Anton Erkoreka Explained

Anton Erkoreka (1950, Biscaya, Basque Country) is a Basque historian of medicine and an ethnographer.[1] He is director of the Basque Museum of the History of Medicine and Science, located at the University of the Basque Country.[2] His areas of specialization include the history of diseases, in particular the Spanish flu pandemic,[3] folk medicine, such as the evil eye[4] and the study of human populations.

Works

Notes and References

  1. Book: 2003 . La religiosidad popular: Hermandades, romerías y santuarios (III). León Carlos Alvarez Santaló, María Jesús Buxó Rey, Salvador Rodríguez Becerra (coord) . Anthropos Editorial . 84-7658-662-0.
  2. Book: 1988 . Euskal antropologoak, etnologoak eta etnografoak gaur . Donostia . Kriselu . 84-7728-105-X.
  3. 81–9 . 10.1111/j.1750-2659.2009.00125.x . The Spanish influenza pandemic in occidental Europe (1918-1920) and victim age . 2010 . Erkoreka . Anton . Influenza and Other Respiratory Viruses . 4 . 2 . 20167048. 5779284 .
  4. Book: Willem . de Blécourt . Owen . Davies . Witchcraft continued: popular magic in modern Europe . 2004 . 149 . 978-0-7190-6658-0 . footnote 67 . https://books.google.com/books?id=B1BmSW_Z1oEC&pg=PA149 . In addition to the rich material provided by Lisón in Brujería, numerous studies have been carried out that are collected in the biographical references of the work by Antón Erkoreka, Begizkoa. Mal de ojo (Bilbao, 1995), pp. 38, 153–67..