In the seventeenth century, smallpox reigned as the world's worst killer. Luck, more than anything else, decided who would live and who would die. That is, until Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, an English aristocrat, moved to Constantinople and noticed the Turkish practice of "ingrafting" or inoculation, which, she wrote, made "the small- pox...entirely harmless." Convinced by what she witnessed, she allowed her six-year-old son to be ingrafted, and the...
Related Subjects
Basic Sciences Biological Sciences Biology Biology & Life Sciences Clinical Education & Reference History Immunology Medical Medical Books Medicine & Health Sciences Obstetrics & Gynecology Pathology Reference Science Science & Math Science & Scientists Science & Technology Special Topics Textbooks