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Could you just sign this for me John? Doctors, charters and occupational identity in early medieval northern and central Italy

Identifieur interne : 001622 ( Istex/Corpus ); précédent : 001621; suivant : 001623

Could you just sign this for me John? Doctors, charters and occupational identity in early medieval northern and central Italy

Auteurs : Clare Pilsworth

Source :

RBID : ISTEX:D7EF0D70861827E8AC08A44E9537821673EF432E

English descriptors

Abstract

Despite intensive study of the texts and manuscripts that have been attributed to the medical ‘schola’ in late antique Ravenna, there has been no systematic investigation of the evidence for doctors active north of Rome c.500–900 AD. This article examines how other medical practitioners fade into the background in the early medieval source material, whereas, thanks largely to surviving charters, elite practitioners – the medici– remain visible. The careers of three contrasting doctors – a learned medicus in Ravenna, a royal Lombard doctor, and the cleric Iohannes of Lucca – are analysed. I argue that the very process of signing charters could strengthen their occupational identity.

Url:
DOI: 10.1111/j.1468-0254.2009.00282.x

Links to Exploration step

ISTEX:D7EF0D70861827E8AC08A44E9537821673EF432E

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<title type="main">Could you just sign this for me John? Doctors, charters and occupational identity in early medieval northern and central Italy</title>
<title type="shortAuthors">Clare Pilsworth</title>
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<p>Despite intensive study of the texts and manuscripts that have been attributed to the medical ‘schola’ in late antique Ravenna, there has been no systematic investigation of the evidence for doctors active north of Rome
<i>c</i>
.500–900 AD. This article examines how other medical practitioners fade into the background in the early medieval source material, whereas, thanks largely to surviving charters, elite practitioners – the
<i>medici</i>
– remain visible. The careers of three contrasting doctors – a learned
<i>medicus</i>
in Ravenna, a royal Lombard doctor, and the cleric Iohannes of Lucca – are analysed. I argue that the very process of signing charters could strengthen their occupational identity.</p>
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<abstract lang="en">Despite intensive study of the texts and manuscripts that have been attributed to the medical ‘schola’ in late antique Ravenna, there has been no systematic investigation of the evidence for doctors active north of Rome c.500–900 AD. This article examines how other medical practitioners fade into the background in the early medieval source material, whereas, thanks largely to surviving charters, elite practitioners – the medici– remain visible. The careers of three contrasting doctors – a learned medicus in Ravenna, a royal Lombard doctor, and the cleric Iohannes of Lucca – are analysed. I argue that the very process of signing charters could strengthen their occupational identity.</abstract>
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