When one examines the recipe books of Early Modern Europe, it is not a challenge to find a plethora of recipes designed to cure certain ailments and heal the human body. This makes it clear that a large number of housewives had an interest in medicine and its practice, and inside the home a number of women probably actively engaged in the practice of medicine. However, outside of the household the story was rather contrasting. It was not that women did not want practice medicine outside of th..
By Alun Withey Much recent work by historians has highlighted the extent that medical knowledge was ...
This thesis explores household healthcare in the later seventeenth century, particularly the extent ...
There were two main gynaecological traditions in the early Middle Ages: the Soranic and Hippocratic ...
Having just completed my online exhibition text on the use of medicinal recipes within the receipt b...
Recipes for women’s healthcare have a rich capacity to demonstrate the scope and perception of healt...
Research into how men and women participated in domestic medicine, or medicine in the home, has typi...
A Doctor, a Herbalist, and a Chef – the early modern ’cookbooks’ have a common theme in that there i...
By Jana Jackson For early modern pious women, the religious obligation to be healers and competent h...
abstract: In the preface to his 1852 Dictionary of Domestic Medicine and Household Surgery, Spencer ...
This thesis examines the provision of medicine within the early modern domestic sphere, focusing on ...
Collecting recipes was an established tradition that continued in elite English households throughou...
Medical practices in the medieval world, across both national, temporal, and cultural boundaries, co...
This thesis examines Scottish domestic medicine in the century between 1650 and 1750. Much has been ...
This study is an exploration of the unlicensed and semi-official medical activities of women in Engl...
During the seventeenth century, the English were integrating foreign foods into their lives at an un...
By Alun Withey Much recent work by historians has highlighted the extent that medical knowledge was ...
This thesis explores household healthcare in the later seventeenth century, particularly the extent ...
There were two main gynaecological traditions in the early Middle Ages: the Soranic and Hippocratic ...
Having just completed my online exhibition text on the use of medicinal recipes within the receipt b...
Recipes for women’s healthcare have a rich capacity to demonstrate the scope and perception of healt...
Research into how men and women participated in domestic medicine, or medicine in the home, has typi...
A Doctor, a Herbalist, and a Chef – the early modern ’cookbooks’ have a common theme in that there i...
By Jana Jackson For early modern pious women, the religious obligation to be healers and competent h...
abstract: In the preface to his 1852 Dictionary of Domestic Medicine and Household Surgery, Spencer ...
This thesis examines the provision of medicine within the early modern domestic sphere, focusing on ...
Collecting recipes was an established tradition that continued in elite English households throughou...
Medical practices in the medieval world, across both national, temporal, and cultural boundaries, co...
This thesis examines Scottish domestic medicine in the century between 1650 and 1750. Much has been ...
This study is an exploration of the unlicensed and semi-official medical activities of women in Engl...
During the seventeenth century, the English were integrating foreign foods into their lives at an un...
By Alun Withey Much recent work by historians has highlighted the extent that medical knowledge was ...
This thesis explores household healthcare in the later seventeenth century, particularly the extent ...
There were two main gynaecological traditions in the early Middle Ages: the Soranic and Hippocratic ...