History of Psychiatry Podcast Series

5. Religious lunacy. Dionys Fitzherbert (1610)

07.25.2017 - By Professor Rab HoustonPlay

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Alexander Cruden, the author of last week’s document, wholly disowned the label of madness. Dionys Fitzherbert also refused to be called insane, arguing in a lengthy account that she was simply experiencing religious turmoil, as did many of the more radical or ‘Puritan’ Protestants of post-Reformation England; she interpreted her experience as a spiritual battle for her soul. A gentlewoman from a privileged background, she (like Hannah Allen) was cared from in domestic settings using medical, spiritual, and psychological methods. In her narrative, physical, mental, and spiritual health were entwined and inseparable: truly holistic.

IMAGE: PORTRAIT OF AN UNKNOWN LADY, of the English School 1660-1670 at Lyme Park, Stockport, Cheshire. Credit: Universal Images Group, Rights Managed / For Education Use Only

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