were taken to determine people's characters in extreme ways: too much blood makes one sanguinic, too much phlegm phlegmatic. A choleric is someone with a surplus of yellow bile, while a melancholic is someone with too much black bile.  


The comedy of humours (associated with [[Ben Jonson]]) has nothing to do with humour in the conventional sense, but with the four humours. It presents characters that are strongly shaped by one humour or that represent (stereo-)types. In the [[Restoration]] period Jonson's model found many admirers, among them [[playwright]] Thomas Shadwell.  
Furthermore the humours were associated with a person's complexion and body type. Sanguine people were generally believed to be red-cheeked  and rather corpulent (one famous literary example is Falstaff), while the typical choleric was percieved as red-haired and thin. Phlegmatic people were also believed to be corpulent in contrast to the melancholic, who was depicted as sallow and thin. The ideal personality came into being when none of the four humours dominated.  


[[Category:Literature]]
By 1600 it was common to use the term "humour" in order to classify different characters and they also feature in Renaissance literature and the arts. Most famously, perhaps, in the comedy of humours (associated with [[Ben Jonson]]). It has nothing to do with humour in the conventional sense, but with the four humours. It presents characters that are strongly shaped by one humour or that represent (stereo-)types. In the [[Restoration]] period Jonson's model found many admirers, among them [[playwright]] [[Thomas Shadwell]].
 
== Sources ==
*http://www.kheper.net/topics/typology/four_humours.html
*http://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/ideas/humours.html
*Suerbaum, Ulrich: ''Das elisabethanische Zeitalter''. Stuttgart: Reclam, 1999.

Latest revision as of 10:37, 22 November 2017

In the Renaissance context: there are four essential body fluids.

In Greek, Medieval, and Renaissance thought, four traditional elements constitute the basis for a theory of medicine and later psychological typology generally referred to as the theory of the four humours. This theory is the western equivalent of the Chinese five states of change. Each of the humours is associated with various correspondences and particular physical and mental characteristics.

The four humours are closely related to the four elements: fire, air, water, earth. Water is associated with phlegm (produced by the lungs), earth with black bile (believed to be produced by the gall bladder), fire with yellow bile (believed to be produced by the spleen) and air with blood (believed to be produced by the liver). Ideally, the four humours should be in balance in the body. If this was not the case, they were taken to determine people's characters in extreme ways: too much blood makes one sanguinic, too much phlegm phlegmatic. A choleric is someone with a surplus of yellow bile, while a melancholic is someone with too much black bile.

Furthermore the humours were associated with a person's complexion and body type. Sanguine people were generally believed to be red-cheeked and rather corpulent (one famous literary example is Falstaff), while the typical choleric was percieved as red-haired and thin. Phlegmatic people were also believed to be corpulent in contrast to the melancholic, who was depicted as sallow and thin. The ideal personality came into being when none of the four humours dominated.

By 1600 it was common to use the term "humour" in order to classify different characters and they also feature in Renaissance literature and the arts. Most famously, perhaps, in the comedy of humours (associated with Ben Jonson). It has nothing to do with humour in the conventional sense, but with the four humours. It presents characters that are strongly shaped by one humour or that represent (stereo-)types. In the Restoration period Jonson's model found many admirers, among them playwright Thomas Shadwell.

Sources