
audiobook
by John Ayrton Paris, J. S. M. (John Samuel Martin) Fonblanque
This volume brings together a leading physician and a seasoned barrister to map the relationship between medicine and law in Victorian Britain. It first examines the authority and duties of medical bodies—physicians, surgeons, apothecaries—and the legal obligations that accompany their practice, including public health, quarantine, and the handling of the dead. The authors blend scientific observation with statutory interpretation, offering clear guidance on how contagion and epidemic control were understood in the courts.
The book also explores medical evidence in personal law, covering marriage, divorce, and the legitimacy of children. It discusses physiological causes of impotence and sterility, the legal status of hermaphrodites, and criteria for determining recent childbirth and permissible interventions such as Caesarean sections. Additional sections assess mental illness, identify feigned diseases, and consider environmental nuisances that affect public health. Its systematic, case‑by‑case approach makes it a useful reference for historians, legal scholars, and medical professionals.
Language
en
Duration
~15 hours (919K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Sonya Schermann and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2020-09-19
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1785–1856
A physician, medical writer, and lively popularizer of science, he is best remembered for making chemistry feel accessible to everyday readers. His most famous book, Philosophy in Sport Made Science in Earnest, helped turn scientific ideas into entertaining family reading.
View all books1787–1865
A 19th-century English barrister and legal writer, he is best remembered for helping shape early forensic and medical-law literature. His work on medical jurisprudence became a notable reference in its day and reflects the growing overlap between medicine and the courts.
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