The sulfonic acid in onions, the same chemical that causes tears when onions are chopped, has a deterrent effect on snakes.
Professor Rosalie David, emeritus professor of biomedical Egyptology said: "Throughout much of its history, ancient Egypt exerted considerable political, military and cultural influence over neighbouring lands.
"The Egyptian healthcare system was advanced and successful, not least for devising innovative ways to treat snake bites and save lives.
"Its achievements although widely praised in antiquity, are often not fully recognised today.
"This ancient Egyptian medicine was even evident in medieval and later practices in Europe, and some aspects still survive today in modern 'Western' medicine."
Dr Roger Forshaw, an honorary lecturer at The University of Manchester, said: "Healers and care providers were essential to the Egyptian medical system, and offered a wide range of treatment methods.
"Certain types of healthcare, training and practice developed simultaneously in various locations including temples, palaces, towns and villages, battlefields and building sites.
"Surgery, pharmaceutical therapy and magico-religious treatments were available which made use of bandages and splints, medical instruments, prostheses and pharmaceutical prescriptions."
The book, Medicine and Healing Practices in Ancient Egypt, is published by Liverpool University Press.
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