The Industrial Revolution Flashcards
c1700 - 1900
What was the supernatural belief like in the 1700 - 1800s?
people used religious belief less to explain events even though religion was still very strong in people’s lives
What was the theory of spontaneous generation?
“animalcules” were the product of decay and so if something was to be left to decay, these animalcules would spontaneously generate onto it
When was the enlightenment?
throughout the 1700s
What was the importance of the enlightenment?
it became fashionable to seek answers to questions about the world and rational explanation became the standard
What was the importance of the Scientific Revolution?
New scientific theories finally began to replace old ones
What was the importance of the growth of towns and cities?
new cities and towns were not well planned meaning that diseases like TB and smallpox were big threats to the working class
Which theory of causing disease was brought forward from the Renaissance
Miasma (becoming less popular)
the links between seeds in the air and animalcules (becoming more popular)
What new theory on the cause of disease was developed in the early 18th century?
Spontaneous Generation as an alternative to the four humours
What were the 4 conclusions of germ theory?
- the air contains living microbes
- microbes in the air cause decay
- microbes are not evenly distributed in the air
- microbes can be killed by heating them
What did Robert Koch discover?
Specific germs that cause specific diseases
What did John Tyndall theorise in 1870?
that disease could be spread through dust particles
When was the tuberculosis germ discovered?
1882
When was the cholera germ discovered?
1883
When was the link between cholera and water proved?
1854 by John Snow
What event in 1915 helped germ theory spread?
Dr Bastien, a well respected doctor who encouraged belief in spontaneous generation, died
When was the first vaccination?
1796 for smallpox
What cures were consistently being used in the industrial period?
herbal remedies because successful cures were not developed until the 20th century
When was the Royal Jennerian Society set up and what did it do?
1803 and it promoted and facilitated vaccinations
When was the smallpox vaccine made compulsory?
1852
When did the British government begin to enforce compulsory vaccinations?
1853
What vaccination did Pasteur discover and what was the importance of this?
A chicken cholera vaccination by producing a weakened strain of the germ
People started to understand how to make other vaccinations
When was John Snow’s work on Cholera?
1854
When did Florence Nightingale begin improving hospitals?
1853
When was inoculation introduced?
1796
What did uneducated people say about Jenner’s vaccination originally?
it would turn them into cows
How did Jenner make the link between smallpox and cowpox?
he noticed that the dairy maids he treated for cowpox never caught smallpox