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Guy de Chauliac

 
Biography: Guy de Chauliac
 

The French surgeon Guy de Chauliac (ca. 1295-1368), also known as Guido de Cauliaco, was the most famous surgical writer of the Middle Ages. His major work remained the principal didactic text on surgery until the 18th century.

Guy de Chauliac was born, very likely, at Chauliac, a village near the southern border of Auvergne. He was probably of peasant stock. The little that is known of his childhood and early training stems from brief, but frequent, autobiographical comments in his writings.

Because Guy cited the views of one of his Toulousian teachers, he is believed to have begun his medical and surgical studies in that city. At the University of Montpellier, whose medical faculty was renowned throughout the medieval world, he fulfilled the requirements for the degree of master of medicine. Subsequently, that title accompanied his name in most official documents, even though he had previously taken holy orders.

Sometime after 1326 Chauliac attended the anatomical lectures of Nicolò Bertuccio, the student of and successor to the important medieval anatomist Mondino da Luzzi at the University of Bologna. The next trace of Chauliac is in Paris, where during the late 13th century great surgeons such as Lanfranc and Henri de Mondeville had taught and practiced. The courses that their followers offered may have piqued but did not hold Chauliac's interest, for unlike many students, he did not linger in Paris but seems to have drifted slowly southward, perhaps performing surgical procedures to earn his way.

After having practiced surgery in or near Lyons for a decade or more, Chauliac moved to Avignon, where he accepted the post of private physician to Pope Clement VI. The date of his appointment to his office can be fixed between the Pope's election in 1342 and the onset of the bubonic plague epidemic at Avignon in 1348, which Chauliac described as a resident physician in that city. He also served Clement's successors at Avignon, Innocent VI and Urban V. In 1363 Chauliac, who had become papal first physician, composed his most important work, The Inventory of Medicine, or as it is known in Latin, Chirurgia magna.

This book, though not the earliest medieval surgical text, is remarkable in several respects. It begins with a historical account of the development of medicine and incorporates Chauliac's evaluation of the medical sources available in the mid-14th century. He reveals that he prized the Galenic texts recently rendered from Greek to Latin but scorned John of Gaddesden's medical encyclopedia, Rosa Anglica.

Of more interest today, however, are the personal experiences that Chauliac sprinkled throughout his text. These findings, together with his efforts to reconcile them with authoritative statements, contributed to the enormous success of his book; the Chirurgia magna was translated into many languages and passed through innumerable editions and abridgments. Five years after completing it, probably during the month of July, in 1368, Chauliac died.

Further Reading

There is a chapter on Chauliac in Leo M. Zimmerman and Ilza Veith, Great Ideas in the History of Surgery (1961). See also Fielding H. Garrison, An Introduction to the History of Medicine (1913; 4th ed. 1929); Arturo Castiglioni, A History of Medicine (1927; 2d ed. 1947); and W. J. Bishop, The Early History of Surgery (1960).

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Columbia Encyclopedia: Guy de Chauliac
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Chauliac, Guy de (gē də shōlyäk') , c.1300–1368, French surgeon. At Avignon he was physician to Pope Clement VI and to two of his successors. His Chirurgia magna (1363) was used as a manual by physicians for three centuries.
 
Wikipedia: Guy de Chauliac
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Guy de Chauliac

Guy de Chauliac (c.1300 – 1368), born in Chaulhac, Lozère, Paris, France, was the most eminent of surgeons during the European Middle Ages. He was the physician for Pope Clement VI and two successors. In Avignon, France, where he spent most of his life, he attended to the Pope and survived an infection of the Black Plague. After the pandemic, he wrote the medical reference Chirurgia magna (1363). He died in Avignon, on July 25, 1368.

Medieval Frenchman Guy de Chauliac is known as one of the most influential surgeons of the fourteenth century. Born into a peasant-class family in 1290, he was guided in his studies by the lords of Mercoeur. One of the most scholarly individuals of his time, Chauliac studied medicine first at Toulouse, and concluded his education at Bologna. With direction from his master Nicolaus Bertrucius (Bertrucio) at Bologna, Chauliac's knowledge of anatomy excelled, his teacher's methods left such an impression on Chauliac that he often quoted him throughout his life. He left Bologna for Paris, then to Lyons where Chauliac was appointed canon (clergyman) of St. Just. Later appointments included canon of Rheims and of Mende. With Avignon being home of the Pope at this time, Chauliac became the private physician to several bishops,including: Clement VI (1342-1352); Innocent VI (1352-1362); and Urban V (1362-1370). As a valued part of the church, he was appointed as papal clerk of the Roman Catholic Church. Chauliac also became acquainted with the Italian lyric poet and scholar Francesco Petrarch while serving at Avignon.

Upon receiving his master's degree in medicine from Montpellier, a title equal to the M.D. of Bologna, Chauliac began to refer to himself in his works as "cyrurgicus magister in medicine." In 1363, he created what would be considered the medical standard on surgery until the seventeenth century with the Chirurgia magna (the actual name is Inventorium sive collectorium in parte chirurgiciali medicin.) Even after undergoing several editions and translations from Latin into Provencal, French, English, Italian, Dutch, and Hebrew, the seven parts of Chirurgia spanned three centuries as the guiding force in surgical medicine. Key information is found in the prologue ("Capitulumsingulare") with topics ranging from liberal arts, diet, surgical instruments, and the process of performing an operation. Chauliac also describes a briefhistory of medicine and surgery as it evolved through earlier physicians andsurgeons, in addition to personal information.

While Chauliac's book was highly regarded, no one admired it more than the author himself, he thought Chirurgia to be the best medical ideas of his time. In the book, he quotes 3,300 acknowledged writers and authors to reinforce his ideas. These include Galen, Hippocrates, Aristotle, Razi (Rhazes), Abul Kasim (Albucasis), Avicenna (Ibn Sina), Ibn Rushd (Averroës) in addition to references to his own colleagues such as Henri de Monteville.[1]

Great emphasis was placed on anatomy in the seven-volume text, and Chauliac indicates that a surgeon who was ignorant of anatomy carved the human body in the same way a blind man carved wood. In the section on anatomy (Tractatus I), Chauliac shows little understanding of this topic. While experienced at actual surgical procedures, this part of Chirurgia shows the limited amount of medical knowledge available to Chauliac and his peers at this time.

The plague epidemics of 1348 and 1360 are both described by Chauliac in the textbook, and he is the first to distinguish the difference between Bubonic Plague (also known as black death) and Pneumonic (a result of Bubonic that affects the lungs) plague. In addition to recording the prevalence of plague in Asia and Europe, Chauliac falsely blames the disease on the Jewish population. The plague is also recognized as being contagious, and Chauliac recommends the air to be purified, venesection (opening of a vein to remove blood), and having the sick maintain a healthy diet to combat the disease.

Chauliac's ideas on infection have caused continued controversy. According to the surgeon, wounds should not be permitted to heal as nature allows, but should be aggressively treated. His treatments included the use plasters. Chauliac also believed that pus from an infection was required in the healing process.

Three other works were written by Chauliac: Practica astrolabii (De astronomia), an essay on astrology; De ruptura, which describes a hernia; and De subtilianti diaeta, explaining cataracts and treatments for the patient.


Bibliography

  • Guigonis De Caulhiaco (Guy de Chaulliac), Inventarium Sive Chirurgia Magna, Michael R. McVaugh, Margrete S. Ogden (editors), Brill, 1997. ISBN 90-04-10784-3. Reviewed here: [1]
  • Guy de Chaulliac, Guy de Chauliac Biography (c. 1300-c. 1368), 2008. ISBN 90-04-10784-3. Reviewed here: [2]

References

  1. ^ http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/pagerender.fcgi?artid=1494004&pageindex=2#page

 
 

 

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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Guy de Chauliac" Read more