Departing from a miscellany with various do-it-yourself advice texts from the city of Deventer, this article explains the medieval model of health. It argues that medievals held an overall vision of health, involving physical, mental and spiritual well-being as well as the search for the moral good. At the end of the Middle Ages, residents of Dutch cities energetically strove to create for themselves a better life in terms of health, comfort, satisfaction and spiritual perfection but never left fellow humans to their own devices. Current decision-makers could profit from this integral model and may replace the concept of health with that of well-being
Latin and vernacular urban panegyrics, describing the ideal city and its residents, mushroomed in th...
Contrary to popular beliefs picturing late medieval cities as pinnacles of disease and dirt, these c...
This open access book examines more than two centuries of societal development using novel historica...
Departing from a miscellany with various do-it-yourself advice texts from the city of Deventer, this...
Departing from a miscellany with various do-it-yourself advice texts from the city of Deventer, this...
Article in Dutch. English summary: Philosophies of life and Health Care Utilization in the Netherlan...
Experiential knowledge is crucial to enable healthy living, and reduce health inequalities. An advis...
HEALTHY OR UNHEALTHY FAITH: STANDARD, CONTEXT, NORMATIVITYThis contribution considers the functional...
Well-being is achieved by means of four resources (that is, the four capitals: natural, economic, hu...
Abstract Today, good health is more than just keeping illness away. It’s also about experiencing go...
This is the author's pdf version of an article published in International Journal of Public Theology...
[ B O O K R E V I E W ]Cederstrom, Carl & Spicer, André (2015)The wellness syndrome. Cambridge: ...
Dit rapport is onderdeel van de Volksgezondheid Toekomst Verkenning 2010 Dit rapport laat Nederlande...
Collective identities and transnational networks in medieval and early modern Europe, 1000-180
Latin and vernacular urban panegyrics, describing the ideal city and its residents, mushroomed in th...
Contrary to popular beliefs picturing late medieval cities as pinnacles of disease and dirt, these c...
This open access book examines more than two centuries of societal development using novel historica...
Departing from a miscellany with various do-it-yourself advice texts from the city of Deventer, this...
Departing from a miscellany with various do-it-yourself advice texts from the city of Deventer, this...
Article in Dutch. English summary: Philosophies of life and Health Care Utilization in the Netherlan...
Experiential knowledge is crucial to enable healthy living, and reduce health inequalities. An advis...
HEALTHY OR UNHEALTHY FAITH: STANDARD, CONTEXT, NORMATIVITYThis contribution considers the functional...
Well-being is achieved by means of four resources (that is, the four capitals: natural, economic, hu...
Abstract Today, good health is more than just keeping illness away. It’s also about experiencing go...
This is the author's pdf version of an article published in International Journal of Public Theology...
[ B O O K R E V I E W ]Cederstrom, Carl & Spicer, André (2015)The wellness syndrome. Cambridge: ...
Dit rapport is onderdeel van de Volksgezondheid Toekomst Verkenning 2010 Dit rapport laat Nederlande...
Collective identities and transnational networks in medieval and early modern Europe, 1000-180
Latin and vernacular urban panegyrics, describing the ideal city and its residents, mushroomed in th...
Contrary to popular beliefs picturing late medieval cities as pinnacles of disease and dirt, these c...
This open access book examines more than two centuries of societal development using novel historica...