Women Healers and the Medical Marke tplace of 16th-Century Lyon
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Klairmont Lingo, AlisonEditorial
Universidad de Granada
Date
1999Referencia bibliográfica
Klairmont-Lingo, Alison. «Women healers and the medical marketplace of 16th-century Lyon». Dynamis: Acta Hispanica ad Medicinae Scientiarumque Historiam Illustrandam, 1999, Vol. 19, p. 79-94, https://raco.cat/index.php/Dynamis/article/view/106143.
Résumé
Although women's legal and marital status make them almost invisible in archiva1
documents, what traces remain suggest that women participated in Lyon's medical
marketplace in various ways and under various guises. At Lyon's municipally-funded
poor hospital, the Hotel-Dieu, widows and wives of surgeons, repentant prostitutes,
birth attendants, and .women» cared for the destitute and sick of Lyon, in the capacity
of midwives, physicians, surgeons, and barbers. Though the records almost always
identify women practitioners simply as «women» or by their first and last name, many
of them engaged in the identical tasks as male practitioners. Outside of the hospital,
wives acted as barbers or surgeons alongside or in place of their husbands when
widowed. In the final analysis, municipal authorities accepted the help of female
healers on the basis of their traditional medical knowledge, joint work identity with
their practitioner-husbands, and proven skill.