Women medical practitioners in Early Modern Europe

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Early Modern Europe marked a period of transition within the medical world. Universities for doctors were becoming more common and standardized training was becoming a requirement.[1] During this time, a few universities were beginning to train women as midwives,[2] but rhetoric against women healers was increasing.[1] The literature against women in medicine started in the 13th century, and the Early Modern period gave way to a widespread call for licensing and proper training for midwives, which was largely unavailable.[3]

Within family households, however, women continued to heal,[4] as seen in the recipe books many women kept and passed down from generation to generation.[5] Women "were brought up to know how to make medicines and how to use them."[6] The roots of medicine within Europe largely originated from women and their knowledge.[7]

Women medical practitioners were both paid and unpaid. Women were healers whether compensated or not, but harder to separate into specialties as with male healers, because women had no formal guilds.[8] This has resulted in some confusion about what women's roles actually were when it came to medicine.[8]

Midwives

Unpaid labor

References

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