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Renaissance medicine wasn’t ignorant—its cures were stranger and smarter than you think.
Step back into a world of blood, bones, bile, and groundbreaking innovation as Dr Alanna Skuse dismantles the biggest myths about Renaissance medicine. From battlefield surgeries and prosthetics, to midwives, quacks, toads, and the four humours, this episode reveals a medical world far more logical, experimental, and effective than popular history suggests.
Discover why Renaissance surgeons weren’t reckless, why quacks sometimes worked wonders, and why patients were far from naïve. Packed with bizarre cures, pioneering breakthroughs, and the surprising origins of modern treatments, this is the ultimate guide to the misunderstood world of 16th and 17th-century healing.
Whether you're into medical history, social history, early modern England, quackery, midwifery, apothecaries, or surgical innovation, this episode of History Rage delivers deep insight, dark humour, and a fresh perspective.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode
About Our Guest: Dr Alanna Skuse
Dr Alanna Skuse is a literary scholar, medical historian, and author specialising in early modern disease, surgery, and the cultural history of the body. Her latest trade book uncovers the real experience of staying alive in Renaissance England.
📚 Buy Her Book
The Surgeon, the Midwife, the Quack: How to Stay Alive in Renaissance England
👉 https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781836430773
📨 Contact / Follow Dr Alanna Skuse
Website: https://www.dralannaskuse.co.uk/
Twitter / X: @alanna_skuse
Instagram: @historian_alanna
Explore More Medical History Episodes
If this episode left you hungry for more medical history:
Follow & Support History Rage
🎙 Follow History Rage:
Twitter/X: @HistoryRage
Instagram: @historyragepod
💥 Support the Show & Get Bonus Content
❤️ Best way to help?
Tell a friend about the podcast and get them raging too.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Paul Bavill4.9
3131 ratings
Renaissance medicine wasn’t ignorant—its cures were stranger and smarter than you think.
Step back into a world of blood, bones, bile, and groundbreaking innovation as Dr Alanna Skuse dismantles the biggest myths about Renaissance medicine. From battlefield surgeries and prosthetics, to midwives, quacks, toads, and the four humours, this episode reveals a medical world far more logical, experimental, and effective than popular history suggests.
Discover why Renaissance surgeons weren’t reckless, why quacks sometimes worked wonders, and why patients were far from naïve. Packed with bizarre cures, pioneering breakthroughs, and the surprising origins of modern treatments, this is the ultimate guide to the misunderstood world of 16th and 17th-century healing.
Whether you're into medical history, social history, early modern England, quackery, midwifery, apothecaries, or surgical innovation, this episode of History Rage delivers deep insight, dark humour, and a fresh perspective.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode
About Our Guest: Dr Alanna Skuse
Dr Alanna Skuse is a literary scholar, medical historian, and author specialising in early modern disease, surgery, and the cultural history of the body. Her latest trade book uncovers the real experience of staying alive in Renaissance England.
📚 Buy Her Book
The Surgeon, the Midwife, the Quack: How to Stay Alive in Renaissance England
👉 https://uk.bookshop.org/a/10120/9781836430773
📨 Contact / Follow Dr Alanna Skuse
Website: https://www.dralannaskuse.co.uk/
Twitter / X: @alanna_skuse
Instagram: @historian_alanna
Explore More Medical History Episodes
If this episode left you hungry for more medical history:
Follow & Support History Rage
🎙 Follow History Rage:
Twitter/X: @HistoryRage
Instagram: @historyragepod
💥 Support the Show & Get Bonus Content
❤️ Best way to help?
Tell a friend about the podcast and get them raging too.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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