Friday, May 18, 2012

18th century Hungarian medical police

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22578378


Stud Hist Philos Biol Biomed Sci. 2012 May 9. [Epub ahead of print]

Quackery versus professionalism? Characters, places and media of medical knowledge in eighteenth-century Hungary.

Source

Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Department of Early Modern History, Múzeum krt. 6-8, H-1088 Budapest, Hungary.

Abstract

This essay discusses the question of health in the Kingdom of Hungary during the Age of Enlightenment. It explores the relationships and tensions between central theories of medical police and the local expectations of government administrators, as well as those between academic or official knowledge and implicit or alternative knowledge about health. The reigns of Maria Theresia and Joseph II marked the moment at which particular kinds of folk and practical knowledge about healing became visible and above all legible. This is to be seen in the enormous rise in book production, which in itself represented an 'approved knowledge' that found legitimation in new academic and bureaucratic institutions, such as the reformed medical faculty of the University of Vienna, the newly-founded medical faculty at Tyrnau, the establishment of a health department within the Hungarian Statthalterei, as well as in the emission of royal legislation supporting the agendas of the new enlightened science of 'medical police'.

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