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Born into wealth and nobility (daughter of the 1st Duke of Kingston), Lady Mary was given a minimal education by her parents. Whatever learning she eventually posessed, she acquired by her own efforts. She read many of the works in her parents' libraries and she learned Latin by secretly studying a Latin dictionary. In her day, the parents of the bride and groom choose their children's spouses based on social position and wealth (his inheritance for the groom, her dowry for the bride). As was typical, her parents choose the man she was to marry, made the financial arrangements for the new couple, and drew up a marriage contract for her. Dissatisfied with this arrangement (so dissatisfied, in fact, that she would eventually write "On the Mischief of Giving Fortunes with Women in Marriage" (Miscellanea, published by Curll in 1726) and "in love" with another man, in 1712 Lady Mary eloped to become the wife of the extremely wealthy Edward Wortley Montagu. Their marriage was not a happy one, even the birth of their son in May 1713 could not bring them together.
In 1714, Queen Anne died, bringing the Elector of Hanover to the throne. Her husband, a politician, was rewarded by being appointed Ambassador to Turkey and the young couple set off for the exotic Turkish lands. A perceptive spectator, an adventurous tourist, and a fascinated amateur ethnographer, Lady Mary immersed herself in all things Turkish, even learning the language. She visited the zenanas, meeting the upper class women secluded there, and learning Turkish customs. Her record of her travels, Turkish Embassy Letters, are still considered among the finest specimens of the epistolary genre.
Upon returning home to England, Lady Mary introduced into England the Turkish practice of inoculating healthy children with a weakened strain of smallpox to confer immunity from the more virulent strains of the disease. The dreaded smallpox, which left Lady Mary herself scarred from her 1715 bout with the disease and which killed her brother, often killed its victims or left them scarred or deformed for life. Upon learning of the Turkish practice, Lady Mary immediately had her son inoculated. After returning home to England, she introduced the custom to the nobility by having her daughter inoculated, too. Edward Jenner (1749-1823) would eventually be given credit for the smallpox vaccine, but it was really Lady Mary who pioneered the approach in western Europe and made it acceptable to the influential, the rich and the powerful. Eventually, the practice of inoculation would filter down to the middle and working classes and would be extended to inoculation against a variety of infectious diseases..
As time passed, more and more people were vaccinated against smallpox, until in 1979, the UN World Health Organization declared that smallpox, that perennial killer, had been eradicated throughout the world. Following in the footsteps pioneered by the health professionals fighting smallpox, vaccines for a host of deadly and deforming diseases including mumps, measles, rubella, diphtheria, tetanus, and polio were developed and distributed making so many of the infectious diseases which were early childhood killers a thing of the past, at least in the developed and developing world. Millions, possibly hundreds of millions, of people owe their lives or their health or the lifes or health of someone close to them to Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.
References
Modern History Sourcebook: Lady Mary Wortley Montagu (1689-1762): Smallpox Vaccination in Turkey
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and Malcolm Jack (ed.), Turkish Embassy Letters, U. of Georgia Press, 1993
Cynthia Lowenthal, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and the Eighteenth-Century Familiar Letter, U. of Georgia Press, 1994
"Jenner, Edward," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1994 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1994 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation.
"Montagu, Lady Mary Wortley," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1994 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1994 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation.
"Smallpox," Microsoft (R) Encarta. Copyright (c) 1994 Microsoft Corporation. Copyright (c) 1994 Funk & Wagnall's Corporation.
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last updated February 2001