Books as a Source of Medical Education for Women in the Middle Ages
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Green, Monica H.Editorial
Universidad de Granada
Date
2000Referencia bibliográfica
Green, Monica H. «Books as a source of medical education for women in the middle ages». Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam, 2000, Vol. 20, p. 331-369, https://raco.cat/index.php/Dynamis/article/view/86637.
Abstract
The development of philosophical medicine in the high and late Middle Ages
brought with it a powerful association of medical knowledge with the written word. To
possess books, or at least to have access to books, was both a prerequisite for and a
symbol of the kind of theoretical learning that distinguished the learned practitioner
from the empiric. This study examines evidence for women’s access to medical books,
raising the question of what difference gender made. I argue that, for the most part,
women did not own medical books, whether they were laywomen or religious. I suggest
that this was largely due to the limits on advanced education for women, a factor that
would have effected both laywomen and nuns.