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Leprosy in medieval England

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Set firmly in the medical, religious and cultural milieu of the European Middle Ages, this book is the first serious academic study of a disease surrounded by misconceptions and prejudices.

Even specialists will be surprised to learn that most of our stereotyped ideas about the segregation of medieval lepers originated in the nineteenth century; that leprosy excited a vast range of responses, from admiration to revulsion; that in the later Middle Ages, it was diagnosed readily even by laity; that a wide range of treatment was available, that medieval leper hospitals were no more austere than the monasteries on which they were modelled; that the decline of leprosy was not monocausal but implied a complex web of factors - medical, environmental, social and legal.

Carole Rawcliffe writes with consummate skill, subtlety and rigour; her book will change forever the image of the medieval leper.

Carole Rawcliffe is Professor of Medieval History at the University of East Anglia.

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Product Details
The Boydell Press
1843832739 / 9781843832737
Hardback
19/10/2006
United Kingdom
English
512 p. : ill.
24 cm
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