Leather plague authentic doctor mask

$126.17
#SN.269198
Leather plague authentic doctor mask,

Made of 2 layers of 1 mm thick white leather blackened

Made.

Black/White
  • Eclipse/Grove
  • Chalk/Grove
  • Black/White
  • Magnet Fossil
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Product code: Leather plague authentic doctor mask

Made of 2 layers of 1 mm thick white leather blackened.

Made to order

This listing is only the mask
If you want to order the hat too, you can find it in the section Masks

A plague doctor was a medical physician who treated victims of the plague. 

They were specifically hired by towns that had many plague victims in times of epidemics. Since the city was paying their salary, they treated everyone: both the wealthy and the poor.

However, some plague doctors were known to charge patients and their families additional fees for special treatments and/or false cures. Typically they were not professionally trained nor experienced physicians or surgeons, but rather they were often either second-rate doctors unable to otherwise run a successful medical practice or young physicians seeking to establish themselves. These doctors rarely cured authentic their patients; rather, they served to record a count of the number of people contaminated for demographic purposes.



Plague doctors by their covenant treated plague patients and were known as municipal or "community plague doctors", whereas "general practitioners" were separate doctors and both might be in the same European city or town at the same time. In France and the Netherlands, plague doctors often lacked medical training and were referred to as "empirics". In one case, a plague doctor had been a fruit salesman before his employment as a physician.



In the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth centuries, some doctors wore a beak-like mask which was filled with aromatic items. The masks were designed to protect them from putrid air, which (according to the miasmatic theory of disease) was seen as the cause of infection. The design of these costumes has been attributed to Charles de Lorme, the chief physician to Louis XIII.

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