Difference between revisions of "Foundation of Faculty of Medicine, 1726"

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The Faculty of [[Medicine]] of Edinburgh University was founded in 1726.  
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The Faculty of [[Medicine]] was founded in 1726, laying the foundation for Edinburgh University's international reputation as a centre of medical teaching and research.  
  
In February 1726, four Edinburgh doctors [[John Rutherford (1695–1779)]], [[Andrew Sinclair (c1698-1760)]], [[Andrew Plummer (1697-1756)]], and [[John Innes (1696-1733)]] presented a petition to the Town Council, requesting that they 'institute the Profession of Medicine' at Edinburgh University and appoint the petitioners to teach the subject. The Town Council replied that such a step would be of great advantage to the university, city, and country. They therefore appointed Sinclair and Rutherford as Professors of the Theory and Practice of Medicine and Plummer and Innes as Professors of Medicine Chemistry. They were granted full power not only to teach medicine 'in all its branches' but to examine and confer degrees upon students. The appointments
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On 9 February 1726, four Edinburgh doctors [[John Rutherford (1695–1779)]], [[Andrew Sinclair (c1698-1760)]], [[Andrew Plummer (1697-1756)]], and [[John Innes (1696-1733)]] presented a petition to the [[Town Council]], requesting that they 'institute the Profession of Medicine' at Edinburgh University and appoint the petitioners to teach the subject. The Town Council acceded to their request, replying that such a step would be of great advantage to the university, city, and country. They therefore appointed Sinclair and Rutherford as Professors of the Theory and Practice of Medicine and Plummer and Innes as Professors of Medicine and Chemistry. They were granted full power not only to teach medicine 'in all its branches' but to examine students and confer degrees in medicine.
  
charter
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The four doctors knew that their petition was likely to find friendly ears. The Lord Provost of Edinburgh, [[George Drummond (1688-1766)]], had long worked in partnership with John Monro (d. 1740), Deacon of the Incorporation of Surgeons, to create a medical school in the city. The first step had been the appointment of Monro's son [[Alexander Monro ''primus'' (1697-1767)]] to the newly created Chair of [[Anatomy]] in 1720. In October 1726, a meeting of the [[Senatus Academicus]] formally recognized the Chair of Anatomy and the four newly created chairs as constituting a Faculty of Medicine.
  
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John Rutherford and John Innes essentially lectured on the Practice of Physic and Andrew Sinclair on the Institutes of Theory of Medicine. Andrew Plummer appears to have taken over the teaching of [[Chemistry]] from [[James Crawford (1682-1731)]] who had been appointed to the [[Creation of Chair of Chemistry, 1713|newly created]] Chair of Chemistry in 1713. Crawford had divided his time between the Chairs of Chemistry and [[Hebrew]] since 1719 but from now on taught Hebrew alone.
  
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At the time of the Foundation of the Faculty, Edinburgh University had employed a Professor of [[Botany]] since 1695. This Chair, however, was not amalgamated with the Faculty of Medicine until the appointment of [[Charles Alston (1683-1760)]] in 1738.
  
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== Sources ==
  
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*[[Alexander Bower (fl. 1804-1830)|Alexander Bower]], ''The History of the University of Edinburgh''. 3 vols. Edinburgh, 1817-1830.
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*[[Sir Alexander Grant]], ''The Story of the University of Edinburgh during its First Three Hundred Years'', 2 vols (London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1884)
  
  
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[[Category:Events|Foundation of the Faculty of Medicine, 1726]][[Category:Incomplete|Foundation of the Faculty of Medicine, 1726]]
examine candidates, and to do every other thing
 
requisite and necessary to the graduation of doctors
 
of medicine." They conferred these appointments
 
ad vitam aut culpam ; but they were to be unaccom-
 
panied by any salary out of the City's revenues.
 
 
 
This Act of 1726 not only established the
 
Medical Faculty of the University by creating four
 
Professorships in Medicine, in addition to the Chair
 
of Anatomy already existing, but it also for the first
 
time recognised on the part of the Town Council
 
 
 
1 Craufurd, who in 17 13 had been appointed " Professor of Chemis-
 
try in the University of Edinburgh," must now have either deceased,
 
or else have voluntarily discontinued his occasional courses of lectures
 
(see above, p. 297).
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
314 THE STORY OF THE UNIVERSITY. [1726.
 
 
 
the right of the Principal and Professors to " deliber-
 
ate and vote on the affairs of general concern to the
 
College.' ' Of course the practice of so deliberating
 
and voting had long existed, but it had never been
 
recognised, and on one occasion, at least, the right
 
had been formally denied (see above, pp. 240-246).
 
But now the Council, being in a more reasonable
 
frame of mind, recognised the practice, and proceeded
 
to regulate it by ordaining that of the four new
 
Professors '• two only 1 shall at one time have the
 
privilege of voting with the other Professors in
 
College affairs." They were to enjoy this privilege
 
in alternate years ; first, one Professor of the Theory
 
and Practice of Medicine, and one Professor of
 
Medicine and Chemistry were to be privileged for
 
a year to deliberate and vote, and then for the next
 
year they were to be disfranchised, and the other
 
pair were to come in. The term " Senatus Academi-
 
cus " is never used in the Act, but the existence of
 
such a body is clearly implied by its provisions.
 
And, as if acting on the encouragement which they had
 
received, the Principal and Professors met in the sub-
 
sequent October as a Senatus Academicus, and having
 
recognised the five Medical Professors as a Medical
 
Faculty, entered them as such in their minutes.
 
 
 
The Town Council had not exactly defined the
 
provinces of the four Professors whom they
 
appointed ; it appears, however, that while Dr.
 
 
 
1 The reason for limiting the new Medical votes in the College
 
Councils is not known. Perhaps the Arts Professors may have made
 
a representation on the subject. The restriction was removed by an
 
Act of the Town Council on the 26th February 1729.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
r
 
 
 
1726.] CHAIR OF MIDWIFERY FOUNDED. .'31$
 
 
 
Plummer lectured on Chemistry, or rather Chemi-
 
cal Pharmacy, Dr. Innes ignored the term " Chem-
 
istry" in his commission, and simply taught the
 
Practice of Physic conjointly with Dr. Rutherford,
 
who lectured on Boerhaave's Aphorismi de Cogno-
 
scendis et Curandis Morbis. Dr. Sinclair, who had
 
chosen the Institutes of Theory of Medicine as his
 
province, took the Instttuttones Medicce of the same
 
author for his text-book. There was no longer any
 
dilettanteAsvcL about the Medical Professorships in
 
the College; systematic courses were henceforth
 
delivered, though for a time there was a want of
 
originality about them, as they were entirely a re-
 
production of the system of Boerhaave. 1
 
 
 
On the same day (9thJFebruary 1726) on which
 
the Town Council added four new Professors to the
 
staff of the College they also proceeded to appoint
 
a Professor of Midwifery, not, however, for the
 
College, but for the City. It was hardly contem-
 
plated in those days that Medical Students should go
 
through a course of obstetrics, the whole practice
 
and profession of which was then left to females.
 
But one Mr. Joseph Gibson, a Surgeon of Edin-
 
burgh, had outstepped his era, and had for some time
 
practised this important art in the town of Leith,
 
and, supported by the recommendations of members
 
of the Colleges of Physicians and Surgeons, he now
 
applied to the Town Council to create him a Pro-
 
 
 
1 The notices in the Scots Magazine of the courses of lectures in
 
the University of Edinburgh for 1741 do not contain any particulars
 
as to the teaching of the Medical Professors beyond what is above
 
given.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
316 THE STORY OF THE UNIVERSITY. [1739-
 
 
 
fessor, which they did, nominating him " Professor
 
of Midwifery in this City and privileges," with power
 
to him " to profess and teach the said art, in as large
 
an extent as it is taught in any city or place where
 
this profession is already instituted." And with this
 
appointment they joined a system of rules for the
 
regulation of the practice of Midwifery in Edinburgh.
 
Here again we have an instance of a branch of study
 
elevated into a Professorship owing to suggestions
 
from without. As Bower says: "This institution, like
 
every other connected with the history of Medicine
 
in Edinburgh, originated with the colleges of Physi-
 
cians and Surgeons." At first, as in other cases,
 
the Professorship of Midwifery was general and un-
 
attached, but subsequently it was incorporated into
 
the University. On the death of Gibson in 1739
 
he was succeeded by Mr. Robert Smith, who re-
 
ceived a commission appointing him " Professor of
 
Midwifery in this City's College," "with the same
 
privileges and immunities which the other Professors
 
in the said College do enjoy, or that are known to
 
appertain to a Professor of Midwifery in any other
 
well regulated city or place." 1
 
 
 
The next great step in the progress of the Medi-
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1 The researches of Professor A. R. Simpson (see his Introductory
 
Lecture on the History of the Chair of Midwifery, etc., Edinburgh,
 
1883, pp. 9, 10), lead to the conclusion that Joseph Gibson was the
 
first person who ever received the title of " Professor of Midwifery."
 
Professor Simpson says that none of the title-pages of the obstetric
 
treatises prior to 1726 indicate that the authors had that title. And he
 
refers to Killian's Geburtslehre, p. 23, for the fact that the University
 
of Strasburg was the first on the Continent to have a Professorship of
 
Midwifery, dating from 1728, i.e. two years after Gibson had received
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1746.] CLINI CAL TEACHIN G ESTABLISHED. 3*7
 
 
 
cal School of the University was made in 1746,
 
when George Drummond, after an interval of twenty
 
years, returned to office as Lord Provost, in the
 
autumn succeeding the battle of Culloden. The
 
Royal Infirmary, his creation, had then been opened,
 
and one of the first acts of his administration was to
 
institute clinical lectures in the Infirmary. The
 
Managers, by his advice, permitted all Students of
 
Medicine, upon paying a small gratuity, to attend
 
the hospital. Dr. Rutherford, as Professor of the
 
Practice of Physic, commenced delivering clinical
 
lectures in the winter session of 1746-47, and was
 
immediately attended by a large number of Students.
 
Rutherford's clinical courses were continued over
 
twenty years, and he thus solidly inaugurated that
 
practical instruction in Medicine for which the Uni-
 
versity of Edinburgh has been distinguished.
 
 
 
We have seen that in 1 726 the Senatus Academi-
 
cus recognised five Professors as constituting the  
 
Medical Faculty, namely, those of Anatomy, Insti-
 
tutes of Medicine, Practice of Physic, and two joint
 
Professors of Medicine and Chemistry. The next
 
expansion in the Faculty took place in the province
 
of Botany. The Town Council, so long back as
 
1676, had given the title of " Professor of Botany in
 
the Town's College " to Mr. Sutherland, Keeper of
 
the Physic Garden. But this was an outside and
 
quasi -honorary Professorship, and no systematic
 
 
 
his appointment in Edinburgh. The Town Council then, in speaking
 
of " other cities and places where this profession is instituted," were
 
unconscious that they were doing something original, and were not
 
following, but founding, a precedent.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
318 THE STORY OF THE UNIVERSITY. [1761.
 
 
 
teaching in Botany seems to have been given, either
 
by Sutherland or by his two successors in the
 
appointment, Charles and George Preston. At last
 
Dr. Charles Alston appeared on the scene ; he had
 
devoted his life to the study of Botany, and had especi-
 
ally imbued himself at Leyden with the ideas of
 
Boerhaave on this science. On returning to Edin-
 
burgh about the year 1720, aged thirty-seven, he
 
seems to have got the sinecure office of King's
 
Botanist in connection with the gardens of Holy rood,
 
and to have begun giving some lectures. Eighteen
 
years later, in the year 1738, George Preston died,
 
and the Town Council, "considering that were a Pro-
 
fessor of Medicine and Botany elected and installed
 
in the City's College, it would in a great measure
 
contribute to the advancement of learning, etc. ; they
 
therefore appoint Dr. Charles Alston, etc." And
 
this vigorous man, commencing when he was fifty-
 
five years old, delivered two courses of lectures
 
annually for the next twenty-two years — one on
 
Botany and one on Materia Medica. And so the
 
teaching of these two subjects got regularly estab-
 
lished in the University.
 
 
 
What had been thus begun was diligently carried
 
forward by Dr. John Hope, who in 1761 was
 
appointed by the Town Council " Professor of
 
Botany and Materia Medica." Like his predecessor,
 
he gave an annual course in each of these subjects,
 
and he laboured indefatigably in introducing the
 
Linnaean system into Scotland. But subdivision
 
and specialisation of science was required in order
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1768-70.] ADDITIONAL CHAIRS FOUNDED. 319
 
 
 
to give the Medical School of the University its
 
complete organisation. In 1768 Dr. Hope received
 
a commission from the King as Regius Professor of
 
Botany, and he then appears to have recommended
 
to the patrons that the province of Materia Medica
 
should be separated from his Chair and entrusted to
 
other hands. Accordingly Dr. Francis Home, who
 
was well qualified by study and experience at home
 
and abroad for this charge, was appointed to a separ-
 
ate Professorship of Materia Medica, which he
 
worthily inaugurated during a period of thirty years.
 
 
 
In addition to the existing Chair of [[Anatomy]], an Act of the Town Council of Edinburgh created two professorships of the Theory and Practice of Medicine and two professorships of Medicine and [[Chemistry]]. It further granted the university the power to instruct and to examine for itself candidates for the degree of medicine.
 
[[Category:Events|Foundation of the Faculty of Medicine, 1726]]
 

Latest revision as of 12:49, 15 July 2015

The Faculty of Medicine was founded in 1726, laying the foundation for Edinburgh University's international reputation as a centre of medical teaching and research.

On 9 February 1726, four Edinburgh doctors John Rutherford (1695–1779), Andrew Sinclair (c1698-1760), Andrew Plummer (1697-1756), and John Innes (1696-1733) presented a petition to the Town Council, requesting that they 'institute the Profession of Medicine' at Edinburgh University and appoint the petitioners to teach the subject. The Town Council acceded to their request, replying that such a step would be of great advantage to the university, city, and country. They therefore appointed Sinclair and Rutherford as Professors of the Theory and Practice of Medicine and Plummer and Innes as Professors of Medicine and Chemistry. They were granted full power not only to teach medicine 'in all its branches' but to examine students and confer degrees in medicine.

The four doctors knew that their petition was likely to find friendly ears. The Lord Provost of Edinburgh, George Drummond (1688-1766), had long worked in partnership with John Monro (d. 1740), Deacon of the Incorporation of Surgeons, to create a medical school in the city. The first step had been the appointment of Monro's son Alexander Monro ''primus'' (1697-1767) to the newly created Chair of Anatomy in 1720. In October 1726, a meeting of the Senatus Academicus formally recognized the Chair of Anatomy and the four newly created chairs as constituting a Faculty of Medicine.

John Rutherford and John Innes essentially lectured on the Practice of Physic and Andrew Sinclair on the Institutes of Theory of Medicine. Andrew Plummer appears to have taken over the teaching of Chemistry from James Crawford (1682-1731) who had been appointed to the newly created Chair of Chemistry in 1713. Crawford had divided his time between the Chairs of Chemistry and Hebrew since 1719 but from now on taught Hebrew alone.

At the time of the Foundation of the Faculty, Edinburgh University had employed a Professor of Botany since 1695. This Chair, however, was not amalgamated with the Faculty of Medicine until the appointment of Charles Alston (1683-1760) in 1738.

Sources

  • Alexander Bower, The History of the University of Edinburgh. 3 vols. Edinburgh, 1817-1830.
  • Sir Alexander Grant, The Story of the University of Edinburgh during its First Three Hundred Years, 2 vols (London: Longmans, Green, and Co., 1884)