Health and the People: 1500-1800 Early Modern Flashcards

1
Q

When was the Early Modern Period?

A

Approx. 1500-1800 Overlapping periods the Renaissance, the Reformation, the Enlightenment, the Age of Reason.

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2
Q

What trends and factors were active in this period?

A

Globalization, travel & discovery, colonization and empire, trading economies (mercantilism), The Protestant Reformation questioning religion, experimental science, technology including printing, nation states with centralised secular governments.

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3
Q

What was the Renaissance?

A

‘Rebirth’ – the period after the middle ages focused on a rediscovery of classical learning and values from art to science.

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4
Q

Who wrote the anatomy textbook ‘The Fabric of the Human Body’ in 1543?

A

Andreas Vesalius

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5
Q

Whose theories did the scientific approach of Renaissance doctors challenge?

A

Galen

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6
Q

What techniques were developed by the French barber surgeon Ambroise Paré?

A

Wound dressing and ligatures instead of cauterization

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7
Q

What did William Harvey discover?

A

That blood circulated around the body, veins contained valves and the heart was a pump. ‘On the Motion of the Heart’ was published in 1628

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8
Q

When were the first microscopes invented?

A

1590

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9
Q

What is a bezoar stone?

A

A stone from the stomach of a goat that was believed to be an antidote for all poisons. Pare did an experiment that proved it did not but it was still used in medicine for decades after.

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10
Q

When was the Great Plague?

A

1665

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11
Q

How many people died of the Plague in London?

A

About 15%. 68,596 deaths were recorded in the city, the true number was probably over 100,000.

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12
Q

Where were the earliest cases of the Plague in London 1665?

A

A parish outside the city walls called St Giles-in-the-Fields.

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13
Q

What time of year did the plague deaths peak?

A

The hot summer months

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14
Q

Who left London during the plague?

A

Anyone who could; King Charles II, lawyers, merchants, doctors.

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15
Q

What were some of the methods of Plague prevention issued by the King and Lord Mayor?

A

Quarantine, watchmen, searchers, marked infected houses, food provision, restriction of trade and movement, certificates of health, no public gatherings, fires and fumes to correct the bad air, no rotten food, burn infected clothes and possessions, fumigate houses.

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16
Q

What did people think caused and treated the plague?

A

Causes; impure air, god

Treatments and preventions: Bleeding, smoke and heat, smoking, sniffing a sponge soaked in vinegar, prayer

17
Q

What detailed document kept records of the types of deaths in London?

A

Bills of mortality

18
Q

What famous Londoner kept a diary that detailed the impact of the Great Plague?

A

Samuel Pepys

19
Q

How long were plague infected houses shut for?

A

40 days with a red cross then 20 days with a white cross

20
Q

Who wrote the fictional ‘A Journal of Plague Year’ in 1722?

A

Daniel Defoe

21
Q

What is a Quack?

A

Sellers of fake and fraudulent medicine with exaggerated claims of their curative properties.

22
Q

What did Thomas Coram open in 1741?

A

The Foundling Hospital (to provide care for abandoned children)

23
Q

What replaced religious hospitals after the dissolution of the monasteries?

A

Voluntary hospitals set up by inherences or private subscriptions. They focused more on treatment rather than just care and prayer.

24
Q

What did Robert Burton blame and recommend for mental illness in 1621?

A

Causes: Lack of exercise, idleness, excess pleasure, excess study.
Cures: Fresh air, exercise, music and laughter.

25
Q

What did Jane Sharpe publish in 1671?

A

The Midwives Book

26
Q

Who published A Treatise on Asthma in 1698?

A

Sir John Floyer

27
Q

What was scurvy and who came up with a cure?

A

Disease caused by lack of Vitamin C. Symptoms include; tiredness, leg pain, red-blue spots, swollen bleeding gums, loose teat, joint pain, yellow skin.
James Lind made sailors drink lime juice.

28
Q

What does vaccination mean?

A

Giving people a vaccine to stimulate an individual’s immune system to develop immunity to a disease.

29
Q

What are the symptoms of smallpox?

A

The variola virus causes red bumpy rash, raised blisters, death in 30-60% of cases; scars, blindness and limb deformities in survivors.

30
Q

What country doctor developed a vaccine for smallpox?

A

Edward Jenner

31
Q

When did Jenner develop a vaccine for smallpox?

A

1796

32
Q

What did Jenner notice about milkmaids?

A

Those who caught cowpox did not catch smallpox

33
Q

How did Jenner test and prove his theory?

A

He injected 9 year old James Phipps with cowpox pus and when he recovered gave him a dose of smallpox. He repeated the experiment on others including his 11 month old son.

34
Q

Why did people reject Jenner’s work on vaccination?

A

Wrong to inject cowpox. Smallpox was God’s punishment. Parents should decide. Government should not interfere.

35
Q

When was the smallpox vaccination made free to all infants?

A

1840, after the smallpox epidemic of 1837-40

36
Q

When did the government make the smallpox vaccine compulsory?

A

1853, after the smallpox epidemic of 1837-40

37
Q

When did the WHO declare the eradication of smallpox?

A

1979