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The royal protomedicato: the regulation of the medical professions in the Spanish empire
John Tate Lanning and John Jay TePaske
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Frontmatter
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Editor's Preface and Acknowledgments (page 1)
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Author's Preface (page 6)
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1 The King's Physicians Follow Columbus (page 14)
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2 The Municipal Protomedicato: The Cities and Medicine in the Formative Period (page 24)
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3 The Royal Protomedicato: Organization and Practice (page 58)
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4 The Royal Protomedicato: Problems of Jurisdiction (page 92)
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5 The Illicit Practice of Medicine (page 135)
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6 Foreign Doctors in the Spanish Empire (page 153)
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7 Legitimacy and Blood Purity (Limpieza de Sangre): Birth, Race, and Caste, and the Practice of Medicine (page 175)
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8 The Handling of Charity: Legal Obligations of Medical Men (page 201)
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9 Pride and Preferment: The Standing and Reputation of Medical Men and Medical Practice (page 217)
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10 Government and the Apothecary (page 230)
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11 Government and Surgery (page 261)
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12 Government and Phlebotomy (page 282)
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13 Government and Obstetrics (page 286)
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14 Medical Education, Learning, and Research (page 325)
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15 The Government, Protomedicato, and Public Health (page 351)
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Glossary (page 387)
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Abbreviations Used in References (page 393)
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Notes (page 395)
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Bibliography of Works Cited (page 463)
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Index (page 471)
Journal Abbreviation | Label | URL |
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HAHR | 67.1 (Feb. 1987): 155-156 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/2515218 |
AHR | 91.2 (Apr. 1986): 496 | http://www.jstor.org/stable/1858332 |
Citable Link
Published: 1985
Publisher: Duke University Press
- 9780822306511 (hardcover)