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      Women healers of the middle ages: selected aspects of their history.

      American Journal of Public Health
      American Public Health Association

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          Abstract

          The stellar role of women as healers during the Middle Ages has received some attention from medical historians but remains little known or appreciated. In the three centuries preceding the Renaissance, this role was heightened by two roughly parallel developments. The first was the evolution of European universities and their professional schools that, for the most part, systematically excluded women as students, thereby creating a legal male monopoly of the practice of medicine. Ineligible as healers, women waged a lengthy battle to maintain their right to care for the sick and injured. The 1322 case of Jacqueline Felicie, one of many healers charged with illegally practicing medicine, raises serious questions about the motives of male physicians in discrediting these women as incompetent and dangerous. The second development was the campaign--promoted by the church and supported by both clerical and civil authorities--to brand women healers as witches. Perhaps the church perceived these women, with their special, often esoteric, healing skills, as a threat to its supremacy in the lives of its parishioners. The result was the brutal persecution of unknown numbers of mostly peasant women.

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          Most cited references7

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          Women's Medical Practice and Health Care in Medieval Europe

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            Historians as Demonologists: The Myth of the Midwife-witch

            D Harley (1990)
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              Status and Medieval Medicine

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                American Journal of Public Health
                Am J Public Health
                American Public Health Association
                0090-0036
                1541-0048
                February 1992
                February 1992
                : 82
                : 2
                : 288-295
                Article
                10.2105/AJPH.82.2.288
                2356262b-235c-4eaf-a603-1dbae15ae97d
                © 1992
                History

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