Abstract
Taking the office of the coninc der ribauden in Ghent as a case-study, this article reconstructs the enforcement of urban sanitation and preventative health practices during the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries. The coninc managed a wide range of issues perceived as potentially polluting, damaging or threatening to health. Banning waste and chasing pigs as well as prostitutes off the streets, the office implemented a governmental vision on communal well-being. Health interests, as part of a broader pursuit of the common good, therefore played an important yet hitherto largely overlooked role in medieval urban governance.
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CITATION STYLE
Coomans, J. (2019). The king of dirt: Public health and sanitation in late medieval Ghent. Urban History, 46(1), 82–105. https://doi.org/10.1017/S096392681800024X
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