This chapter discusses the contribution that artefactual analyses make to a cultural history of medieval medicine, and more specifically, what the study of archaeological sources can offer, drawing principally on evidence from medieval Britain
This Special Issue has its foundation in presentations delivered in the symposium Disability and Car...
Traditionally, the study of human skeletal remains from ancient backgrounds (bio-archaeology) has ex...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the ways people understood their body during the medieval pe...
Archaeology and material culture are used in this chapter to consider how monastic experience respon...
This volume brings together essays that consider wounding and/or wound repair from a wide range of s...
This chapter explores the relationship between medieval magic and religion. It considers the use of ...
This thesis provides the first comprehensive synthesis of the archaeology of the medieval hospitals ...
This paper examines patterns in the placement of apotropaic objects and materials in high- to late-m...
Anatomy -- the practice of stripping back the body and revealing it, part by part, for discussion an...
The revival of monasticism in the eleventh century promoted greater seclusion of monks and the re-po...
The material contained here derives from a wide variety of printed and manuscript sources, chosen to...
The dataset was created during research for Professor Roberta Gilchrist’s Rhind Lectures in 2017 and...
My Wellcome Trust-funded PhD dissertation integrates textual and osteological evidence to explore th...
Open Access through the Elsevier Agreement Acknowledgments The authors would like to thank Trish Bie...
Historical evidence has provided a rich source of information concerning the structure and experienc...
This Special Issue has its foundation in presentations delivered in the symposium Disability and Car...
Traditionally, the study of human skeletal remains from ancient backgrounds (bio-archaeology) has ex...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the ways people understood their body during the medieval pe...
Archaeology and material culture are used in this chapter to consider how monastic experience respon...
This volume brings together essays that consider wounding and/or wound repair from a wide range of s...
This chapter explores the relationship between medieval magic and religion. It considers the use of ...
This thesis provides the first comprehensive synthesis of the archaeology of the medieval hospitals ...
This paper examines patterns in the placement of apotropaic objects and materials in high- to late-m...
Anatomy -- the practice of stripping back the body and revealing it, part by part, for discussion an...
The revival of monasticism in the eleventh century promoted greater seclusion of monks and the re-po...
The material contained here derives from a wide variety of printed and manuscript sources, chosen to...
The dataset was created during research for Professor Roberta Gilchrist’s Rhind Lectures in 2017 and...
My Wellcome Trust-funded PhD dissertation integrates textual and osteological evidence to explore th...
Open Access through the Elsevier Agreement Acknowledgments The authors would like to thank Trish Bie...
Historical evidence has provided a rich source of information concerning the structure and experienc...
This Special Issue has its foundation in presentations delivered in the symposium Disability and Car...
Traditionally, the study of human skeletal remains from ancient backgrounds (bio-archaeology) has ex...
The aim of this paper is to investigate the ways people understood their body during the medieval pe...