The history of medicine during the enlightenment is full of paradoxes, and nowhere is this more evident than in the phenomenon of charlatanry. On the one hand, for the charlatans' numerical abundance and sheer audacity, historians have sometimes singled out the eighteenth century as the ‘golden age of quackery’. At the same time, it was one of increasing control and severity by the medical elites. In Italy, from the mid-sixteenth century, protomedicato tribunals, colleges of physicians, or health offices (jurisdiction varied from state to state) had required ciarlatani to submit their wares for inspection and, upon approval, pay a licence fee in order to set up a stage from which to perform and sell them. This procedure became an adminis...
Early modern charlatan representations, and their origins on the medieval religious stage With re...
The author is grateful to the Wellcome Trust for awarding a Small Grant in Medical Humanities (proje...
For many ‘regular’ medical practitioners in mid-nineteenth-century England, the spectre of unlicense...
The history of medicine during the enlightenment is full of paradoxes, and nowhere is this more evid...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>From the mid-sixteenth...
Much despised and satirised, but rarely understood, the figure of the wandering, theatrical, remedy-...
Few periods in history have surpassed the Eighteenth Century in violent and extravagent contrasts. ...
From the mid-sixteenth century onwards, the Italian Protomedicato tribunals, Colleges of Physicians,...
In 1621 the vice-protomedico of the Papal States was arrested while inspecting an apothecary's shop ...
This essay will present a documented Italian history of secrets devised in the late seventeenth cent...
“Deceptive Medicine and (Dis)Trust in Renaissance Drama” complicates our perception of medical credi...
Renaissance knowledge was not composed of disparate, specialist disciplines. In particular, medicine...
“I am a charlatan, ladies and gentlemen; indeed, I am nothing else than a charlatan. But what I do, ...
This article examines the role of testing and innovation in sixteenthcentury Italian pharmacy. I arg...
We all know, in fact we are sure, that our medical practices are very different from those in the ti...
Early modern charlatan representations, and their origins on the medieval religious stage With re...
The author is grateful to the Wellcome Trust for awarding a Small Grant in Medical Humanities (proje...
For many ‘regular’ medical practitioners in mid-nineteenth-century England, the spectre of unlicense...
The history of medicine during the enlightenment is full of paradoxes, and nowhere is this more evid...
<p>Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.</p>From the mid-sixteenth...
Much despised and satirised, but rarely understood, the figure of the wandering, theatrical, remedy-...
Few periods in history have surpassed the Eighteenth Century in violent and extravagent contrasts. ...
From the mid-sixteenth century onwards, the Italian Protomedicato tribunals, Colleges of Physicians,...
In 1621 the vice-protomedico of the Papal States was arrested while inspecting an apothecary's shop ...
This essay will present a documented Italian history of secrets devised in the late seventeenth cent...
“Deceptive Medicine and (Dis)Trust in Renaissance Drama” complicates our perception of medical credi...
Renaissance knowledge was not composed of disparate, specialist disciplines. In particular, medicine...
“I am a charlatan, ladies and gentlemen; indeed, I am nothing else than a charlatan. But what I do, ...
This article examines the role of testing and innovation in sixteenthcentury Italian pharmacy. I arg...
We all know, in fact we are sure, that our medical practices are very different from those in the ti...
Early modern charlatan representations, and their origins on the medieval religious stage With re...
The author is grateful to the Wellcome Trust for awarding a Small Grant in Medical Humanities (proje...
For many ‘regular’ medical practitioners in mid-nineteenth-century England, the spectre of unlicense...