On the Diseases and Cures of Women is a medical text preserved as part of a
miscellany on a single manuscript, codex 75.3 from the
Laurentian Library. The manuscript dates to the late tenth or early eleventh century, is authored by three different hands, and was probably compiled in southern Italy. The codex measures 110 x 170 mm, and comprises 263
leaves. There are between 25 and 27 lines of text on each page. The text was first published by Aristotle Kousis in 1945. The surviving manuscript collects various writings on medical topics. It begins with a section focusing on
obstetrics and diseases of the
uterus, followed by a more general discussion of women's medicine, a collection of miscellaneous excerpts from medical writers, and finally a series of excerpts from the sixth-century physician
Alexander of Tralles. The first section of the manuscript seems to be a single group of medical recipes which are unrelated to any other known medical works. Marie-Hélène Congourdeau identifies both the initial section on the womb, and the more general subsequent section on women's medicine, as being by Metrodora; on the other hand Gemma Storti suggests that the text on women's medicine generally should be grouped with the miscellaneous extracts from other medical writers, and that Metrodora might have been the author of only the initial section. The text begins with a discussion of the womb, how it is the source of most women's diseases, and a discussion of
hysteria. This discussion is heavily influenced by the treatise
On the Diseases of Women in the
Hippocratic Corpus. The text then discusses general diseases of the womb,
conception and
contraception, and childbirth. It also includes discussions of
aphrodisiacs and love-potions, diseases of the breasts, and cosmetics. At some point the Greek text of
On the Diseases and Cures of Women was translated into Latin, and it was misattributed to
Cleopatra. This was apparently due to a note included with one of the text's recipes, saying that it was used by Cleopatra. This Latin translation was published in 1566 by
Caspar Wolf, but all manuscripts have been lost. ==Identity of Metrodora==