Blood & Bandages
BLOOD & BANDAGES : ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
Barbers were not just hairdressers.
Being skilled in using sharp instruments, they
were often employed to carry out minor surgery. A common remedy for a wide
range of illnesses was to be, ‘bled’. Taking a significant amount of blood by
cutting into a vein would have been a risky business (no antibiotics in those
days, and cutting deeply is always risky), but at least a barber had experience of working with sharp instruments and was trusted (!) to know where and how
deeply to cut. How many people were cured – and how many were further harmed –
by bleeding is another matter.
We don’t know if Crediton had any physicians (forerunners of today's GPs) in 1743 –
but we do know that one property on the map belonged to, ‘Dr. Hooker’. There is
nothing to indicate if he was a medical doctor.
In 1745 – just two years after this map was made – surgery
and dentistry were established as separate professions regulated by the London College of Surgeons.
More information about barbers and
barber-surgeons can be found at:
https://dralun.wordpress.com/2018/03/09/barbers-and-advertising-in-the-18th-century/
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