Franciscus Sylvius
Franciscus Sylvius | |
---|---|
Franciscus Sylvius | |
Born |
11 May 1614 Hanau, Holy Roman Empire |
Died |
19 November 1672 Leiden, Republic of the United Netherlands |
Doctoral advisor |
Adolph Vorstius Emmanuel Stupanus[1] |
Other academic advisors | Otto Heurnius |
Doctoral students | Burchard de Volder |
Other notable students | Ehrenfried von Tschirnhaus |
Influences |
Paracelsus Jan Baptist van Helmont[2] |
Franciscus Sylvius (11 May 1614 – 19 November 1672), born Franz de le Boë, was a Dutch physician and scientist (chemist, physiologist and anatomist) who was an early champion of Descartes', Van Helmont's and William Harvey's work and theories. He was one of the earliest defenders of the theory of circulation of the blood in the Netherlands.
Life
Sylvius, a latinization of "de le Boë" translated as "of the woods", was born in Hanau, Germany to an affluent family originally from Cambrai, but worked and died in Netherlands. He studied medicine at the Protestant Academy of Sedan, and from 1632–1634 in Leiden under Adolph Vorstius and Otto Heurnius. In 1634 he held a disputation Positiones variae medicae under the presidency of Vorstius, in which he defended the proposition that there should be a pulmonary circulation. After that Sylvius made a study tour to Jena and Wittenberg, and on 16 March 1637 he defended a thesis entitled De animali motu ejusque laesionibus at the University of Basel under the presidency of Emmanuel Stupanus.[3][4] After practicing medicine in his hometown Hanau he returned to Leiden in 1639 to lecture. In this period he became famous for his demonstrations on circulation. From 1641 on he had a lucrative medical practice in Amsterdam. While in Amsterdam he met Glauber, who introduced him to chemistry. In 1658 he was appointed the professor of medicine at the University of Leiden and was paid 1800 guilders which was twice the usual salary. He was the University's Vice-Chancellor in 1669-70.
Work
In 1669 Sylvius founded the first academic chemical laboratory . For this reason, the building in which much of the Leiden University chemistry and natural science faculties are housed has the name Sylvius Laboratory. His most famous students were Jan Swammerdam, Reinier de Graaf, Niels Stensen and Burchard de Volder.
He founded the Iatrochemical School of Medicine, according to which all life and disease processes are based on chemical actions. That school of thought attempted to understand medicine in terms of universal rules of physics and chemistry. Sylvius also introduced the concept of chemical affinity as a way to understand the way the human body uses salts and contributed greatly to the understanding of digestion and of bodily fluids. The most important work he published was Praxeos medicae idea nova (New Idea in Medical Practice, 1671).
He researched the structure of the brain and was credited as the discoverer of the cleft in the brain known as Sylvian fissure by Caspar Bartholin in his 1641 book Casp. Bartolini Institutiones Anatomicae[5] In this book, it is noted that in the preface that “We can all measure the nobility of Sylvius’s brain and talent by the marvelous, new structure of the brain” And also, “In the new images of the brain, the engraver followed the design and scalpel of the most thorough Franciscus Sylvius, to whom we owe, in this part, everything that the brain has the most, or the most wonderful of”[5]
However Caspar Bartholin died in 1629 and Franciscus Sylvius only started medicine in 1632 and it has been argued that the words in this word describing the Sylvian fissure are either by his son Thomas Bartholin or indeed Franciscus Sylvius.[5] In 1663 in his Disputationem Medicarum, Franciscus Sylvius under his own name described the lateral fissure: "Particularly noticeable is the deep fissure or hiatus which begins at the roots of the eyes (oculorum radices) [...] it runs posteriorly above the temples as far as the roots of the brain stem (medulla radices). [...] It divides the cerebrum into an upper, larger part and a lower, smaller part".[5]
The Sylvian fissure and the Sylvian aqueduct are named after him.
According to a poster by Andre Parent of Laval University,[6] Flemish anatomist Franciscus Sylvius (1614-1672) not only gave his name to the prominent lateral fissure, but more importantly, the dude invented gin. Apparently in an effort to develop a diuretic for the treatment of kidney disease, Sylvius mixed the oil of juniper berry with grain alcohol. The concoction became known as jenever (juniper in Dutch) and geniévre (in French). The term was eventually anglo-thrashed into the word “gin.” English soldiers brought it back to their homeland where it became wildly popular.[7]
The mineral sylvite was also named for Sylvius.[8]
He owned a collection of 190 paintings, nine by Frans van Mieris and eleven by Gerard Dou, in the 17th century highly valued and pricey painters.[9]
References
- ↑ Franciscus Sylvius at the Mathematics Genealogy Project
- ↑ Digitaal Wetenschapshistorisch Centrum (DWC) - KNAW: "Franciscus dele Boë", PDF p
- ↑ Hoefer, Jean C.F. (1843). Histoire de la chimie depuis les temps les plus reculés jusqu'a notre époque. Paris: Hachette. p. 222. OCLC 14166162.
- ↑ Koehler, Peter J.; Bruyn, George W.; Pearce, John M. S. (2000). Neurological Eponyms. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 51. ISBN 0-19-513366-8. OCLC 42969585.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 Collice, M; Collice, R; Riva, A (2008). "Who discovered the sylvian fissure?". Neurosurgery 63 (4): 623–8. doi:10.1227/01.NEU.0000327693.86093.3F. PMID 18981875.
- ↑ Parent A, Franciscus Sylvius: From dry gin to wet brain anatomy. Society for Neuroscience, San Diego, CA, 2007. Program No. 24.1/MMM1. 2007 Abstract Viewer/Itinerary Planner. Online.
- ↑ http://www.talkingbrains.org/2007/11/raise-your-martini-glass-to-sylvius.html
- ↑ Webmineral, retrieved 2011-10-05.
- ↑ Eric J. Sluijter, Marlies Enklaar, Paul Nieuwenhuizen (1988) Leidse fijnschilders: van Gerrit Dou tot Frans Mieris de Jonge, 1630-1760.
External links
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