Madras in the eighteenth century was a site of continuous warfare sparked mostly by trading interests. This paper studies how these influences of hostility and commerce shaped the medical establishment of the English East India Company. It begins by analyzing the struggle of the medical establishment to cope with military and logistical requirements; it then shows how the Coromandel trade provided a peculiar dynamic to the practice of medicine in Madras. By aligning the history of medicine with that of trade, the paper traces the parallel trajectories of intellectual and material wealth. The development of modern medicine is seen as a process of adjusting to and engaging with diverse ideas and items - sometimes co-opting them, sometimes realigning them in new modes of production.
CITATION STYLE
Chakrabarti, P. (2006, March). Neither of meate nor drinke, but what the Doctor alloweth: Medicine amidst War and Commerce in Eighteenth-Century Madras. Bulletin of the History of Medicine. https://doi.org/10.1353/bhm.2006.0009
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.