Bibliography
Benjamin
Hazard s. xx–xxi
Works authored
comments: Reprinted in 2010
Contributions to journals
Contributions to edited collections or authored works
Hazard, Benjamin, “Early modern medical practitioners and military hospital systems in Flanders and the south-west of Ireland”, in: John Cunningham (ed.), Early Modern Ireland and the world of medicine: practitioners, collectors and contexts, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2019. 39–60.
abstract:
This chapter is concerned with the relationship between large-scale warfare and the establishment of military hospitals in Flanders and Ireland in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. It reflects on the work of Irish medics in the employment of Spain before focusing particular attention on the military hospital at Mechelen. The significance of the field hospital set up by the Spanish at Castlehaven on the southern coast of Ireland is also assessed.
abstract:
This chapter is concerned with the relationship between large-scale warfare and the establishment of military hospitals in Flanders and Ireland in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. It reflects on the work of Irish medics in the employment of Spain before focusing particular attention on the military hospital at Mechelen. The significance of the field hospital set up by the Spanish at Castlehaven on the southern coast of Ireland is also assessed.
Hazard, Benjamin, and Kenneth W. Nicholls, “Annales Dominicani de Roscoman”, CELT: Corpus of Electronic Texts, Online: University College Cork, 2012–. URL: <https://celt.ucc.ie/published/L100015A>.
Electronic publication (encoded in TEI XML) of a Latin text from a previously unpublished manuscript by Sir James Ware (London, Victoria and Albert Museum, Clements Collection, Irish MS R 23 drawer 5. ff. 45r–50r). The Latin text represents extracts made by Ware from an annalistic compilation of the Roscommon Dominican priory, which itself is based on earlier materials.
Electronic publication (encoded in TEI XML) of a Latin text from a previously unpublished manuscript by Sir James Ware (London, Victoria and Albert Museum, Clements Collection, Irish MS R 23 drawer 5. ff. 45r–50r). The Latin text represents extracts made by Ware from an annalistic compilation of the Roscommon Dominican priory, which itself is based on earlier materials.