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Women in Medicine across Empires: A Historical Study of Female Medical Practitioners in Iran and the Ottoman World | ||
| Journal of Research on History of Medicine | ||
| دوره 14، Suppl. 1، دی 2025، صفحه 117-120 اصل مقاله (867.33 K) | ||
| نوع مقاله: Conference Paper | ||
| شناسه دیجیتال (DOI): 10.30476/rhm.2025.51273 | ||
| نویسندگان | ||
| Zahra Taheri-Kharameh1؛ Jamile Khoshsourat* 2؛ Maryam Mohseni Seifabadi3 | ||
| 1Associate Professor, Qom University of Medical Sciences, Qom, Iran | ||
| 2Student research committee, school health and religion, Qom University of Medical Sciences, Qom, Iran | ||
| 3Department of History of Medicine, School of Persian Medicine, Tehran University of Medical Sciences, Tehran, Iran | ||
| چکیده | ||
| This study provides a comparative historical analysis of female medical practitioners in the Ottoman Empire and Iran from the early modern period to the nineteenth century. Utilizing a historical-comparative methodology, it examines primary and secondary sources to reveal a significant divergence in women’s professional opportunities. The findings indicate that Ottoman women achieved notable integration as physicians, surgeons, and midwives, supported by formal training and institutional legitimization. In contrast, women in Qajar Iran were predominantly confined to informal roles as midwives and healers, their advancement constrained by stricter sociopolitical structures. The study concludes that women’s participation in Islamic medicine was profoundly shaped by distinct imperial policies and religious interpretations, challenging homogenized understandings of gender roles in premodern medical history. | ||
| کلیدواژهها | ||
| Women in Medicine؛ Ottoman Empire؛ Iran؛ Gender History؛ Islamic Medicine؛ Midwifery | ||
| مراجع | ||
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آمار تعداد مشاهده مقاله: 477 تعداد دریافت فایل اصل مقاله: 359 |
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