McVaugh, Michael. “The "Experience-Based Medicine" of the Thirteenth Century.” Early Science and Medicine, 2009, 14(1): 105-130.
Rankin, Alisha. “Empirics, physicians, and wonder drugs in early modern Germany: The case of the Panacea Amwaldina.” Early Science and Medicine, 2009, 19: 680-710
Truitt, Elly R. “The virtues of Balm in late Medieval literature.” Early Science and Medicine, 2009, 19: 711-736.
Touwaide, Alain. “Foreign vs. local new horizons, and ancient dilemmas and strategies?” Early Science and Medicine, 2009, 19: 765-788.
Brenner, Elma. Elma Brenner. “Recent perspectives on leprosy in Medieval Western Europe.” History Compass 2010 8(5): 388-406.
Pomata, Gianna. “Sharing cases: The Observationes in early modern medicine.” Early Science and Medicine, 2010, 15: 193-236.
Vann Sprecher, Tiffany D. “The midwife and the church: Ecclesiastical regulation of midwives in Brie, 1499-1504.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2011, 85(2): 171-192.
Bresadola, Marco. “A physician and a man of science: Patients, physicians, and diseases in Marcello Malpighi's medical practice.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2011, 85(2): 193-221.
Van Sprecher, Tiffany D.; and Karras, Ruth M. “The midwife and the church: Ecclesiastical regulations of midwives in Brie, 1499-1504.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2011, 85(2): 171-192.
Bresadola. Marco. “A physician and a man of science: Patients, physicians, and diseases in Marcello Malpighi's medical practice.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2011, 55(2): 193-221.
Maclean, Ian. “The logic of physiognomony in the late Renaissance.” Early Science and Medicine, 2011, 16: 275-295.
Horden, Peregrine. “What’s wrong with early Medieval medicine?” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(1): 5-25.
Pilsworth, Clare. “Beyond the medical text: Health and illness in early Medieval Italian sources.” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(1): 26-40
Meaney, Audrey L. “Extra-medical elements in Anglo-Saxon medicine.” 2011, 24(1): 41-56.
Banham, Debby. “Dun, Oxa and Pliny the Great Physician: Attribution and authority in old English medical texts.” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(1): 57-73.
Totelin, Laurence. “Old recipes, new practice? The Latin adaptations of the Hippocratic gynaecological treatises.” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(1): 74-91.
Rider, Catherine. “Medical magic and the church in thirteenth-century England.” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(1): 92-107.
Harper, April. “The image of the female healer in Western vernacular literature of the Middle Ages.” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(1): 108-124.
McCleery, Iona. “Medical ‘emplotment’ and plotting medicine: Health and disease in late Medieval Portuguese chronicles.” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(1): 125-141.
Lloyd, Paul. “Nutritious foods and consumption choices in the early modern period.” Social History of Medicine, 2011, 24(1): 161-165.
Mitchell, Piers. “Retrospective diagnosis and the use of historical texts for investigating disease in the past.” International Journal of Paleopathology, 2011, 1: 81-88.
Mitchell, Piers. “Human intestinal parasites in crusader Acre: Evidence for migration with disease in the medieval period.” International Journal of Paleopathology, 2011, 1:132-137.
Evans, Jennifer. “‘Gentle purges corrected with hot spices, whether they work or not, do vehemently provoke
venery’: Menstrual provocation and procreation in early modern England.” Social History of Medicine, 2012, 25(1): 2-19.
Geltner, Guy. “Public health and the pre-modern city: A research agenda.” History Compass, 2012, 10(3): 231-245.
Petry, Yvonne. “‘Many things surpass our knowledge’: An early modern surgeon on magic, witchcraft and demonic possession.” Social History of Medicine, 2012, 25(1): 47-64.
A podcast of the very successful symposium at the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 'Medical Prognosis in the Middle Ages', which took place in London on Saturday 26 May, is now online at http://backdoorbroadcasting.net/2012/05/medical-prognosis-in-the-middle-ages/
Brittain, Robert P. “Cruentation in legal medicine and in literature.” 2012, Social History of Medicine, :82-88.
Jackson, Donald F. “ Greek medicine in the fifteenth century.” Early Science and Medicine, 2012, 17: 378-390.
Perilli, Lorenzo. “A risky enterprise: The Aldine edition of Galen, the failures of the editors, and the shadow of
Erasmus of Rotterdam.” Early Science and Medicine, 2012, 17: 446-466
Savino, Christina. “Giovanni Battista Rasario and the 1562–1563 edition of Galen. research, exchanges and forgeries.” Early Science and Medicine, 2012, 17: 413-445.
World Health Organization. “Global leprosy situation, 2012.” Weekly Epidemiological Record, 2012, 87: 317-328.
Roffey, Simon. “ Medieval leper hospitals in England: An archaeological perspective.” Medieval Archaeology, 2012, 56: 203-233.
Roffey, Simon; Tucker, Katie. “A contextual study of the medieval hospital and cemetery of St. Mary Magdalen, Winchester, England.” International Journal of Paleopathology, 2012, 2: 170-180.
Boucher, Caroline; and Dumas, Genevieve. “Traductions et compilations médicales : une coïncidence obligée ?” Early Science and Medicine, 2012, 17: 273-308.
Jackson, Donald F. “Greek medicine in the fifteenth century.” Early Science and Medicine, 2012, 17: 378-390.
Touwaide, Alain. “Printing Greek medicine in the Renaissance. Scholars, collections, opportunities, and challenges. Introduction.” Early Science and Medicine, 2012, 17: 371-377.
Touwaide, Alain. “Printing Greek medicine in the Renaissance. Scholars, collections, opportunities, and challenges introduction.” Early Science and Medicine, 2012, 17: 371-377. World Health Organization. “Global leprosy situation, 2012.” Weekly Epidemiological Record, 2012, 87: 317-328.
Furuse, Y.; Suzuki, A.; and Oshitani, H. “Origin of measles virus: divergence from
rinderpest virus between the 11th and 12th centuries.” Virology Journal. 2010, 7: 52-56.
Kaiser, Laura F. “Can leprosy finally be eradicated? A new test and vaccine could stop a disease that has cursed humanity for millennia.” February 20, 2013.
Dictionary of Old English Plant Names
http://oldenglish-plantnames.org.
Magnusson, Roberta J. “Medieval urban environmental history.” History Compass, 11(3): 189-200.
A "vodcast" of Peter Jones from Cambridge talking about King's MS 16:
http://www.reproduction.group.cam.ac.uk/category/features/, regarding a
15th-century MS later owned by the 16th-century Simon Forman and its content
relating to reproduction.
A blog post on medieval women's medicine, specifically, the Middle English
text Sickness of Women 2, which is an English translation of the gynecological
sections of Gilbertus Anglicus's Compendium medicine:
http://www.reproduction.group.cam.ac.uk/the-sekeness-of-wymmen/.
Milner, Matthew. “The physics of holy oats: Vernacular knowledge, qualities, and remedy in fifteenth century England.” Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 2013, 43(2): 219-245.
Crespo, Fabian. “Tuberculosis and leprosy: Competing maladies or cross immunity?” Evolutionary Anthropology, March 27, 2013.
Taylor, G. Michael; et. al. “Detection and strain typing of ancient Mycobacterium leprae from a medieval leprosy hospital.” PLOS ONE, 2013.
Greene, Monica. “Caring for gendered bodies.” Pp. 345-362.
Hogenboom, Melissa. “Medieval skeletons give clues to leprosy origin.” BBC News, 2013.
Ferragud, Carmel. “The role of doctors in the slave trade during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries within the kingdom of Valencia (Crown of Aragon).” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2013, 87(2): 143-169.
Geltner, Guy. “Healthscaping a medieval city: Lucca's Curiaviarum and the future of public health history.” Urban History, 2013, 40(3): 395-415.
medieval leper hospital-Winchester, England, 900 A.D.
http://youtu.be/GiZsQiy8CGc
National Public Radio. “Growing The Latest In 16th-Century Medicine.”
http://www.npr.org/2013/07/06/199234929/growing-the-latest-in-16th-century-medicine?sc=3Dipad&f=3D1001
September 16 Monday
The Plague's Impact on European Health Care and Society-History Channel Videotape
Harvard-Countway Library: incunabula relating to plague and syphilis
http://ocp.hul.harvard.edu/contagion/pestilence.html
http://www.brown.edu/Departments/Italian_Studies/dweb/plague/origi…
Ziegler, Philip. "The plague in a Medieval village." In The Black Death, Pp. 202-223.
Norris, John. "East or West? The geographic origin of the Black Death." Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 1977 (51): 1-24.
Renouard, Yves. "The Black Death as a major event in world history." in The Black Death: A Turning Point in History?. Malabar, FL: Krieger Pub., 1978, pp. 25-34.
Campbell, Anna M. “The Black Death and men of learning.” Lehfeldt, Elizabeth A., ed. The Black Death, pp. 126-132.
Dohar, William J. “The Black Death and pastoral leadership.” Lehfeldt, Elizabeth A., ed. The Black Death, pp. 152-159.
Hatcher, John. “England in the aftermath of the Black Death.” Lehfeldt, Elizabeth A., ed. The Black Death, pp. 173-180.
Mate, Mavis. “Daughters, wives and widows after the Black Death.” Lehfeldt, Elizabeth A., ed. The Black Death, pp. 187-193.
Keiser, George R. “Two Medieval plague treatises and their afterlife in early modern England.” Journal of the History of Medicine 2003 (58): 292-324.
McCormick, Michael. “Rats, communication, and plague: Towards an ancient and medieval ecological history.” Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 2003, 34(1): 1-25.
Stearns, Justin. “New directions in the study of religious responses to the Black Death.” History Compass, 2009, 7: 1-13.
Bowers, Kristy W. “Balancing Iidividual and communal needs: Plague and public health in early modern Seville.” Bulletin of the History of Medicine, 2007 (81): 335-358.
Haensch, Stephanie; et. al. “Distinct clones of Yersinia pestis caused the Black Death.”
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