Date
-

Professor Linda Voigts, “The Sweating Sickness [Sudor Anglicus]: Mortality and Possibility of Recovery”

Abstract:
Sweating Sickness occurred in England in intermittent epidemics from 1485 well into the sixteenth century. It was a viral disease, not to be confused with the bacillary plague, Yersinia pestis. Mortality from the Sweat was significant, especially among wealthy upper-class young adult males. The 1502 death of Prince Arthur, regnal heir to Henry VII, was likely from Sudor Anglicus. The disease did not provide immunity against subsequent outbreaks. Therapy involving isolation and bed rest came to be understood as efficacious and was utilized in the treatment of prominent patients. Treatises on efficacious therapy for the disease were written by Thomas Forestier, by the 2nd Duchess of Norfolk, and-- most important--by the English physician John Caius (1510-1573). These texts are discussed in this session, from the extant manuscript version of Forestier’s advice to Caius’s printed work.

Biography:
Linda Ehrsam Voigts is Curators' Professor Emerita in the Department of English at the University of Missouri-Kansas City. Her numerous publications and contributions to scholarship include “The Master of the King’s Stillatories,” in The Lancastrian Court: Proceedings of the 13th Harlaxton Symposium, ed. Jenny Stratford (Donington: Shaun Tyas, 2003), “The Declaracions of Richard of Wallingford: A Case Study of a Middle English Astrological Treatise,” in Medical and Scientific Writing in Late Medieval English, ed. Irma Taavitsainen and Päivi Pahta (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004), “Medicine for a Great Household (ca. 1500): Berkeley Castle Muniments Select Book 89” with Ann Payne (Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History, 3rd Series, Vol. 12 (2016), and  Scientific and Medical Writings in Old and Middle English: An Electronic Reference, with Patricia Deery Kurtz (CD database of information on more than 8,000 texts (University of Michigan Press, 2000); 2005 edition accessible at National Library of Medicine. Updated on-line at the University of Missouri-Kansas City). She is a Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America and Subject Editor, Medicine for the Oxford Dictionary of the Middle Ages.