In this article we combine the perspective of medieval urban hygiene and the findings of medical and intellectual historians by tracing some ways in which medieval urban residents and governments attempted to limit disease and promote health by recourse to preventative measures. In both of the urban regions and domains in focus, namely Italian streets and Dutch bathouses, considerable thought had been put into reducing the health risks percieved as attending upon them, at times devising arguments and procedures that possibly reflect insights from prevailing medical theories and the advice of practitioners. We suggest that the relation between medical learning and health practices was more complex than a trickle-down process, and analyze the...
of clean water and protection of public hygiene to the impetuous urban development, and above all to...
Tapping into a combination of court documents, urban statutes, material artefacts, health guides and...
Public health is often thought of as a by-product of modernity, yet historical evidence shows that n...
Contrary to popular beliefs picturing late medieval cities as pinnacles of disease and dirt, these c...
How and to what extent did pre-modern people go about creating healthier environments? Can we reason...
As urban communities in Western Europe mushroomed from the twelfth century onward, authorities promp...
In early fourteenth-century Lucca, one government organ began expanding its activities beyond the ma...
In 'Roads to Health', G. Geltner demonstrates that urban dwellers in medieval Italy had a keen sense...
This article explores the urban environmental concerns of late-medieval English towns and cities and...
Latin and vernacular urban panegyrics, describing the ideal city and its residents, mushroomed in th...
Taking the office of the coninc der ribauden in Ghent as a case-study, this article reconstructs the...
As urban communities in Western Europe mushroomed from the twelfth century onward, authorities promp...
"Conserving health in early modern culture explores the impact of ideas about healthy living in earl...
The link between hygiene and the concept of transmission of infective diseases was established earli...
The medieval public bathhouse is, since the nineteenth century, often described as a brothel, as a s...
of clean water and protection of public hygiene to the impetuous urban development, and above all to...
Tapping into a combination of court documents, urban statutes, material artefacts, health guides and...
Public health is often thought of as a by-product of modernity, yet historical evidence shows that n...
Contrary to popular beliefs picturing late medieval cities as pinnacles of disease and dirt, these c...
How and to what extent did pre-modern people go about creating healthier environments? Can we reason...
As urban communities in Western Europe mushroomed from the twelfth century onward, authorities promp...
In early fourteenth-century Lucca, one government organ began expanding its activities beyond the ma...
In 'Roads to Health', G. Geltner demonstrates that urban dwellers in medieval Italy had a keen sense...
This article explores the urban environmental concerns of late-medieval English towns and cities and...
Latin and vernacular urban panegyrics, describing the ideal city and its residents, mushroomed in th...
Taking the office of the coninc der ribauden in Ghent as a case-study, this article reconstructs the...
As urban communities in Western Europe mushroomed from the twelfth century onward, authorities promp...
"Conserving health in early modern culture explores the impact of ideas about healthy living in earl...
The link between hygiene and the concept of transmission of infective diseases was established earli...
The medieval public bathhouse is, since the nineteenth century, often described as a brothel, as a s...
of clean water and protection of public hygiene to the impetuous urban development, and above all to...
Tapping into a combination of court documents, urban statutes, material artefacts, health guides and...
Public health is often thought of as a by-product of modernity, yet historical evidence shows that n...