Rankin, Alisha Michelle (Author)
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.
...MoreDescription “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)
Article Fissell, Mary Elizabeth (2008) Introduction: Women, Health, and Healing in Early Modern Europe. Bulletin of the History of Medicine (p. 1).
Book
Spinks, Jennifer;
(2009)
Monstrous Births and Visual Culture in Sixteenth-Century Germany
(/isis/citation/CBB001231127/)
Book
Stolberg, Michael;
(2003)
Homo patiens: Krankheits- und Körpererfahrung in der Frühen Neuzeit
(/isis/citation/CBB000771761/)
Book
Aho, James;
Aho, Kevin;
(2008)
Body Matters: A Phenomenology of Sickness, Disease and Illness
(/isis/citation/CBB001201370/)
Book
Demaitre, Luke E.;
(2007)
Leprosy in Premodern Medicine: A Malady of the Whole Body
(/isis/citation/CBB000773314/)
Book
Hannah Newton;
(2018)
Misery to Mirth: Recovery from Illness in Early Modern England
(/isis/citation/CBB061787859/)
Article
Lindemann, Mary;
(2008)
The Body Debated: Bodies and Rights in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Germany
(/isis/citation/CBB001030667/)
Thesis
Crowther-Heyck, Kathleen Maisie;
(2001)
Creating Adam and Eve: Body, soul, and gender in sixteenth-century Germany
(/isis/citation/CBB001562598/)
Article
Glaze, Florence Eliza;
Nance, Brian K.;
Porter, Suzanne;
(2008)
The Diseased Body: Resources for Scholarly Inquiry in the Duke University History of Medicine Collections
(/isis/citation/CBB001030670/)
Article
Zimmerman, Susan;
(2008)
The Diseased Body in Premodern Europe: Ideology and Representation
(/isis/citation/CBB001030663/)
Thesis
Heidi Hausse;
(2016)
Life and Limb: Technology, Surgery, and Bodily Loss in Early Modern Germany, 1500-1700
(/isis/citation/CBB244378239/)
Book
Covington, Sarah;
(2009)
Wounds, Flesh, and Metaphor in Seventeenth-Century England
(/isis/citation/CBB001231099/)
Book
Park, Katharine;
(2006)
Secrets of Women: Gender, Generation, and the Origins of Human Dissection
(/isis/citation/CBB000773343/)
Chapter
Rittgers, Ronald K.;
(2007)
Protestants and Plague: The Case of the 1562/63 Pest in Nürnberg
(/isis/citation/CBB001023498/)
Book
Fabrizio Bigotti;
(2020)
Physiology of the Soul: Mind, Body and Matter in the Galenic Tradition of Late Renaissance, 1550-1630
(/isis/citation/CBB286303811/)
Article
Schleiner, Winfried;
(2000)
Early Modern Controversies about the One-Sex Model
(/isis/citation/CBB000660471/)
Book
Kerwin, William;
(2005)
Beyond the Body: The Boundaries of Medicine and English RenaissanceDrama
(/isis/citation/CBB000720434/)
Book
Cregan, Kate;
(2009)
The Theatre of the Body: Staging Death and Embodying Life in Early-Modern London
(/isis/citation/CBB001020082/)
Chapter
Florike Egmond;
(2021)
Sixteenth-Century University Gardens in a Medical and Botanical Context
(/isis/citation/CBB585001235/)
Book
Stein, Claudia;
(2009)
Negotiating the French Pox in Early Modern Germany
(/isis/citation/CBB000933044/)
Article
Pérez Ibáñez, M. J.;
(2008)
Galli vocat istum morbum morbum eius cuius est. Otra designación para el “mal francés”
(/isis/citation/CBB000931884/)
Be the first to comment!