Sabine Jesner
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Habsburg border quarantines until 1837
An epidemiological 'iron curtain'?
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Sanitary innovations implemented during the eighteenth century made it possible for the Viennese court to expel bubonic plague outbreaks from the Habsburg Empire. The foundation for this development was laid through the establishment of an effective sanitary cordon at the south-eastern margins of the Habsburg Monarchy. The Habsburg Military Border, which was initially installed to protect the Monarchy from Ottoman invasions during the sixteenth century, expanded its preventive role through a sanitary function. Consequently, the most important element of these sanitary innovations was the establishment of specific quarantine facilities as permanent institutions in the Habsburg Military Border. Contemporaneously known as ‘Contumaz’, these facilities became the focal point of medical control. Border closures and mandatory quarantine became the predominant instruments used by the Viennese court to contain the plague. This chapter provides insights into the nexus of human movement and plague prevention at the external border of the Habsburg composite state. The method of quarantine is investigated by contextualizing the quarantine procedure in practice, the contemporaneous medical views and the perception of quarantine. Examining the functioning of quarantine as a tool to control epidemics in an early modern setting contributes to the research on the historical development of medicalized borders.

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Medicalising borders

Selection, containment and quarantine since 1800

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