Medical practice, urban politics and patronage: The London "commonality" of physicians and surgeons of the 1420s
Medical practices in fifteenth-century England is often sen as suffering from the low status and unregulated practice of which Thomas Linacre later complained. Unlike in many European cities, the provision of physic was uncontrolled, ans while urban guilds oversaw surgery as a manual art, no compreh...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The English historical review 2015-10, Vol.130 (546), p.1102-1131 |
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Hauptverfasser: | , |
Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Medical practices in fifteenth-century England is often sen as suffering from the low status and unregulated practice of which Thomas Linacre later complained. Unlike in many European cities, the provision of physic was uncontrolled, ans while urban guilds oversaw surgery as a manual art, no comprehensive system of medical organisation or regulation existed. However, in a remarkable episode of the 1420s, a group of university-trained physicians and elite surgeons association with Humphrey, Duke of Gloucester, briefly established just such a system. While their efforts initially secured approval for a national scheme, it was only in the City of London that they succeeded in implementing their plans. The detailed ordinances of the collegiate "commonality" they founded provide a unique insight into their attitudes. Drawing on continental models, they attempted to control all medicine within the city by establishing a hierarchy of practitioners, preventing illicit and incompetent practice, and offering treatment to even the poorest Londoners. Yet they failed to appreciate the vested interests of civic politics: achieving these aims meant curtailing rights of the powerful Grocers and the Barbers, a fact made clear by their adjudication of a case involving two members of the Barbers' Company, and the Barbers' subsequent riposte - a mayoral petition that heralded the commonality's end. Its founder surgeons went on to revitalise their "Surgeons' Fellowship," which continued independently of the Barbers until a merger in 1540; in contrast, the physicians withdrew from civic affairs, and physic remained entirely unregulated until episcopal licensing was instituted in 1511. OA |
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ISSN: | 0013-8266 1477-4534 |
DOI: | 10.1093/ehr/cev261 |