Published online: 15 December 2021Historians have often represented prayer as an instrumental response to illness. We argue instead that prayer, together with physic, was part of larger regimes to preserve health and prevent disease. We focus on early modern England, through the philosophical writings of the physician, Robert Fludd, and the medical records of the clergyman, Richard Napier. Fludd depicted health as a fortress and illness as an invasion by demons; the physician counsels the patient in maintaining and restoring moral and bodily order. Napier documented actual uses of prayer. As in Fludd’s trope, through prayer, Napier and his patients enacted their aspiration for health and their commitment to a Christian order in which medici...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Around 1580 in Valencia an illiterate female healer, or metgessa, attracted the attention of the Inq...
Historians have often represented prayer as an instrumental response to illness. We argue instead th...
This article explores three central questions. What did people consider the physical effects of pray...
In broad terms, this thesis is a study of what Protestant theologians in early modern England taught...
The body and soul were intimately linked in early modern religious thought. This thesis examines one...
This article examines casebooks and papers penned by the Anglican physician Dr John Downes. His manu...
This article explores how writers, predominantly adhering to a variety of different Christian denomi...
Jennifer Evans and Sara Read, 'Maladies and Medicines: Exploring Health and Healing 1540-1740' (Barn...
This is the final published version. It first appeared at http://shm.oxfordjournals.org/content/earl...
There has been of late a vigorous interest in combining medical practice and spirituality to facilit...
This dissertation examines how early modern British writers use practical texts of spiritual and phy...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Around 1580 in Valencia an illiterate female healer, or metgessa, attracted the attention of the Inq...
Historians have often represented prayer as an instrumental response to illness. We argue instead th...
This article explores three central questions. What did people consider the physical effects of pray...
In broad terms, this thesis is a study of what Protestant theologians in early modern England taught...
The body and soul were intimately linked in early modern religious thought. This thesis examines one...
This article examines casebooks and papers penned by the Anglican physician Dr John Downes. His manu...
This article explores how writers, predominantly adhering to a variety of different Christian denomi...
Jennifer Evans and Sara Read, 'Maladies and Medicines: Exploring Health and Healing 1540-1740' (Barn...
This is the final published version. It first appeared at http://shm.oxfordjournals.org/content/earl...
There has been of late a vigorous interest in combining medical practice and spirituality to facilit...
This dissertation examines how early modern British writers use practical texts of spiritual and phy...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Current medical practitioners are discovering their patients are actively seeking alternative and co...
Around 1580 in Valencia an illiterate female healer, or metgessa, attracted the attention of the Inq...