Readership: Scholars and students of early modern social history; medical historians; historians of London
Margaret Pelling, Reader in Social History - Medicine, University of Oxford
"The result of many years' painstaking research, this is an important and multi-faceted contribution to our knowledge of English medicine in the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries - a period which has attracted much less historical attention than that after 1640." - History
Preface and Acknowledgements Abbreviations and Conventions List of Figures and Tables 1: Introduction: The College and the Middling Sort 2: Anatomy of an Anxious Institution: Plague and Seasonality 3: Censorial Activity: The Burdens of Officebearing 4: Initiation and Pursuit: Sources of Information for a Capital in Flux 5: Irregular Practitioners: A Wilderness of Mirrors 6: Gender Compromises: The Female Practitioner and her Connections 7: Active Patients: Patrons and Parties to Contract 8: The Effects of Confrontation: Demeanour, Penalties, and Patronage 9: Conclusions: Defining the Majority Appendixes Bibliography Index