2011
DOI: 10.1111/j.1477-4658.2011.00721.x
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The nun apothecaries of Renaissance Florence: marketing medicines in the convent

Abstract: Using unpublished archival sources, this essay analyses the development of convent pharmacies in sixteenth‐century Florence and situates them in a changing medical and political landscape. These female‐run apothecary shops shed light on several important issues for historians of Renaissance medicine and society: the nature and extent of women's medical agency; the acquisition and transmission of specialized knowledge outside a university or guild setting; the regulation of unofficial practitioners by guild and… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…The exotic plants used by Krummhübel herbalists may also refer to the scholarly origin of their knowledge. This, and the considerable overlap of the nomenclature with the old herbals, indicates that the recipes might have been originated (even if later modified) from the monastic tradition dating back to at least the sixteenth century [65, 66], and they may go back even to antiquity. For example, by producing and marketing drugs to the public, Italian Renaissance nuns both augmented the medical resources available in urban society and acquired roles of public significance beyond the spiritual realm [66](Table 2).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The exotic plants used by Krummhübel herbalists may also refer to the scholarly origin of their knowledge. This, and the considerable overlap of the nomenclature with the old herbals, indicates that the recipes might have been originated (even if later modified) from the monastic tradition dating back to at least the sixteenth century [65, 66], and they may go back even to antiquity. For example, by producing and marketing drugs to the public, Italian Renaissance nuns both augmented the medical resources available in urban society and acquired roles of public significance beyond the spiritual realm [66](Table 2).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In their complete lack of participation in monetary exchange, they were farther from the commercial marketplace than other female charitable healers, such as the Florentine nun apothecaries whom Sharon Strocchia has studied. 84 Although Anna shared her remedies widely and in many cases provided medical advice to her aristocratic contacts, she did not sell her cures or aim to supplant the role of a physician. For both women, then, the basic monetary value of their remedies was not a central consideration in their own lifetimes, although Anna of Saxony unquestionably used the gift of her remedies to curry favour.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…By the middle of the sixteenth century Florence had over 46 registered apothecaries, or one per 1,500 inhabitants, surpassing the Venetian ratio of one apothecary per 2,422 people. 69 Many of Florence's apothecaries were concentrated in the Old Market (Mercato Vecchio). One such shop was the Speziale al Giglio, which played a vital role in artistic production in Florence and listed in its ledgers were many leading artists of Florence including Sandro Botticelli, Domenico Ghirlandaio and Piero's master, Cosimo Rosselli.…”
Section: The Role Of Vipers In Renaissance Florencementioning
confidence: 99%