François Cureau de La Chambre

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François Cureau de La Chambre (19 July 1630 in Le Mans - 22 March 1680 in Versailles) was a French physician during the reign of Louis XIV.

Biography[edit]

François was the eldest son of Marin Cureau de la Chambre (1594-1669). He obtained his medical degree at the University of Paris on 3 August 1656.[1]

He was physician of Chancellor Pierre Séguier and his family. He accompanied Armand de Camboust, duc de Coislin and the Abbé de Coislin on the court's trip to the Midi in 1659 and 1660.[2]

In 1660 he was appointed physician to Queen Maria Theresa and the children of France.[3][4]

In 1665, he was ordinary physician to King Louis XIV,[5] then on 31 July 1671, after the death of his father, who held this position, and on Antoine Vallot's presentation, the King appointed him as a demonstrator operator of the interior of plants[note 1] of the Botanical Garden (Jardin des Plantes) with a salary of 1500 livres a year.[6] He thus became professor of anatomy and surgery but delegated anatomy to Pierre Cressé and surgery to Pierre Dionis.[7]

François Cureau de La Chambre was ordinary doctor of the Bâtiments du Roi "to take care of all the officers servants and employees of the State" and doctor "to serve with the Admiral of France".[3]

He died at the court of Versailles on 22 March 1680 and was buried at Saint-Eustache.[8]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ "Démonstrateur opérateur pour l’intérieur des plantes": the composition of the medicines was associated with the "interior of the plants".

References[edit]

  1. ^ Lévy-Valensi, Joseph (1933). La médecine et les médecins français au XVIIIe siècle (in French). Paris: J.B. Baillière.
  2. ^ Kerviler, René (1874). Le chancelier Pierre Séguier second protecteur de l'Académie française. Études sur sa vie privée, politique et littéraire et sur le groupe académique de ses familiers et commensaux (in French). Didier. p. 453.
  3. ^ a b L'Anthropologie (in French). Masson. 1894. p. 270.
  4. ^ Ganeau, Étienne; Plaignard, François (1731). Memoires pour L'Histoire des Sciences et des Beaux Arts (in French). de l'Imprimerie de S. A. S. p. 1445.
  5. ^ Hazon, Jacques Albert; Bertrand, Thomas Bernard (1778). Notice des hommes les plus célèbres de la Faculté de Médecine en l'Université de Paris, depuis 1110, jusqu'en 1750 (inclusivement) (in French). chez Benoît Morin. p. 135.
  6. ^ Muséum national d'histoire naturelle (France) (1893). Archives (in French). p. 28.
  7. ^ Dureau, Alexis, Congrès international de médecine (2016-02-22). Paris-médical: Assistance et enseignement (in French). Ligaran. ISBN 978-2-335-15566-2.
  8. ^ Jaussaud, Philippe; Brygoo, Édouard-Raoul (2019-10-24). Du Jardin au Muséum en 516 biographies (in French). Publications scientifiques du Muséum. p. 179. ISBN 978-2-85653-853-1.