Professional article
OA Policy
English

The poor and the patient : protestant Geneva in the early modern period

Published inHygiea internationalis, vol. 5, no. 1, p. 33-50
Publication date2006
Abstract

Exploring the medical marketplace in early modern Geneva reveals an active town with a high density of both regular and irregular healers. The aim of this article is to assess just how ordinary and poor people used these services and to what extent medical commodities were available to the destitute. Using both court records, private and public sources, this article explores traces of practices highlighting the flexibility with which practitioners were admitted, the high tolerance to irregular practices and the continuity of the recourse to supernatural and catholic healing traditions by Protestants living within the city walls. Data on self-help and medical support offered by family, friends and neighbours is discussed, suggesting the importance of informal medical services in everyday life. Examples demonstrate that to some extent the poor managed to elect strategies and to control therapies, whereas expensive treatment was regularly offered by charities interested in getting the ill back to work.

Keywords
  • Patient
  • Poor
  • Self-help
  • Health
  • Medical offer
  • Neighbourhood
  • Charity
Affiliation entities Not a UNIGE publication
Citation (ISO format)
RIEDER, Philip Alexander. The poor and the patient : protestant Geneva in the early modern period. In: Hygiea internationalis, 2006, vol. 5, n° 1, p. 33–50. doi: 10.3384/hygiea.1403-8668.065133
Main files (1)
Article (Published version)
accessLevelPublic
Identifiers
Journal ISSN1403-8668
411views
252downloads

Technical informations

Creation19/06/2016 19:05:00
First validation19/06/2016 19:05:00
Update time15/03/2023 01:31:00
Status update15/03/2023 01:31:00
Last indexation25/11/2024 14:18:59
All rights reserved by Archive ouverte UNIGE and the University of GenevaunigeBlack