Church leaders looked carefully at Galen's works and decided that they fitted in with Christian ideas because he referred to "the creator" in his works
Medical schools began to appear in Western Europe, starting with the one in Salerno, Italy. Translations of Galen's and Hippocrates' work were accepted as absolute truth in medical schools
Books were written that brought together the ideas of Aristotle, Galen and Hippocrates. These books were important means by which these ideas got back to Western Europe
Although human dissection was carried out in medical schools, findings were interpreted as the theory of the four humours – although some later doctors began to challenge traditional understandings
Trained doctors were very expensive. Medicine practised amongst the most was provided by monasteries and housewife-physicians, using traditional cures and their experience