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      Collecting Knowledge for the Family: Recipes, Gender and Practical Knowledge in the Early Modern English Household

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          Abstract

          When Mary Cholmeley married Henry Fairfax in 1627, she carried to her new home in Yorkshire a leather-bound notebook filled with medical recipes. Over the next few decades, Mary and Henry, their children and various members of the Fairfax and Cholmeley families continually entered new medical and culinary information into this ‘treasury for health.’ Consequently, as it stands now, the manuscript can be read both as a repository of household medical knowledge and as a family archive. Focusing on two Fairfax ‘family books,’ this essay traces on the process through which early modern recipe books were created. In particular, it explores the role of the family collective in compiling books of knowledge. In contrast to past studies where household recipe books have largely been described as the products of exclusively female endeavors, I argue that the majority of early modern recipe collections were created by family collectives and that the members of these collectives worked in collaboration across spatial, geographical and temporal boundaries. This new reading of recipe books as testaments of the interests and needs of particular families encourages renewed examination of the role played by gender in the transmission and production of knowledge in early modern households.

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          The Invisible Technician

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            Knowledge and Practice in English Medicine, 1550–1680

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              Making medicines in the early modern household.

              This article is a study of household medicine production and consumption through an examination of the papers of Elizabeth Freke (1641-1714) and a wider survey of around nine thousand medical recipes in printed and manuscript collections from seventeenth-century England. It investigates the sorts of medicines that may have been produced in early modern households and the production methods, ingredients, and equipment used. Focusing on three inventories of medicines compiled by Freke between 1710 and 1712 as well as her manuscript recipe collection and medical reading notes, I contend that she kept on hand a number of cure-alls and medicines for general weaknesses, while holding onto recipes for more-specific ailments; the recipes, in these cases, would be the "just-in-case" medicine cabinet. I also argue for a close relationship between commercial and domestic medicine, and present the idea that household practitioners purchased not only ingredients (both processed and unprocessed) and equipment, but also medical knowledge.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Centaurus
                Centaurus
                cnt
                Centaurus; International Magazine of the History of Science and Medicine
                Blackwell Publishing Ltd (Oxford, UK )
                0008-8994
                1600-0498
                May 2013
                30 April 2013
                : 55
                : 2
                : 81-103
                Affiliations
                [* ]Department II (Daston), Max Planck Institute for the History of Science Boltzmannstrasse 22, Berlin, 14195, Germany eleong@ 123456mpiwg-berlin.mpg.de
                Article
                10.1111/1600-0498.12019
                3709121
                23926360
                f3ca7676-e51e-4690-a27b-980995e16569
                © 2013 John Wiley & Sons Pte Ltd

                Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2.5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.

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                early modern medicine,gender history,household,informal science

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