How and to what extent did pre-modern people go about creating healthier environments? Can we reasonably talk about public health when it comes to earlier urban societies? This essay briefly surveys a few tenacious misconceptions about preventative (as opposed to curative) health care in pre-modern cities, and then proceeds to review a budding scholarly literature that explores how urban dwellers, organizations, and governments, especially in medieval Europe and the Near East, identified and addressed the particular health risks attendant upon their milieus. The article concludes by pointing out several fruitful directions in which this emerging historical field can develop
This article presents a modular, multidisciplinary methodology for tracing how different communities...
Hospitals and individual caregivers helped meet the physical and psychological needs of medieval peo...
A brief outline of health and diseases over the ages is presented herein based on written and icono...
This article presents a modular, multidisciplinary methodology for tracing how different communities...
In this article we combine the perspective of medieval urban hygiene and the findings of medical and...
In early fourteenth-century Lucca, one government organ began expanding its activities beyond the ma...
Contrary to popular beliefs picturing late medieval cities as pinnacles of disease and dirt, these c...
Public health historians have repeatedly shown that the theory, policy, and practice of group prophy...
This chapter and the others that follow have the study of population health as their focus, as oppos...
Tapping into a combination of court documents, urban statutes, material artefacts, health guides and...
Public health historians have repeatedly shown that the theory, policy, and practice of group prophy...
Public health is often thought of as a by-product of modernity, yet historical evidence shows that n...
As urban communities in Western Europe mushroomed from the twelfth century onward, authorities promp...
From the ancient ages, the human has been plagued by numerous diseases. While ancient people attribu...
This article explores the urban environmental concerns of late-medieval English towns and cities and...
This article presents a modular, multidisciplinary methodology for tracing how different communities...
Hospitals and individual caregivers helped meet the physical and psychological needs of medieval peo...
A brief outline of health and diseases over the ages is presented herein based on written and icono...
This article presents a modular, multidisciplinary methodology for tracing how different communities...
In this article we combine the perspective of medieval urban hygiene and the findings of medical and...
In early fourteenth-century Lucca, one government organ began expanding its activities beyond the ma...
Contrary to popular beliefs picturing late medieval cities as pinnacles of disease and dirt, these c...
Public health historians have repeatedly shown that the theory, policy, and practice of group prophy...
This chapter and the others that follow have the study of population health as their focus, as oppos...
Tapping into a combination of court documents, urban statutes, material artefacts, health guides and...
Public health historians have repeatedly shown that the theory, policy, and practice of group prophy...
Public health is often thought of as a by-product of modernity, yet historical evidence shows that n...
As urban communities in Western Europe mushroomed from the twelfth century onward, authorities promp...
From the ancient ages, the human has been plagued by numerous diseases. While ancient people attribu...
This article explores the urban environmental concerns of late-medieval English towns and cities and...
This article presents a modular, multidisciplinary methodology for tracing how different communities...
Hospitals and individual caregivers helped meet the physical and psychological needs of medieval peo...
A brief outline of health and diseases over the ages is presented herein based on written and icono...