1st Edition

Renaissance Surgeons Learning and Expertise in the Age of Print

By Kristy Wilson Bowers Copyright 2022
    170 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    170 Pages 7 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    This book examines the lives, careers, and publications of a group of Spanish Renaissance surgeons as exemplars of both the surgical renaissance occurring across Europe and of the unique context of Spain.

    In the sixteenth century, European surgeons forged new identities as learned experts who combined university medical degrees with manual skills and practical experience. No longer merely apprentice-trained craftsmen engaged only with healing the exterior wounds and rashes of the body, these learned surgeons actively engaged with the epistemic shifts of the sixteenth century, including new forms of knowledge construction, based in empiricism, and knowledge circulation, based in printing. These surgeons have long been overshadowed by the innovative work of anatomists and botanists but were participants in the same intellectual currents reshaping many aspects of knowledge. Active in communities across both Castile and Aragon, learned surgeons formed an intellectual community of practitioners and scholars who helped reshape surgical knowledge and practice. This book provides an overview of the Spanish learned surgeons, known as médicos y cirujanos, who were influential in universities, on battlefields, at court, and in private practice. It argues that the surgeons’ larger significance rests in their collective identity as part of the broader intellectual shift to empiricism and innovation of the Renaissance.

    Renaissance Surgeons: Learning and Expertise in the Age of Print is essential reading for upper-level students and scholars of the history of medicine and early modern Spain.

    0. Introduction  1. Physicians and Surgeons: Medical Learning and Licensing  2. Spanish Learned Surgeons: A Broad and Connected Movement  3. Sharing Knowledge: Learned Surgical Texts  4. Refining Knowledge and Practice: Empiricism, Tradition, and Innovation  5. Expanding Expertise: New Problems and New Treatments  6. Conclusion

    Biography

    Kristy Wilson Bowers is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Missouri. She is the author of Plague and Public Health in Early Modern Seville (2013), as well as several articles related to the history of medicine in early modern Spain.