Battle-scarred examines mortality, medical care and military welfare during the British Civil Wars. Its focus on the victims of war and their means of survival provides a series of case studies to demonstrate how these visceral conflicts drove developments in medical care and military welfare for servicemen and their families. -- .
Battle-scarred examines mortality, medical care and military welfare during the British Civil Wars. Its focus on the victims of war and their means of survival provides a series of case studies to demonstrate how these visceral conflicts drove developments in medical care and military welfare for servicemen and their families. -- .Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
Produktdetails
Politics, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain
David J. Appleby is Lecturer in Early Modern British History at the University of Nottingham Andrew Hopper is Professor of English Local History at the University of Leicester
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction David J. Appleby and Andrew Hopper Part I: Mortality 1 Battlefields, burials and the English Civil Wars Ian Atherton 2 Controlling disease in a civil-war garrison town: military discipline or civic duty? The surviving evidence for Newark upon Trent, 1642-46 Stuart B. Jennings Part II: Medical care 3 A new kind of surgery for a new kind of war: gunshot wounds and their treatment in the British Civil Wars Stephen M. Rutherford 4 'Stout Skippon hath a wound': the medical treatment of Parliament's infantry commander following the battle of Naseby Ismini Pells 5 'Dead hogges, dogges, cats and well flayed carryon horses': royalist hospital provision during the First Civil War Eric Gruber von Arni 6 Gerard's Herball and the treatment of war-wounds and contagion during the English Civil War Richard Jones Part III: The hidden human costs 7 The third army: wandering soldiers and the negotiation of parliamentary authority, 1642-51 David J. Appleby 8 'The deep staines these Wars will leave behind': psychological wounds and curative methods in the English Civil Wars Erin Peters 9 The administration of military welfare in Kent, 1642-79 Hannah Worthen 10 'To condole with me on the Commonwealth's loss': the widows and orphans of Parliament's military commanders Andrew Hopper 11 'So necessarie and charitable a worke': welfare, identity and Scottish prisoners of war in England, 1650-55 Chris R. Langley Conclusion David J. Appleby and Andrew Hopper Index
Introduction David J. Appleby and Andrew Hopper Part I: Mortality 1 Battlefields, burials and the English Civil Wars Ian Atherton 2 Controlling disease in a civil-war garrison town: military discipline or civic duty? The surviving evidence for Newark upon Trent, 1642-46 Stuart B. Jennings Part II: Medical care 3 A new kind of surgery for a new kind of war: gunshot wounds and their treatment in the British Civil Wars Stephen M. Rutherford 4 'Stout Skippon hath a wound': the medical treatment of Parliament's infantry commander following the battle of Naseby Ismini Pells 5 'Dead hogges, dogges, cats and well flayed carryon horses': royalist hospital provision during the First Civil War Eric Gruber von Arni 6 Gerard's Herball and the treatment of war-wounds and contagion during the English Civil War Richard Jones Part III: The hidden human costs 7 The third army: wandering soldiers and the negotiation of parliamentary authority, 1642-51 David J. Appleby 8 'The deep staines these Wars will leave behind': psychological wounds and curative methods in the English Civil Wars Erin Peters 9 The administration of military welfare in Kent, 1642-79 Hannah Worthen 10 'To condole with me on the Commonwealth's loss': the widows and orphans of Parliament's military commanders Andrew Hopper 11 'So necessarie and charitable a worke': welfare, identity and Scottish prisoners of war in England, 1650-55 Chris R. Langley Conclusion David J. Appleby and Andrew Hopper Index
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