Article ID: CBB000830240

Duchess, Heal Thyself: Elisabeth of Rochlitz and the Patient's Perspective in Early Modern Germany (2008)

unapi

Rankin, Alisha Michelle (Author)


Bulletin of the History of Medicine
Volume: 82
Pages: 109--144


Publication Date: 2008
Edition Details: Part of a special issue: Women, Health, and Healing in Early Modern Europe
Language: English

This article uses the case of German noblewoman Elisabeth of Rochlitz as a window on sixteenth-century patient attitudes toward disease and the body. A widowed duchess of Saxony, Elisabeth spent the last twenty years of her life battling an increasingly serious string of illnesses. Despite her ready access to learned physicians and her friendly relationship with several of them, she used a wide variety of practitioners and frequently privileged lower-status healers when she perceived their methods to be more efficacious. She placed the greatest weight on remedies that would relieve the experienced symptoms of her illness, rather than more holistic methods such as doctors' regimens. This perception of disease as a set of symptoms led to a dispute about the meaning of signs in her final illness.

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Description “This article uses the case of German noblewoman Elisabeth of Rochlitz as a window on sixteenth-century patient attitudes toward disease and the body.” (from the abstract)


Included in

Article Fissell, Mary Elizabeth (2008) Introduction: Women, Health, and Healing in Early Modern Europe. Bulletin of the History of Medicine (p. 1). unapi

Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB000830240/

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Authors & Contributors
Aho, James
Aho, Kevin
Covington, Sarah
Cregan, Kate
Crowther, Kathleen M.
Demaitre, Luke E.
Journals
Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies
Renaissance Quarterly
Publishers
Princeton University
Ashgate
Böhlau
Brepols
Brepols Publishers
Johns Hopkins University
Concepts
Medicine
Human body
Disease and diseases
Patients
Physicians; doctors
Medicine and culture
People
Laurens, André du
Galen
Vesalius, Andreas
Gryll, Lorenz
Time Periods
16th century
Renaissance
17th century
15th century
18th century
Medieval
Places
Germany
England
Europe
Italy
Great Britain
France
Institutions
Company of Barber Surgeons (London)
Duke University
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