In the Archaeological Museum of Nicosia, Cyprus, a collection of Roman terracotta vessels-dated to the 1st century BCE to 1st century CE-offers a compelling view into the convergence of empirical healing and early anatomical reasoning. These vessels, likely used for localized heat therapy, are distinctly shaped to contour specific body parts: ears, hands, feet, knees, abdomen, and thorax. With spouts for pouring warm liquids and cavities for radiating retained heat, they appear to have functioned as reusable "hot bags" for therapeutic application. Their deliberate anatomical shapes hint at a proto-clinical understanding of the body region, anticipating modern anatomical concepts such as aesthetic units, vascular territories, and lymphatic drainage zones. These vessels fall into distinct morphologies: craniofacial and auricular vessels, shaped for the side of the head or ear-reminiscent of the posterior auricular and superficial temporal angiosomes, and suggestive of treating headaches, neuralgia, or infections. Thoracoabdominal vessels, whose curved contours match rib cage and abdominal surfaces-suggesting therapeutic warmth for visceral discomfort or muscular tension. Upper and lower limb units, including knees, thighs, and elbows-likely used in joint pain or injuries. Distal extremity molds, notably for the hands and feet-organs that modern clinicians recognize as prone to cold exposure, vasospasm, and microvascular pathology. This paper repositions these clay forms not only as implements of care, but as anatomical "drawings in relief"-early, handmade representations of functional human zones. In doing so, they reconnect anatomy with the sensory and therapeutic traditions that first shaped it.
Kun Hwang (Tue,) studied this question.