Jo Willett tells the story of Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, who pioneered smallpox inoculation almost a century before Edward Jenner
Mary Wortley Montagu is one of the most important figures in the battle to combat smallpox, so why is this 18th-century aristocrat so little-known today? Jo Willett, author of The Pioneering Life of Mary Wortley Montagu, shares the story of a fiercely independent scientist, feminist and woman of letters who changed the course of medical history.
(Ad) Jo Willett is the author of The Pioneering Life of Mary Wortley Montagu: Scientist and Feminist (Pen & Sword, 2021). Buy it now from Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Pioneering-Life-Mary-Wortley-Montagu/dp/1526779382/?tag=bbchistory045-21&ascsubtag=historyextra-social-hexpod/
See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Lord Byron: life of the week
Horrible Histories: 15 years of death, poo and talking rats
Medieval medicine: everything you wanted to know
Death & hubris in west Africa: how two British expeditions met with disaster
Conspiracy Revisited: The JFK assassination – Oswald’s second murder
Clotilda: the last slave ship to America
History behind the headlines: the Bengal famine
Spying in the Troubles: the murky world of double agents in Northern Ireland
Welsh mythology: everything you wanted to know
Tying the knot: 500 years of wedded bliss and marital misery
Conspiracy Revisited: The JFK assassination – 95 per cent certain?
The British empire's divisive legacy
Saladin: life of the week
Back in the USSR: the Soviet Sixties
Anglo-Saxon kingdoms: everything you wanted to know
Dinosaurs: a Victorian obsession
Tiger Tamer | 6. battling against Bovril
How was Elizabeth I shaped by her childhood?
Joan of Arc: life of the week
Leftovers: how our ancestors battled food waste
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
Dan Snow’s History Hit
Gone Medieval
History Unplugged Podcast
History Daily
Not Just the Tudors