Public Health= the health and well-being of the population as a whole
Slide 2
Towns and Cities
People lived close together, making it easy for diseases to spread
Clean water was in short supply as people put their waste in the same streams and rivers they drank from
Butchers killed animals in the towns and cities and did not know how to clean the waste
There were no bins or rubbish collectors to remove the waste from the streets
Cesspits were built next to wells, allowing one to contaminate the other
Cesspits were emptied infrequently
Animals created waste on the streets
There were no sewers
Household waste was chucked into the streets and left to rot
Shopkeepers tried to sell rotten food
People were always unclean due to the lack of clean water
Slide 3
Monasteries
often situated in isolated places, near rivers
monasteries had pipes to deliver clean water to wash basins
filtering systems cleaned water
monasteries were rich due to donations in exchange for prayers
they had toilets
monks had religious routines of cleanliness
monks were educated and disciplined
they had access to medical books
they had infirmaries
Slide 4
Practice Question
Compare public health in a medieval town to a medieval monastery.
In what ways were they different?
Refer to both.
[8 marks]