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The majority received no treatment as such, as it was still believed by many that "madness" was an affliction of the soul, rather than of the body or mind. However, attitudes were changing by this point, and so there was a little more understanding than, for instance, 50 years before.

The majority of those with severe mental illness (madness) were placed in work houses or prisons, with a select (often rich) few being committed to primitive "madhouses", the forerunners of asylums that would develop over the next two hundred years. As in the majority of human history, those suffering from more mild mental illness (depression, mild forms of schizophrenia, etc) where instead characterised as suffering from emotional problems - "melancholy", having "black moods", etc.

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15y ago

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