Matt Crawford, Kent State University
University of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia, PA)
Pharmacopoeias - texts that provide information on medicinal substances and how to prepare them for therapeutic use - have been a persistent genre of medical writing since the fifteenth century. Yet, they have been underused by historians of pharmacy and medicine relative to other types of medical texts and sources. This presentation explores some of the possibilities and pitfalls of pharmacopoeias as historical sources. In particular, it will present some preliminary results of research on the timing and speed of changes in the materiality of pharmaceutical therapeutics using European pharmacopeias from the seventeenth to nineteenth century. The results are part of a larger project that seeks to provide new insight into an important revolution in the pharmaceutical therapeutics of Western medicine: the transition from predominantly botanical medicaments to predominantly chemical drugs