Elma Brenner
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Introduction
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The Introduction explains the importance and originality of the volume, presenting examples of the key findings of the chapters. Through comparison with China, it argues that the response to leprosy in medieval Europe was distinguished by the emergence of specialised institutions that did not fully isolate sufferers from society. It addresses the question of when leprosy declined in Europe, and surveys the recent findings of ancient DNA analysis regarding the global distribution of leprosy. A detailed discussion of terminology is included, in terms of both the attention paid by the chapters to the medieval terms used to refer to leprosy and its sufferers, and the fact that the authors adopt different stances on whether to use the word ‘leper’, which closely follows the medieval terminology but denotes stigma today. This issue is complicated by the fact that some people who were described as ‘lepers’ in medieval Europe did not necessarily have leprosy. The Introduction considers the nuances of the individual and collective identities of leprosy sufferers, key themes in the volume. People with leprosy lived both within and outside leprosy hospitals, and they had a wide range of social and religious identities. The Introduction also explores how leprosy sufferers lived between the states of integration and segregation, and provides a detailed overview of the volume.

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Leprosy and identity in the Middle Ages

From England to the Mediterranean

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