CHARLATAN, or CHARLETAN, signifies an empiric or quack, who retails his medicines on a public stage, and draws people about him with his buffooneries, feats of activity, &c. The word, according to Calepine, comes from the Italian, ceretano; of Caretum, a town near Spoleto in Italy, where these impostors are said to have first risen. Menage derives it from carlatano, and that from circulatorius, of circulator, a quack.
4th ed. (1810) · vol. 5 · p. 402CHARLEMAGNE ›
CHARLATAN
article · 421 chars · lineage ↗ · page image at NLS ↗