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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.〔Astruc, p. 363〕 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.〔Tibayrenc, pp.680-681. French sourced as: Delaunay, Paul, ''La vie médicale aux XVIe, XVIIe et XVIIIe siècles,'' p. 274, Genève: Slatkine, 2001, ISBN 2-05-101732-8〕〔(Medical History, Supplement No. 10, 1990, 23-47. THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE SPA IN SEVENTEENTH-CENTURY FRANCE by L. W. B. Brockliss )〕〔Thomas, p. 796〕 Charles was the chief physician of three French kings, Henri IV, Louis XIII and Louis XIV.〔"The Cincinnati lancet-clinic," Volume 89, 1903, p. 317 ''We now understand why Moliere mocked the doctors of his day. A special journal, "La Chronique Medicale," informs us that in the seventeenth century a physician named Charles de Lorme was attached to the person of three kings— Henri IV, Louis XIII and Louis XIV. This physician enjoyed great renown and he owed this to his essays.''〕 He was very reputable in his profession as a doctor.〔(Universal Pronouncing Dictionary of Biography and Mythology, Volume 1 By Joseph Thomas )〕 He acquired the friendship of Cardinal Richelieu and Chancellor Pierre Séguier, who granted him a pension.〔 == Biography == 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.〔(Bernardin, pp. 1-2 )〕 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.〔(Bernardin, pp. 3-7 )〕 The following are some of these theses. * '' Convient-il d'employer les mêmes remèdes avec les amants qu'avec les déments?'' *: Should one use the same remedies for lovers as are used for the insane? * '' Une fièvre pestilente peut-elle être intermittente?'' *: Can pestilential fever be intermittent? * ''La guimauve est-elle un être vivant, et a-t-elle les propriétés que lui accordent Dioscoride et Galien ? '' *: Is the althaea officinalis a living being, and does it have the properties which Pedanius Dioscorides and Galen ascribe to it? The following were four theses, dedicated to the Chancellor de Sillery, that Charles wrote after October 30, 1607.〔 * '' La vie des rois, des princes et des grands est-elle moins exposée à la maladie et plus longue que telle des gens du peuple et des paysans?'' *: Are the lives of kings, princes and great men less exposed to disease and longer than common people and peasants? * '' Les vésicants sont-ils bons pour les douleurs arthritiques?'' *: Are blister-causing agents good for arthritis pain? * ''Peut-on préparer un poison qui tue à une époque déterminée?'' *: Can one prepare a poison that kills at a certain time? * ''Est-il permis, quand une femme enceinte souffre d'une maladie aiguë, de lui prescrire des abortifs?'' *: Is it permissible, when a pregnant woman suffers from an acute illness, to prescribe her an abortion? de Lorme is credited with the invention of the medico della peste costume worn by plague doctors in Europe's lazarettos in the late 16th and early 17th centuries. The costume included a beak filled with perfumes and hat and vestments made of Levantine leather, all intended to prevent a doctor from becoming ill with bubonic plague when visiting sick patients in quarantine. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Charles de Lorme」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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