Charles De Lorme | |
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1630 portrait by Jacques Callot |
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Born | January 1, 1584 Moulins, France |
Died | December 31, 1678[1] Moulins, Allier[2] |
(aged 94)
Occupation | Medical doctor |
Charles de Lorme, Delorme, d'lorm, or De l'Orme (1584–1678), was a medical doctor. Charles was the son of Jean Delorme (a professor at Montpellier University), who was the primary doctor to Marie de' Medici. This ultimately opened doors for Charles' medical career soon after he graduated from the University of Montpellier in 1607 at the age of 23. He first came to Paris after graduation to practice medicine under the watchful eye of his father, until he was ready to practice as a regular doctor on his own. There are no records of his marriages, except that he married for the third time at the age of 78. This wife died within a year.[3]
Charles was the personal physician to several members of the royal family of the House of Medici from 1610 to 1650. He was the main doctor to Louis the Just after his father retired and additionally became the primary physician to the king's brother Gaston, Duke of Orléans starting in 1629.[4][5][6]
Charles was the chief physician of three French kings, Henri IV, Louis XIII and Louis XIV.[7] He was very reputable in his profession as a doctor.[8] He acquired the friendship of Cardinal Richelieu and Chancellor Pierre Séguier, who granted him a pension.[8]
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One biography describes him as having nice features including a good complexion, and a strong distinct voice. He also had an excellent volubility of language, an elegant ease of speech, and a good memory. He was generally open minded, had a great wit, and spoke with authority. Charles claims he was a direct descendant of Jacques de L'Orme, one of those who worked on the reform of the Custom of Bourbonnais.[9]
Through his father's influence, a professor at the University of Montpellier, he learned Latin, Greek, Spanish and Italian. He also influenced Charles' education in the medical field. Charles did nine theses while he was a student at the University of Montpellier. They were in Latin and Greek and were published and sold in Paris in 1608.[10]
The following are some of these theses.
The following were four theses, dedicated to the Chancellor de Sillery, that Charles wrote after October 30, 1607.[10]
Jean De Lorme, Charles' father, was one of two doctors from Moulins that introduced Bourbon-Lancy as a spa town to Europe. Charles was the heir to his father's interest in the spa town, however for some unknown reason promoted the rival spa town of Bourbon-l'Archambault. Charles profited hugely from promoting the spa in this town. He was accused with the proverb d'avoir pris pension des habitants pour y faire aller bien du monde ("to have boarded the inhabitants in order to make the world go well") because of his enthusiasm for this rival spa. Charles gave the spa of Bourbon-l'Archambault its excellent reputation in the European upper class.[5]
Charles became wealthy in a medical practice of prescribing a concoction of antimony (a.k.a. stibnite, an ingredient used in a certain eye cosmetic) to Henry IV, Louis XIII, Cardinal Mazarin, and Madame de Sevigné as a health-preserving, health-restoring and life extending preparation.[11] This concept was originally started by Basil Valentine in his work Currus Triumphalis Antimonii ("The triumphal chariot of antimony"); who obtained the idea of medical benefits from Paracelsus (1480–1541).[12] Charles claimed "qui plus en boira, plus il vivra" (He who drinks more will live more).[12] Some of the patients to whom he prescribed this concoction were Guez de Balzac, who lived to the age of 70, Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux, who lived to the age of 75, and Daniel Huet, who lived to the age of 91. Charles himself nearly became a centenarian.[13]