Battle-scarred: Mortality, medical care and military welfare in the British Civil Wars
David Appleby and Andrew Hopper
Abstract
Historians of the British Civil Wars are increasingly taking notice of these bloody conflicts as a critical event in the welfare history of Europe. This volume will examine the human costs of the conflict and the ways in which they left lasting physical and mental scars after the cessation of armed hostilities. Its essays examine the effectiveness of medical care and the capacity of the British peoples to endure these traumatic events. During these wars, the Long Parliament’s concern for the ‘commonweal’ led to centralised care for those who had suffered ‘in the State’s service’, including imp ... More
Historians of the British Civil Wars are increasingly taking notice of these bloody conflicts as a critical event in the welfare history of Europe. This volume will examine the human costs of the conflict and the ways in which they left lasting physical and mental scars after the cessation of armed hostilities. Its essays examine the effectiveness of medical care and the capacity of the British peoples to endure these traumatic events. During these wars, the Long Parliament’s concern for the ‘commonweal’ led to centralised care for those who had suffered ‘in the State’s service’, including improved medical treatment, permanent military hospitals, and a national pension scheme, that for the first time included widows and orphans. This signified a novel acceptance of the State’s duty of care to its servicemen and their families. These essays explore these developments from a variety of new angles, drawing upon the insights shared at the inaugural conference of the National Civil War Centre in August 2015. This book reaches out to new audiences for military history, broadening its remit and extending its methodological reach.
Keywords:
soldiers,
widows,
surgery,
wounds,
medicine,
disease,
burial,
welfare
Bibliographic Information
Print publication date: 2018 |
Print ISBN-13: 9781526124807 |
Published to Manchester Scholarship Online: January 2019 |
DOI:10.7228/manchester/9781526124807.001.0001 |
Authors
Affiliations are at time of print publication.
David Appleby, editor
Lecturer in Early Modern British History at the University of Nottingham
Andrew Hopper, editor
Associate Professor in English Local History at the University of Leicester
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