1999
DOI: 10.1093/shm/12.2.191
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Practitioners and Saints: Medical Men in Canonization Processes in the Thirteenth to Fifteenth Centuries

Abstract: This article shows that recourse to expert medical judgement for authenticating miracles has medieval roots which lead to the thirteenth century. It provides a survey of those cases in the printed versions of canonization processes from c. 1200 to c. 1500 where medical men actively appeared as witnesses. It shows how, from the second half of the thirteenth century, many canonization processes (overwhelmingly in southern Europe) included at least one medical man who witnessed or gave expert testimony as a suppl… Show more

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Cited by 49 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…Religion was the primary macrolevel institution, dictating the values, norms, and, often, political structures and policies of the society (Bruce, 1997). Medicine itself was based in religious institutions in the premodern world (Ziegler, 1999). Industrialization, urbanization, and secularization transformed the status and power of religion and family.…”
Section: Contributions To Sociologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Religion was the primary macrolevel institution, dictating the values, norms, and, often, political structures and policies of the society (Bruce, 1997). Medicine itself was based in religious institutions in the premodern world (Ziegler, 1999). Industrialization, urbanization, and secularization transformed the status and power of religion and family.…”
Section: Contributions To Sociologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Miracles were very much a part of what constituted the fama sanctitatis (Reputation of Sanctity) in the middle ages. In the canonisation proceedings of Louis of Toulouse and in the case of Urban V (1376/7), for example, there is a collection of more than 200 miracles (Ziegler 1999). By the thirteenth century, with the centralisation of the canonisation process, miracles had become the subject of official examination (Goodich 1983: 170).…”
Section: Miracles and Sanctity Since The Middle Agesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is important, however, to emphasise that such transformations did not occur overnight. Indeed, the proceedings of canonisation trials, from at least the thirteenth century, regularly featured a medicus (medical man) as an expert witness (Ziegler 1999). However, we should also note that in the hagiographical literature of the early middle ages, the medicus appears as a foil to the superior and supernatural power of the saints (Flint 1989: 135).…”
Section: Miracles and Sanctity Since The Middle Agesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…22Flint 1989; Mattoso 1993; Ziegler 1999; Pilsworth 2000; McCleery in Cooper and Gregory (eds) 2005.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%