Trotulaβs most significant contribution to history was her authorship of De Passionibus Mulierum Curandorum ("On the Diseases of Women"), a groundbreaking medical text that focused on womenβs health, including menstruation, childbirth, and fertility. She argued for humane and scientifically sound treatments of womenβs ailments, directly challenging the contemporary belief that womenβs suffering was divinely ordained or caused by their supposed inherent weakness.
Trotulaβs contributions were so influential that her works were studied for centuries across Europe, and yet, because of her gender, her authorship was questioned or downplayed in later centuries. Nonetheless, her legacy as a trailblazer in medicine persists. Trotula defied the deeply ingrained gender norms of her time by not only practicing medicine but excelling in it, reshaping medieval attitudes toward women's health and paving the way for future generations of women in science and medicine.
During a time when women were generally excluded from practicing medicine and academic life, Trotula became one of the most prominent medical figures in medieval Europe. Living in Salerno, Italy, she was part of the Schola Medica Salernitana, one of the first medical schools in Europe, and she specialized in womenβs health, a field largely neglected by male physicians.