{"title":"[Physicians' households in the 16th century].","authors":"Tilmann Walter","doi":"","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><p>16th-century's medicine was marked by a wave of professionalization: besides scientific influences--evident by new ambitious texts on botany, anatomy, and chemiatry--functions of medical expertise for political purposes were an important factor. Based on findings made in my DFG-funded project \"Arztliche Autorität in der Frühen Neuzeit\" (medical authority in early modem times) is discussed how these influences altered the professional conditions for physicians. \"Haushalt\" (household) can be understood as a social community as well as a monetary budget in this context: physicians earned their money with a lot of different ventures beside medical practice, as commerce, farming, banking, or mining etc. Expenses for houses, gardens, interior etc. were based on needs of everyday life but could also be signs of luxury. Thus the physicians demonstrated the high social status they had acquired, and some of them thereby placed themselves at one social level with the nobility. Even scientific books can be estimated as a special case of such a conspicuous consumption for in most cases publishing made high investments without monetary benefit necessary. Thus scientific reputation was to some degree foreseeable: epoch-making books like above all Andreas Vesalius' \"De humani Corporis fabrica libri septem\" (Basel 1543) had to be financed out of the assets of the family (in Vesalius' case: a high-standing family in the emperor's services). Other sources show clearly that many doctors were not able to afford publishing comparable elaborated and expensive books.</p>","PeriodicalId":81975,"journal":{"name":"Medizin, Gesellschaft, und Geschichte : Jahrbuch des Instituts fur Geschichte der Medizin der Robert Bosch Stiftung","volume":"27 ","pages":"31-73"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2008-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Medizin, Gesellschaft, und Geschichte : Jahrbuch des Instituts fur Geschichte der Medizin der Robert Bosch Stiftung","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
16th-century's medicine was marked by a wave of professionalization: besides scientific influences--evident by new ambitious texts on botany, anatomy, and chemiatry--functions of medical expertise for political purposes were an important factor. Based on findings made in my DFG-funded project "Arztliche Autorität in der Frühen Neuzeit" (medical authority in early modem times) is discussed how these influences altered the professional conditions for physicians. "Haushalt" (household) can be understood as a social community as well as a monetary budget in this context: physicians earned their money with a lot of different ventures beside medical practice, as commerce, farming, banking, or mining etc. Expenses for houses, gardens, interior etc. were based on needs of everyday life but could also be signs of luxury. Thus the physicians demonstrated the high social status they had acquired, and some of them thereby placed themselves at one social level with the nobility. Even scientific books can be estimated as a special case of such a conspicuous consumption for in most cases publishing made high investments without monetary benefit necessary. Thus scientific reputation was to some degree foreseeable: epoch-making books like above all Andreas Vesalius' "De humani Corporis fabrica libri septem" (Basel 1543) had to be financed out of the assets of the family (in Vesalius' case: a high-standing family in the emperor's services). Other sources show clearly that many doctors were not able to afford publishing comparable elaborated and expensive books.
16世纪的医学以一波专业化浪潮为标志:除了科学的影响——从植物学、解剖学和化学方面雄心勃勃的新文本中可以看出——出于政治目的的医学专业知识的功能也是一个重要因素。根据我在dfg资助的项目“Arztliche Autorität in der fr hen Neuzeit”(现代早期的医学权威)中所做的发现,讨论了这些影响如何改变了医生的专业条件。在这种情况下,“Haushalt”(家庭)可以被理解为一个社会社区,也可以理解为一种货币预算:医生在医疗实践之外通过许多不同的企业赚钱,如商业、农业、银行或采矿等。房屋、花园、室内装饰等方面的开支是基于日常生活的需要,但也可能是奢侈的标志。因此,医生们展示了他们所获得的高社会地位,其中一些人因此将自己置于贵族的社会地位。即使是科学书籍也可以被认为是这种炫耀性消费的一个特例,因为在大多数情况下,出版需要大量投资,而不需要金钱上的利益。因此,科学声誉在某种程度上是可以预见的:像安德烈亚斯·维萨里乌斯(Andreas Vesalius)的《关于人类的公司》(De humani Corporis fabrica libri septem)(巴塞尔1543)这样划时代的著作,必须从家族资产中获得资金(在维萨里乌斯的例子中:一个为皇帝服务的显赫家族)。其他资料清楚地表明,许多医生没有能力出版同样详尽和昂贵的书籍。