Abstract
This article investigates the role of the medical examination in municipal poor relief programmes between 1570 and 1620. Documents from the city of Nördlingen, a community of approximately 10,000 people in 1600, suggest that municipal facilities addressed a range of serious illnesses for a wide spectrum of the population. Practitioners were influenced by their Galenic medical milieu but ultimately focused on a range of practical resource questions rather than the diagnosis of an individual's disease. © 2011 The Author.
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Hammond, M. L. (2011). Medical examination and poor relief in early modern Germany. Social History of Medicine, 24(2), 244–259. https://doi.org/10.1093/shm/hkq056
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