You're Dead to Me - Renaissance Medicine (Radio Edit)

Episode Date: May 8, 2026

Greg Jenner is joined in the 16th century by Dr Alanna Skuse and comedian Ria Lina to learn all about medicine and medical professionals in Tudor and Stuart England.In Renaissance-era England, medicin...e was still based on the theory of the four humours, passed down from ancient Greek and Roman physicians like Hippocrates and Galen. But from the reign of Henry VIII, there were signs of change. The invention of the printing press led to an explosion in medical and anatomical books, and the circulation of ideas from across Europe. The College of Physicians was founded in 1518, and the Company of Barber-Surgeons in 1543. Medicine became a real business, with a range of specialists, professional bodies overseeing different kinds of healthcare, and an explosion of medical providers advertising their services to the general public.This episode explores the landscape of healthcare in 16th- and 17th-century England, looking at everyone from physicians, surgeons and apothecaries to domestic healers and midwives, and even taking in quacks and frauds. Along the way, it examines the sensible social distancing measures taken during the Great Plague, the cures both sensible and dangerous offered for all kinds of diseases, and the cutting-edge experiments men like William Harvey and Christopher Wren were carrying out on the circulation of the blood.This is a radio edit of the original podcast episode. For the full-length version, please look further back in the feed.Hosted by: Greg Jenner Research by: Katharine Russell Written by: Dr Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow, Dr Emma Nagouse, and Greg Jenner Produced by: Dr Emmie Rose Price-Goodfellow and Greg Jenner Audio Producer: Steve Hankey Production Coordinator: Gill Huggett Senior Producer: Dr Emma Nagouse Executive Editor: Philip Sellars

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 Hello and welcome to Your Dead to Me, the Radio 4 comedy podcast that takes history seriously. My name's Greg Jenner. I'm a public historian, author and broadcaster. And today we're putting on our plague masks and rummaging in our doctor's bags as we head back to 16th century England to learn all about Renaissance-era medicine. And to help us, we are joined by not one, but two esteemed doctors. In History Corner, she's an associate professor in the Department of English Literature at the University of Reading, where her research focuses on medicine and the body from the 16th to 18th centuries. And luckily for us, she's also the author of the fantastic new book, The Surgeon, the Midwife and the Quack. How to Stay Alive in Renaissance England. It's Dr Alana Scus. Welcome Alana. Hello, nice to be you.
Starting point is 00:00:42 Lovely to have you here. And in Comedy Corner, she's a comedian, actor and writer. You might have seen her on all the TV on Live at the Apollo, QI, pointless and having a good news for you. Maybe you've caught her live shows or heard her on Radio 4's The News Quiz, but you'll definitely remember her from our show. Episodes of Chungi Sao and Marco Polo, of course. It's Dr. Rialina. Welcome, Dr. Rhea. Thank you so much.
Starting point is 00:01:03 I rarely use that title, so it's nice to use it. I mean, you're such a sort of renowned comedian. People might not know this. You have a PhD in virology. I do for my sins. I have a PhD in herpes. That's my specialty. The classic root into comedy.
Starting point is 00:01:18 It just doesn't come up much, especially on a first day. I really... So if you are a trained scientist, modern medicine, presumably you're pretty comfortable. Do you know about the history of medicine? I know bits and pieces. I did the evolution of herpes. That was sort of my, well, not the evolution of it, like, from what it looked like at the beginning to what it looks like now. I mean, it was pretty much the same.
Starting point is 00:01:38 Well, it wasn't. But, you know what I mean? Like, I know bits and pieces, but when you study virus evolution, it actually doesn't come up in terms of human medicine as frequently as you would have thought. Even though you can kind of look back and go, ah, that was a virus. That was a virus. But so I'm excited. Good, good. Especially 16th century.
Starting point is 00:01:59 I've been sitting here for five minutes going, is that the first? 1500s or the 1700? Because it's always one number out, isn't it? It's the 1500s. It's a 1500s. Well, I was going to ask you, actually, you know, does the phrase Renaissance era, England, mean anything to you? See, when you say Renaissance, great, I'm thinking Italians, I'm thinking French, I'm thinking some wonderful progression in science. Then you said England and I went, oh, that's a very different thing. You know, that could be as big as we don't poo in sight outdoors anymore.
Starting point is 00:02:29 Do you know what I mean? Like, progress for the English, especially back then, wasn't quite the same as progress for the rest of Europe. So, what do you know? This is where I have a go at guessing what you, our lovely listener, might know about today's subject. And thanks to Shakespeare's plays and the many weird and wonderful adaptations you've seen, plus all the pop culture about Tudors and Stuarts, you've probably got some sense of what life was like in Renaissance era, England. But what about disease and healthcare specifically? Well, maybe, like me, you're just thinking of the classic scene in.
Starting point is 00:03:03 Blackadder, where the cure for everything is leeches. But what was visiting the doctor in Renaissance England really like? Was there more to it than plague masks? Did they use plague masks? And what about those leeches? Were they true? Oh, and who on earth was the stroker? Let's find out. Ria, when we say Renaissance England, you're thinking post-Italy and France. In your head, you've got a lovely image of Michelangelo sort of doing art. All of the turtles doing their thing. Definitely. We're talking about a renaissance that arrives in England later than in Italy and in France. So it's the Tudor and Stuart eras, you know, 16th, 17th centuries.
Starting point is 00:03:40 Is there a kind of commonality between European medicine and English medicine in this period? There really is. There's a lot of overlap. In fact, it's not very different from each other. The Catholic Church losing its power in England and so stuff starts to be more in English. But that's kind of happening all over the continent because we often think that the church has really been like stamping down on medicine before this. and that they didn't let people do anatomies and stuff. Actually, it's not true. The church never stopped people from doing anatomies.
Starting point is 00:04:07 There weren't enough people being hanged, basically, to provide enough dead bodies that nobody would mind you anatomising. Once you have cities, you got more crime, you get more people being hanged. You also get universities, more people wanting to see the anatomies. Alana, what does anatomise mean? It means cutting up somebody's dead body to have a look inside. Fair enough. And the English doctors are going all over the continent,
Starting point is 00:04:31 and they're going to these new anatomy theatres in Leiden and Padua and Paris and stuff. And they're going to the hospitals as well. Paris is meant to be like the best place in Europe for hospitals. And they bring that all back. There's also loads of migrants coming into England and a lot of those are doctors. So a lot of people coming from Huguenot-France over here and bringing their skills with them. Right. How dare they arrive on boats with skills?
Starting point is 00:04:56 I know. I'm outraged. The absolute temerity of it. We're talking here about. a time where the theory of medicine hasn't changed in over a thousand years. Is that fair, Alana? Broadly, yeah. So the main thing that they believe is Galanism.
Starting point is 00:05:11 It's the idea of the four humours. And there's these four humours that go around in your body, and they're on this spectrum of hot, cold, wet, dry. So you have black bile, which is cold and dry. Blood, which is hot and wet. Yellow bile, which is hot and dry. And then phlegm, the most appealing humour, which is cold and wet.
Starting point is 00:05:31 But it does kind of make sense. If you don't know about microorganisms and stuff, this is quite an intuitive way of viewing your body and we still talk about like being in a good or bad humour or whatever. Ria, which of the humoural profiles do you think you would be? Especially after that conversation, yellow bile. So we've honed our sense of humours, lull. Now let's look at the various medical professions in Renaissance England
Starting point is 00:05:52 because there's not just one type of healthcare worker. As today, there are multiple professions. So, Alana, can we start with, I suppose, the obvious ones, what we would call physicians, which I assume means doctor, but maybe it doesn't? It pretty much does. So the physicians are doctors, but not all doctors are physicians. Oh. Yeah. Whoa. Okay. Yeah, it's history. It's got to be complicated.
Starting point is 00:06:12 I mean, it's going to be a vent diagramming my mind. Yeah. And in the vent diagram, like, the bit of overlap is really small because the physicians are quite a small group because it's really difficult to be a physician. You have to train for about seven years. You need a university degree, and then you have to get licensed by the College of Physicians. So they get this college in 1518. They manage to get Henry the 8th to say, yeah, you can be a college. This is a brand new guild, a body, to regulate and to administer and say, like, you're legit, you've done the training.
Starting point is 00:06:42 Yeah. And then if you're in the College of Physicians, they have a bit of control over you. If you do something bad, they can bring you in and say, like, why did you give that lady seven ounces of hemlock or something? That's a lot of hamlots. That's too much hemlock. I mean, yeah. How much does it time does it take to get that much hemlock?
Starting point is 00:06:59 Anyway. Yeah, the physicians are really expensive, so they're only seeing really quite wealthy people. It's about 10 shillings to get a physician to come out to you. And then as you go on, you get different groups. Like, there's always been different groups, but they start to be more and more formalised because they have to be because otherwise the physicians are just going to take them all over.
Starting point is 00:07:19 So if I'm a rich person spending my 10 shillings to get the doctor in, the physician comes around, how are they diagnosing me? What are they looking for in terms of symptoms, things they can read? So the physicians are really proud of their diagnostic skills. It's kind of the main thing they have that's different from everybody else. They'll take a really detailed history, what your symptoms are, but also what you've been eating, what your relationships like, how you sleep, how often you have sex.
Starting point is 00:07:44 They also will take your pulse. And I've never quite worked out why they're doing this. They're really proud of their ability to take the pulse and read it. But they never seem to actually diagnose any. from it. The thing that they use, and it's more useful to them, is reading urine. So, uroscope, and you'll get flask of your urine, and the physician will have a look at it, and he'll give it a sniff, and he might drink some of it. Whoa. Yeah. Oh, that's normal. I'm sorry, that's normal. The fastest way to tell if someone's diabetic is to taste their teeth.
Starting point is 00:08:16 Exactly. Well, I mean, you seem very unperturbed about drinking urine. We shouldn't be grossed out by urine. I mean, people were washing their clothes in it way back away. It's a fair point. It's a fair point. I suppose in the 16th century urine is a lot more utilitarian. I mean, urine's probably cleaner than a lot of the water sources. Sure. You can wash your hair in urine. You put urine in your makeup. But, listener, please, do not...
Starting point is 00:08:35 It's a nice warm... Don't go around drinking your own weed, just because we said so. Yeah. Stick with chamomal. It looks very similar. Similar temperature. Okay, so Alana, so the doctor has diagnosed as quaffed the urine. What are they going to recommend?
Starting point is 00:08:49 They've gargled it. What a lovely vintage. I need to serve in your... What are they going to recommend? Is it diet, exercise, you know, the classic stuff? Yeah, so about probably 80, 85% of what they recommend is going to be regimen, as they call it. So diet and what you do, but mostly diet. So you want to rebalance whatever humour is out of whack.
Starting point is 00:09:12 Let's say you've got a disease and it's being caused by melancholy. So black bile, which is cold and dry, you're going to want to eat things that are hot and wet. So the foods that are hot, it kind of makes sense. It's the things you think are hot. So red meat, salty foods, cheese, red wine. Okay. I mean, it sounds great. More often, they're telling people that they have to give up all that stuff,
Starting point is 00:09:34 which they don't always like very much. And the physicians are always complaining about, like, people not taking their advice. Okay. And then presumably there's also things like purging. Yeah, they love a purge. So the three great remedies, as they call them, of the College of Physicians, are bleeding, vomiting and diarrhea. Those aren't remedies.
Starting point is 00:09:55 Those are symptoms. Yeah, very fast and loose with the word great there. The other thing I suppose we need to talk about, as well as purging, the bloodletting with leeches, blackoutes was correct? Yeah, they don't use leeches all the time. Sometimes they just cut you and let you bleed into a bowl. It just stab you. It just depends.
Starting point is 00:10:13 And we have this idea that physicians love letting blood out of people and they want to do it all the time. actually it's kind of driven by the patients. Patients want to get their bloodlet because they have the idea that if you let out some of the blood, all the bad stuff's going to go with it, and then you'll make new blood, which is good. We do have scientific progress. You talked about anatomy, which is where someone is opening up the body to look for evidence of disease. We do have a very famous anatomist, William Harvey, who does some proper science.
Starting point is 00:10:41 Yes, he is a clever chap. Before this point, you talked about Galen and Blood. And the Galenic theory of blood is that you make blood mostly in your liver, and then the heart, like, adds oxygen into the blood. And then it kind of goes around the body, but it sort of just sloshes around the body. William Harvey, he measured how much blood you could pump out of the heart. And he worked out, for that to be true, you'd have to be making enormous quantities of blood from your liver every day, like multiples of what you weigh. So he's like, okay, that can't be true. So he gets ligatures and he puts them around people's arms.
Starting point is 00:11:18 So he ties off their arms. Yeah. And then he looks at what happens to the arm. And if you have the ligature really tight, the arm will go cold. Yeah. But if you have the ligature a bit looser, the arm will go hot and fat because the arteries are further down in the body than the veins. So from there, and using various weird experiments on animals,
Starting point is 00:11:40 he works out that the blood does in fact go round and round the body. So this is the circulatory system. He figures out that the heart pumps blood around the body. Yes. It's not completely like we would understand it now, but he's pretty close. Sure. He gets the principle of it. And this is a major revolution in the history of medicine, which is important. And to a certain extent, he's doing that because he's got a lot of bodies around because of the English Civil War, right?
Starting point is 00:12:00 There's violence. There's wars, there's battles. There's dead bodies everywhere. So he's sort of going, all right, I've seen two bodies. So are we post 1665 now? With party? Yeah, just before. Yeah, just before a little bit before.
Starting point is 00:12:11 Yeah, I think it's 1640s and 50s, I think. We're going to talk about the barber surgeons, Ria, care to guess what a barber surgeon was and the clues in the name. Basically, I remember that you needed to have big hands. And I don't know why barbers had to have big hands, but I knew that to be a surgeon, you had to have big hands because you wanted to be able to grip. Like, later in the 1800s, you wanted big hands to play Rachmaninoff. But in this time, you want a big hands to be able to grip the arteries on both sides of the thigh with one hand so that you could stem the bleeding while you saw it off the leg. Was hair particularly coarse back then? Yeah, it's a good question.
Starting point is 00:12:47 I've had expensive haircuts, but this could cost you an arm and a leg, literally, right? Ah, it starts off with the barbers, and for ages they're called the company of barbers surgeons, because the barbers back in medieval times... They sung lovely songs, didn't they? Can you imagine? Poor part harmonies while sawing away.
Starting point is 00:13:05 While screaming. So the barbers, they are pretty handy with a razor, and the monks that were doing most of the medicine back in the medieval period are not actually supposed to spill blood. So they get the barbers in to do things like that. Wow, the standards, the double standards. And then eventually some of the barbers, they're pretty much just working as surgeons and they decide, okay, we should formalize this.
Starting point is 00:13:32 And they get the company of barbers surgeons in 1534. So there's this picture of Henry VIII's handing over a charter to this company, while the physicians stand on his other side looking like they've swallowed a bee. And then they decide, okay, now we've kind of divvied it up. The surgeons are going to do the surgery and the barbers are going to cut their hair and never the twain shall meet.
Starting point is 00:13:54 And obviously the 16th and 17th century in England is a time of war, of battles, of civil wars in the 17th century of course. So you've got loads and loads of people going to war and horrible injuries. So this is also a time of prosthesis, of false legs, of false eyes, of false noses, ears stitched to hats, which I love.
Starting point is 00:14:12 So you put the hat down and suddenly you've got ears attached, which is amazing. We should bring those back. Look, I'm an elf. But we need to move on to a different discipline, which is the apocothery. I mean, I don't know if I pronounce that correctly, but these are pharmacists. Yeah, basically. So they come from the pepperers and the spices who are medieval. Okay.
Starting point is 00:14:31 Because... Did you say those two words again? Pepperers and spices. I love to be like pepperers. They import pepper and spices. Oh, wow. Pepperers and spices. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:14:38 And they basically are pharmacists. What they're supposed to do is fill the prescriptions that the physician's right. What they actually do is they do that, but they also sell their own medicines and they do a bit of their own medical practice. So they diagnose, they sell, they've got their own little shops maybe. Yeah, there's loads of them. Yeah. And there's loads of them in London, isn't it? We know it's like one for every 2,000 people.
Starting point is 00:14:58 And this is a big city. Yeah. So there's a lot of apothecary. Apothecary is. How are we pronouncing it? Apothecary. Apothecary. It's quite hard to say.
Starting point is 00:15:05 And the most famous one, I suppose, would be Nicholas Cole Pepper, who, is amazing, does work with the poor, often does incredibly really generous work, and also writes one of the most popular medicine books of all time. Yeah, it's still in print. It's had more additions than Grey's Anatomy. Wow. Wait, what's it called? I'm buying it. Coal pepper's herbal.
Starting point is 00:15:22 Coal pepper's herbal. Yeah. So we've discussed legit medical professionals. We've got physicians, apothecaries, we've got barbers surgeons, but we've also got some slightly dodgier quacks. I'm going to use the word quack. Ria, what do you think the stroker did as a service? Okay, this is a family show, so not that. The stroker. I think the stroker, I keep thinking too far forward into the 1800s, and there were a lot of things that doctors did for women that could come under the stroking umbrella, which, but we're not there yet.
Starting point is 00:15:58 Okay. So does the stroker do some kind of, something that calms the nervous system like literally stroking, they don't realize that that's what they're doing by calming people down? It's a good guess and very, very elegantly put. Well done for Radio 4. Alana, who is the stroker and what does he do? So the stroker is a guy called Valentine Great Rakes. What a name. I know.
Starting point is 00:16:19 I mean, you start with a good name and then you get an even better nickname. He is Irish. He's essentially a faith healer. And he comes over from Ireland in 1665. And the way he treats people is that say you've got a headache, he'll start, he'll kind of stroke your head, and then he'll stroke like maybe down to your finger. and the headache comes out at your fingertips.
Starting point is 00:16:40 Oh. Yeah. He's incredibly popular. He calms your nervous system then. Yeah. Oh, my gosh. So it's sort of massage or is it just sort of, it's more... Fetary stroking.
Starting point is 00:16:50 Fethrushing. It's Irish rakey. Does he also speak in his Irish accent? Because I'll be honest, if I had a migraine and someone just talked to me in that beautiful lilt, I think it would go as well. Yeah, maybe. I mean, presumably, he is Irish, so... And we would call him a quack.
Starting point is 00:17:03 What does quack mean in a historical term? The word quack comes from the... word quack salver, which is a Dutch word for somebody who sells ointments by boasting about their medical credentials. Right, okay. So someone with a bit of kind of a little bit of showmanship, Rasmataz, buying my staff, it'll cure you. What was the Dutch word?
Starting point is 00:17:21 Quack salver. So we've got male surgeons, male physicians, male quacks. And I think, Alana, we need to talk about the fact women were hugely involved in healthcare. I suspect they were hugely involved in Corpeper's herbal. Maybe. Yeah, I mean, a lot of what Coppa puts in the herbal. He's just cribbed from women.
Starting point is 00:17:38 Okay. Yeah. We always talk about the physicians and the surgeons and stuff because they're the ones that left a lot of writings. But the vast majority of medical treatment is being administered by women. Kind of noble women or women of the kind of middling class who give medicines to their servants and their families and their neighbours. And they do extraordinary medicine.
Starting point is 00:18:00 They do all the kind of basically giving you a hot toddy type medicine. But they also, some of them will do bits of service. Like treat quite serious illnesses. The noble women will do this. That's fascinating. Not like in my picture of my head, I picture the noble woman living in her manner. But then it's going to be like the village herbalists that comes in and does all the midwifery. But you're saying it's actually.
Starting point is 00:18:24 The noble women, they've got money and they're bored witless. And they're clever and they're quite well educated. Yeah, exactly. Yeah. Okay. Amazing. So actually, you know, in a local village, you've got your squire who's got some land and everything else. And it might be his wife that is the nurse of the town.
Starting point is 00:18:41 Yeah. Wow. And one of the most famous women of this area would be Hannah Woolley. Yeah. Hannah Woolley is kind of like Martha Stewart or someone like that. So she's not noble. She pulls herself up basically by her bootstraps. Her husband dies and she needs to make some money.
Starting point is 00:18:56 So she does one of the first commercial remedy books. Yeah. And it's really, really popular. And she ends up publishing loads of these. So it's her and Culpeper are sort of the kind of bestselling medical books of the time, I suppose. Yeah, and a lot of, there's not really copyright in this period. So a lot of the medicines.
Starting point is 00:19:14 There's not copyright now, is there? AI companies, boo. Anyway, sorry. A lot of the medicines appear across, like, numerous of these texts. Okay. Ria, important question. What was Cockwater? Okay, because this is a family-friendly radio show.
Starting point is 00:19:30 I'm going to assume you're spelling Cox, C-A-U-L-K. Oh, beautiful. And it's mineral water. or something chalky or... No, it's spelled C-O-C-K. Is it? It's spelled cock water. I tried to lift this program up out of the gutter and you keep bringing it back down.
Starting point is 00:19:47 You're a classy lady and I've dragged it down again. Alana, what is cock water? Cockwater is cural medicine for fevers and things. You make it by mashing up a cockerel and then you distill the water from the cockerel with raisins, the milk of a red cow and ambergris. An ambergris is whale phlegm, right? It is. Yeah, hyper-expensive, incredibly expensive.
Starting point is 00:20:10 Hard to find. Hard to find, because you need whale to literally wash up on the beach. Sometimes just the ambergris. Yeah. We'll wash up on the beach. Oh, beautiful. Yeah, and it's for fevers and things. Okay.
Starting point is 00:20:19 Oh, so it's like cowlpole. Kind of, it sounds like chicken soup. It's cream of chicken soup. The other cures, of course, would be oil of frog. Oil of frog. Oil of frog. Oil of frog. And puppy water, I don't want to ask.
Starting point is 00:20:34 Puppy water can either be. puppy wee or water in which you've boiled a puppy. Oh, come on. Come on. All right. Well, as a BBC programme, I once again must stress, please do not go around boiling frogs or puppies. Right.
Starting point is 00:20:48 Moving on. We've mentioned midwives very briefly. Alana, this is a hugely important part of healthcare and medicine. Does the midwifery world have a college? Are they official physicians? Are they treated that way? What is their training? Midwifery is a funny profession,
Starting point is 00:21:05 because some of the midwives are professional midwives. They're making all their money from it. They do a lot of births. And some of the midwives are like your auntie that has seven kids. So there's always mostly men trying to get them to make it more formal, but they're quite resistant to it. And the most famous one, I suppose, from this era, would be Jane Sharp. Yeah, Jane Sharp's great.
Starting point is 00:21:27 We hardly know anything about her as a person. She's kind of mysterious. But she writes this big midwifery book. It's like 400 pages. but it's really good seller. And it's very frank about everything, which I think is why people bought it. It's also got really detailed pictures
Starting point is 00:21:44 of all the different sort of presentations that can go wrong. So baby's got his arms stuck the wrong way. Breach birth and that sort of thing. Yeah, okay. Yeah, I mean, it's a fascinating breed. And I suppose we should talk a little bit about general beliefs about women's bodies in this era,
Starting point is 00:21:58 so in the 16th, 17th century. Ria, a mini quiz for you. Okay. Which of these was not believed at the time? So, number one, unborn babies would breathe through the woman's vagina. Two, the womb could move around inside a woman's body and had to be coaxed back into place with delicious smells.
Starting point is 00:22:15 Three, babies with longer umbilical cords had longer penises. Or four, the womb continued to live after a woman had died. Which of those not true? I'm going to go with number three, umbilical cord of penis length because you could just eyeball that. Because I know the womb traveling around your body, that was a thing. They were just like, come back, come back, come back down. They were kind of like soothe it back into place.
Starting point is 00:22:39 The breathing through the vagina kind of makes logical sense if you know nothing about the inside. And what was the last one again? The last one was that a womb continued to live after. Yeah, and that one I'm going to say, I still think some people in the US believe because they do not see us as people. They see us as walking incubators. So I'm going to go with number three. I mean, you're correct to go for three as one that might seem.
Starting point is 00:23:00 outlandish, they're all true. I lied to you. Obviously, you know, you trusted me and I betrayed you. But, you know, a comedy show. So what are you going to do? You're a man. So midwives, were they ever regulated? Have midwives ever? I mean, of course they've regulated. Now, of course they are. But were they in the historical period talking about the 16th century, 17th century? Yeah, there's physicians and the surgeons. They really wanted to regulate them. And they kept trying to do it. But basically, they never succeeded. Ria, we've been on quite a journey.
Starting point is 00:23:26 I think that's a testament to how much you can trust women. It's the fact that it wasn't until men muscled their way in that we finally went, okay, we should regulate this. But when women did it by themselves, we were like, they're fine, they're fine. People are being born. People are standing up afterwards and walking around after childbirth. There's no need to regulate this. It's quite the story, though, isn't it, the history of medicine in this period, Ria?
Starting point is 00:23:50 It's incredible. The nuance window! Okay, it's time now for the nuance window. This is where Ria and I sit quietly, mixing our herbal cures for two minutes while Dr. Alana I take centre stage to tell us something we need to know about Renaissance medicine in England. My stopwatch is ready. So take it away, Dr. Alana. Can I just get a cup of hot urine while we sit while we listen? You may, you may. Okay. Alana, you've got two minutes. Off you go.
Starting point is 00:24:19 Okay, so there's this big emphasis on the market, and this is what I usually talk about, is that commercialisation is driving medical specialism and driving people to get better at medicine. but we also have to remember that this is the birth of a lot of the public health that we now know. So we've seen the plague and you have public health measures there. But we also have things like welfare. Because after the dissolution of the monasteries, the monasteries who've been looking after people, they can't do that anymore. And there's kind of chaos for about 70 years.
Starting point is 00:24:50 And then Elizabeth, as in Elizabeth I, recognizes that she needs to bring in an act for the welfare of maimed soldiers. because there's so many wars. There are so many people with disabilities coming home. And that act gets tinkered with over the next 300 years. It's basically the origins of the welfare system. The other thing we have is hospitals. And that's again driven by war because the civil wars,
Starting point is 00:25:17 you need hospitals for people. It's a whole propaganda thing of who has the best hospitals. So you get more hospitals being used as training centres and more hospitals in general. So at the end of the 17th century, you get new hospitals or expansions of hospitals like Chelsea, St. Thomas, Guys, Westminster, they're all produced during that period.
Starting point is 00:25:40 So we have quite a lot of hangover from that time in the good as well as the horrible stuff that we always think about. That's amazing. Thank you so much. Wow. I forgot that about the monks. The monks were the welfare system. You know, if you were tired or, you know,
Starting point is 00:25:54 they would take in the poor and they would, you know, feed them up, send them on their way. So when Henry got rid of them, we lost basically our mental health support networks. Yeah, he completely dismantled the health system. Yes, just so he could marry the lady he then executed. Yeah. Classic Henry. Yes, I mean, the dissolution of the monastery's listener, if you don't know, is, yeah, Henry V. Switching the faith of England from Catholicism to his own personal religion, the Church of England where he's in charge.
Starting point is 00:26:23 Thank you so much, Rhea. And listener, if you want more from Ria, check out our episodes on Chung-E Sao, the amazing pirate queen, the most successful pirate of all time, and of course our episode on Marco Polo. And for more on the history of health and wellness, we have episodes on ancient medicine,
Starting point is 00:26:38 Renaissance beauty in Italy, and the Kellogg Brothers. They were fun. If you've enjoyed the podcast, please share the show with your friends. Subscribe to Your Dead to Me on BBC Sounds to hear new episodes 28 days earlier than anywhere else. And if you're outside the UK,
Starting point is 00:26:50 you can listen at BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts. I just like to say huge thank you to our guests. In History Corner, we had the amazing Dr. Alana Scus, from the University of Reading. Thank you, Alana. Thank you, Alana. Pleasure to have you here. And in Comedy Corner, we had the brilliant Ria Lina.
Starting point is 00:27:04 Dr. Ria Lina. Thank you, Ria. Pleasure, as always. See me afterwards for that round. Oh, thank you. And to you, lovely listener, join me next time as we restore another languishing historical topic back to full health. But for now, I'm off to go and launch my new wellness brand, Leaches for Life. I'm going to be rich.
Starting point is 00:27:21 Bye! Hi, I'm Phil Wang. and this is a podcast to podcast trailer for a different podcast than this podcast that you've listened to or are going to listen to. But nonetheless, I'm talking about another podcast that you should also definitely listen to. The podcast I'm talking about is Comedy of the Week, which takes choice episodes from BBC sitcoms, sketch shows, podcasts, and panel shows, including my own show, unspeakable, and puts them all into one podcast. Maybe I'll trail this podcast on that podcast. Who's to say? I'll do what I like. Listen to Comedy of the Week
Starting point is 00:28:03 now on BBC Sounds. Podcast.

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