Restoration London saw a wave of publications by physicians advocating that the ‘compleat physician’ should be one who experimented and produced his own medicines. Only thus, they argued, could the medical hierarchy be restored and medical authority re-established on a defensible basis. This article seeks to explain the context for this unusual approach, and why it failed to attract mainstream physicians by the end of the century, by considering the sixty-year career of one of its leading advocates, Everard Maynwaring (c.1629–1713), a prolific medical author, and what his own failure to enter the medical establishment may show about the problems inherent in this model for the physician. A university-trained gentleman physician who converted...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
Though James Lind is renowned as a pioneer of the clinical trial, he records the 1747 trial aboard t...
For many ‘regular’ medical practitioners in mid-nineteenth-century England, the spectre of unlicense...
Restoration London saw a wave of publications by physicians advocating that the ‘compleat physician’...
This is the final version of the article. Available from CUP via the DOI in this record.Restoration ...
This paper explores the interaction of British medical practitioners with the nascent intellectual p...
This paper studies the rising use of commercial medical assistance in early modern England. We measu...
This is the final version. Available from Johns Hopkins University Press via the DOI in this records...
Dr. Leslie E. Keeley (1832–1900), proprietor of the “Gold Cure” for alcohol and drug habits, was the...
From the late nineteenth century onwards there emerged an increasingly diverse response to escalatin...
Employing a lexicon of pronounced binaries, Herring’s tract evokes a picture of the early modern med...
Medical practice in fifteenth-century England is often seen as suffering from the low status and unr...
The 19th century saw the development of an eclectic medical marketplace in both the United Kingdom a...
Fears of being accused of malpractice have plagued the field of medicine since its inception. Despit...
Patent medicines were a major constituent of the healthcare of late Georgian England, but their posi...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
Though James Lind is renowned as a pioneer of the clinical trial, he records the 1747 trial aboard t...
For many ‘regular’ medical practitioners in mid-nineteenth-century England, the spectre of unlicense...
Restoration London saw a wave of publications by physicians advocating that the ‘compleat physician’...
This is the final version of the article. Available from CUP via the DOI in this record.Restoration ...
This paper explores the interaction of British medical practitioners with the nascent intellectual p...
This paper studies the rising use of commercial medical assistance in early modern England. We measu...
This is the final version. Available from Johns Hopkins University Press via the DOI in this records...
Dr. Leslie E. Keeley (1832–1900), proprietor of the “Gold Cure” for alcohol and drug habits, was the...
From the late nineteenth century onwards there emerged an increasingly diverse response to escalatin...
Employing a lexicon of pronounced binaries, Herring’s tract evokes a picture of the early modern med...
Medical practice in fifteenth-century England is often seen as suffering from the low status and unr...
The 19th century saw the development of an eclectic medical marketplace in both the United Kingdom a...
Fears of being accused of malpractice have plagued the field of medicine since its inception. Despit...
Patent medicines were a major constituent of the healthcare of late Georgian England, but their posi...
This is the final version. Available on open access from Cambridge University Press via the DOI in t...
Though James Lind is renowned as a pioneer of the clinical trial, he records the 1747 trial aboard t...
For many ‘regular’ medical practitioners in mid-nineteenth-century England, the spectre of unlicense...