[New Book] Renaissance Medicine: A Short History of European Medicine in the Sixteenth Century

Author: Vivian Nutton (University College London)

Publisher: Routledge, 2022

This volume offers a comprehensive historical survey of medicine in sixteenth-century Europe and examines both medical theories and practices within their intellectual and social context. Nutton investigates the changes brought about in medicine by the opening-up of the European world to new drugs and new diseases, such as syphilis and the Sweat, and by the development of printing and more efficient means of communication.

Chapters examine how civic institutions such as Health Boards, hospitals, town doctors and healers became more significant in the fight against epidemic disease, and special attention is given to the role of women and domestic medicine. The final section, on beliefs, explores the revised Galenism of academic medicine, including a new emphasis on anatomy and its most vocal antagonists, Paracelsians. The volume concludes by considering the effect of religious changes on medicine, including the marginalisation, and often expulsion, of non-Christian practitioners.

Contents

Introduction

1. New Lands, New Drugs and New Diseases

2. Protecting the Health of the City

3. Medical Communications: Print and the Post

4. The Rediscovery of Ancient Medicine

5. The Kaleidoscope of Healing 1: Physicians

6. The Kaleidoscope of Healing 2: Surgeons, Apothecaries and Charlatans

7. On the Margins of Medical History: Women and Patients

8. Learned Medicine

9. Anatomy – the Touchstone of Modernity

10. Paracelsus and Paracelsianism

11. Religion and Medicine

Conclusion

Source: https://www.routledge.com/Renaissance-Medicine-A-Short-History-of-European-Medicine-in-the-Sixteenth/Nutton/p/book/9781032121239