This article reconstructs the diagnostic act of the French pox in the French-disease hospital of sixteenth-century Augsburg. It focuses on how the participants in the clinical encounter imagined the configuration of the pox and its localization in the human body. Of central importance for answering this question is the early modern conception of physical signs. It has been argued that it was due to a specific understanding of bodily signs and their relationship to a disease and its causes, that disease definition and classification in the early modern period showed a high degree of flexibility and fluidity. This paper looks at how the sixteenth-century theoretical conception of physical signs not only shaped the diagnosis and treatment of t...
When the "Great Pox", vérole or "French disease" (Lat. morbus Gallicus), broke out epidemically in E...
During the late fifteenth century a new category of medical practitioner appeared in the German-spea...
This article will survey the colour yellow in early modern England using resources chiefly from medi...
This book explores the identity of the 'French disease' (alias the 'French pox' or 'Morbus Gallicus'...
This article reflects upon the recent return to linear history writing in medical history. It takes ...
The experiences of patients who suffered from the Great Pox in early modern Europe have become the f...
This thesis investigates the factors that influenced understandings of and responses to the French p...
Summary: Consilia played an important role in medieval but also early modern professional health lit...
During the early modern period, practitioners in oftentimes unrelated arts and sciences began to exp...
In early modern Europe, syphilis tormented individuals regardless of social standing. The various st...
The signifier term symptom is strongly associated with the medical register, and its history in Engl...
This volume collects essays dealing with the history of medicine in early modern Europe, and ranging...
People think of medieval medicine as primitive and non-academic, and assume modern medicine to be dr...
This article studies the intersection of verbal and visual culture in the early modern period throug...
Reseña bibliográfica de: Berco, Cristian - From Body to Community: Venereal Disease and Society in B...
When the "Great Pox", vérole or "French disease" (Lat. morbus Gallicus), broke out epidemically in E...
During the late fifteenth century a new category of medical practitioner appeared in the German-spea...
This article will survey the colour yellow in early modern England using resources chiefly from medi...
This book explores the identity of the 'French disease' (alias the 'French pox' or 'Morbus Gallicus'...
This article reflects upon the recent return to linear history writing in medical history. It takes ...
The experiences of patients who suffered from the Great Pox in early modern Europe have become the f...
This thesis investigates the factors that influenced understandings of and responses to the French p...
Summary: Consilia played an important role in medieval but also early modern professional health lit...
During the early modern period, practitioners in oftentimes unrelated arts and sciences began to exp...
In early modern Europe, syphilis tormented individuals regardless of social standing. The various st...
The signifier term symptom is strongly associated with the medical register, and its history in Engl...
This volume collects essays dealing with the history of medicine in early modern Europe, and ranging...
People think of medieval medicine as primitive and non-academic, and assume modern medicine to be dr...
This article studies the intersection of verbal and visual culture in the early modern period throug...
Reseña bibliográfica de: Berco, Cristian - From Body to Community: Venereal Disease and Society in B...
When the "Great Pox", vérole or "French disease" (Lat. morbus Gallicus), broke out epidemically in E...
During the late fifteenth century a new category of medical practitioner appeared in the German-spea...
This article will survey the colour yellow in early modern England using resources chiefly from medi...