In recent decades, historians have made significant contributions to the understanding of the production and circulation of knowledge in the early modern period. This article aims to go further, by demonstrating how a non-medical expert acquired and applied new medical knowledge, and how chronicles can be used as a source to study the reception of (medical) knowledge in the early modern period. To do this, I have used the corpus of the research project Chronicling Novelty which contains 311 early modern chronicles from the Low Countries, written by a heterogenous group of authors from the ‘middling’ ranks of society. The farmer and alderman Lambert Rijckxz Lustigh (1656–1727) tried to make sense of the rinderpest outbreak that spread across...
Although the fanciful notion that the Black Death bypassed the Low Countries has long been rejected,...
People think of medieval medicine as primitive and non-academic, and assume modern medicine to be dr...
This article examines the development of the Dutch medical marketplace between 1650 and 1900 from a ...
Especially with reference to the early modern period the relation between medicine and religion has ...
The methods of preventing and controlling plagues depended heavily on contemporary understandings of...
One of the reasons why early modern people chronicled current events in their communities, was to se...
This article examines the expansion of plague hospitals in early modern France. It shows that the de...
This article describes the Dutch reception of an international controversy about the divining rod. g...
The scientific revolution of the 17th century was driven by countless discoveries in the observatory...
This paper studies the rising use of commercial medical assistance in early modern England. We measu...
This analysis of 18th century plagues stresses the importance of a discursive approach to the analys...
This paper studies the rising use of commercial medical assistance in early modern England. We measu...
Collective identities and transnational networks in medieval and early modern Europe, 1000-180
Starting in 1665 and ending in 1666, London had an episode of the Bubonic plague that left 100,000 L...
Disease represents a strong driving force of societal and cultural change, which repeats itself toda...
Although the fanciful notion that the Black Death bypassed the Low Countries has long been rejected,...
People think of medieval medicine as primitive and non-academic, and assume modern medicine to be dr...
This article examines the development of the Dutch medical marketplace between 1650 and 1900 from a ...
Especially with reference to the early modern period the relation between medicine and religion has ...
The methods of preventing and controlling plagues depended heavily on contemporary understandings of...
One of the reasons why early modern people chronicled current events in their communities, was to se...
This article examines the expansion of plague hospitals in early modern France. It shows that the de...
This article describes the Dutch reception of an international controversy about the divining rod. g...
The scientific revolution of the 17th century was driven by countless discoveries in the observatory...
This paper studies the rising use of commercial medical assistance in early modern England. We measu...
This analysis of 18th century plagues stresses the importance of a discursive approach to the analys...
This paper studies the rising use of commercial medical assistance in early modern England. We measu...
Collective identities and transnational networks in medieval and early modern Europe, 1000-180
Starting in 1665 and ending in 1666, London had an episode of the Bubonic plague that left 100,000 L...
Disease represents a strong driving force of societal and cultural change, which repeats itself toda...
Although the fanciful notion that the Black Death bypassed the Low Countries has long been rejected,...
People think of medieval medicine as primitive and non-academic, and assume modern medicine to be dr...
This article examines the development of the Dutch medical marketplace between 1650 and 1900 from a ...