The essays in this volume provide an unusual historical perspective on
the experience of illness: they try to reconstruct what being ill (from
a minor ailment to fatal sickness) was like in pre-industrial society
from the point of view of the sufferers themselves. The authors examine
the meanings that were attached to sickness; popular medical beliefs and
practices; the diffusion of popular medical knowledge; and the relations
between patients and their doctors (both professional and 'fringe') seen
from the patients' point of view. This is an important work, for illness
and death dominated life in earlier societies to an enormous degree. Yet
almost no studies of this kind have ever been carried out before,
practically all previous treatments having been written from the
traditional point of view of the doctor, the hospital, or medical
science. It will accordingly interest a wide range of readers interested
in social history as well as the history of medicine itself.