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Messenger Monsey : ウィキペディア英語版 | Messenger Monsey Messenger Monsey (baptised 30 October 1694, died 26 December 1788) was an English physician and humourist who became physician to the Royal Hospital, Chelsea, a home for injured and elderly soldiers. Known for being eccentric and ill-mannered, he is described in the diaries of Fanny Burney as "Dr. Monso, a strange gross man".〔''The Early Journals of Fanny Burney'', ed. Larse E. Troide and Stewart J. Cooke. Vol V. 17821783 (Montreal: McGillQueen's UP), p. 385. (Retrieved 27 December 2014 ).〕 ==Early life== Monsey, son of Robert Monsey, a non-juror cleric, and Mary (daughter of Roger Clopton, rector of Downham),〔 Royal College of Physicians, lives of the fellows. (Retrieved 27 December 2014. )〕 was born at Hackford with Whitwell, Norfolk, and educated at home, at Woodbridge School and at Pembroke College, Cambridge (BA, 1714), before studying medicine under Sir Benjamin Wrench MD of Norwich (d. 1747). Monsey was admitted to the Royal College of Physicians in 1723. He then practised in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, where he never earned more than £300 a year, but married well.
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