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In the 17th Century, fevers were the main concern of physicians, who believed that nature had a natural way of responding to any disease by eliminating offensive matter in the body.

A major new narrative history series exploring over 2,000 years of western medicine, written and presented by medical historian Andrew Cunningham.

7/30. Fever

In the 17th Century, fevers were the main concern of physicians, who believed that nature had a natural way of responding to any disease by eliminating the offensive matter in the body.

But it was through the pioneering work of 'The English Hippocrates', physician Thomas Sydenham, who rejected all current theory, that gave us some of the first accounts of the symptoms and the fevered course of each epidemic disease. Trial and error would lead to some impressive cures.

The readers are David Rintoul, Peter Capaldi, Jason Watkins and Scott Handy.

Available now

15 minutes

Last on

Tue 13 Feb 2007 15:45

Broadcast

  • Tue 13 Feb 2007 15:45