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Walking Corpses

Leprosy in Byzantium and the Medieval West

John W. Nesbitt, Timothy S. Miller

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Cornell University Press img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / Mittelalter

Beschreibung

In Walking Corpses, Timothy S. Miller and John W. Nesbitt contextualize reactions to leprosy in medieval Western Europe by tracing its history in Late Antique Byzantium, which had been confronting leprosy and its effects for centuries.

Integrating developments in both the Latin West and the Greek East, Walking Corpses challenges a number of misperceptions about attitudes toward the disease, including that theologians branded leprosy as punishment for sin (rather, it was seen as a mark of God's favor); that Christian teaching encouraged bans on the afflicted from society (in actuality, it was Germanic customary law); or that leprosariums were prisons (instead, they were centers of care, many of them self-governing). Informed by extensive archival research and recent bioarchaeology, Walking Corpses also includes new translations of three Greek texts regarding leprosy, while a new preface to the paperback edition updates the historiography on medieval perceptions and treatments of leprosy.

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Schlagwörter

medieval leprosariums, leprosy and pneumatist doctrine, Christianity and the fear of contagion, Knights of Lazarus and Pope Clement IV, the Leper Plot of 1321, history of leprosy, theories of contagion