William Buzaglo

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Les caprices de la goute, ballet arthritique.A cartoon from 1783 depicting Buzaglo's establishment for curing the gout by means of physical exercise.
Les caprices de la goute, ballet arthritique.
A cartoon from 1783 depicting Buzaglo's establishment for curing the gout by means of physical exercise.

William Buzaglo was an English inventor; died in London in 1788. His first claim to distinction was his introduction of stoves made on a new plan, and intended for the heating of large public buildings. He afterward practised medicine and professed to be able to cure the gout without drugs, by muscular exercise alone. Whatever may have been the real efficacy of his method — which seems analogous to the modern massage — he was generally regarded as a quack because of the nature of his advertisement, abounding, as it did, in praise for himself. His manifesto was humorously parodied by Captain Grose in a handbill, given with a caricature, entitled "Patent Exercise, or Les Caprices de la Goutte".

[edit] External links

  • Lysons, Environs of London, iii. 479

This article incorporates text from the 1901–1906 Jewish Encyclopedia article "William Buzaglo", a publication now in the public domain.