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Volumn 48, Issue 2, 2004, Pages 229-244

The Officiers de Santé of the French Revolution: A Case Study in the Changing Language of Medicine

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EID: 2042507680     PISSN: 00257273     EISSN: None     Source Type: Journal    
DOI: 10.1017/S0025727300007407     Document Type: Review
Times cited : (16)

References (117)
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    • Some might say especially medicine. Thus David M Vess speaks of a "revolution" in French medicine: Medical revolution in France, 1789-96, Gainesville, University Presses of Florida, 1975. However, for the argument in favour of considerable continuity, see L W B Brockliss, 'Before the clinic: French medical teaching in the eighteenth century', in Caroline Hannaway and Ann La Berge (eds), Constructing Paris medicine, Amsterdam, Rodopi, 1998, pp. 71-115; see also Ann La Berge and Caroline Hannaway, 'Paris medicine: perspectives past and present', in ibid., pp. 1-69, p. 51.
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    • Before the clinic: French medical teaching in the eighteenth century
    • Caroline Hannaway and Ann La Berge (eds), Amsterdam, Rodopi
    • Some might say especially medicine. Thus David M Vess speaks of a "revolution" in French medicine: Medical revolution in France, 1789-96, Gainesville, University Presses of Florida, 1975. However, for the argument in favour of considerable continuity, see L W B Brockliss, 'Before the clinic: French medical teaching in the eighteenth century', in Caroline Hannaway and Ann La Berge (eds), Constructing Paris medicine, Amsterdam, Rodopi, 1998, pp. 71-115; see also Ann La Berge and Caroline Hannaway, 'Paris medicine: perspectives past and present', in ibid., pp. 1-69, p. 51.
    • (1998) Constructing Paris Medicine , pp. 71-115
    • Brockliss, L.W.B.1
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    • Paris medicine: Perspectives past and present
    • Some might say especially medicine. Thus David M Vess speaks of a "revolution" in French medicine: Medical revolution in France, 1789-96, Gainesville, University Presses of Florida, 1975. However, for the argument in favour of considerable continuity, see L W B Brockliss, 'Before the clinic: French medical teaching in the eighteenth century', in Caroline Hannaway and Ann La Berge (eds), Constructing Paris medicine, Amsterdam, Rodopi, 1998, pp. 71-115; see also Ann La Berge and Caroline Hannaway, 'Paris medicine: perspectives past and present', in ibid., pp. 1-69, p. 51.
    • Constructing Paris Medicine , pp. 1-69
    • Berge, A.L.1    Hannaway, C.2
  • 4
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    • Oxford, Pergamon
    • Several authors have shown a special interest in political discourse, e.g. Keith Baker, The political culture of the old regime, Oxford, Pergamon, 1987. There is a valuable perspective in Lynn Hunt, Politics, culture and class in the French Revolution, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1984, ch. 1, 'The rhetoric of revolution'. I am particularly indebted to François Furet (Interpreting the French Revolution, Cambridge University Press, 1981) for his argument for the importance of language in the revolutionary period. Both he and Mona Ozouf have shown an interest in language, yet in their massive and wide-ranging Critical dictionary of the French Revolution (transl. Arthur Goldhammer, Cambridge, MA, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1989), one looks in vain for some article on discourse, language or vocabulary. It may be too early to expect a satisfactory comprehensive treatment of French revolutionary language. See also John Renwick (ed.), Language and rhetoric of the Revolution, Edinburgh University Press, 1990, especially ch. 2: Philippe Roger, The French Revolution as logomachy'. There is more recent relevant material in Sophia Rosenfeld, A revolution in language: the problem of signs in late eighteenth-century France, Stanford University Press, 2001, pp. 138-9, 150, 164-72, 181-3, 307-8. Some references that appear to be relevant to the new revolutionary vocabulary in fact reflect the concern in this period to replace various regional languages within France by French.
    • (1987) The Political Culture of the Old Regime
    • Baker, K.1
  • 5
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    • Berkeley, University of California Press, ch. 1
    • Several authors have shown a special interest in political discourse, e.g. Keith Baker, The political culture of the old regime, Oxford, Pergamon, 1987. There is a valuable perspective in Lynn Hunt, Politics, culture and class in the French Revolution, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1984, ch. 1, 'The rhetoric of revolution'. I am particularly indebted to François Furet (Interpreting the French Revolution, Cambridge University Press, 1981) for his argument for the importance of language in the revolutionary period. Both he and Mona Ozouf have shown an interest in language, yet in their massive and wide-ranging Critical dictionary of the French Revolution (transl. Arthur Goldhammer, Cambridge, MA, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1989), one looks in vain for some article on discourse, language or vocabulary. It may be too early to expect a satisfactory comprehensive treatment of French revolutionary language. See also John Renwick (ed.), Language and rhetoric of the Revolution, Edinburgh University Press, 1990, especially ch. 2: Philippe Roger, The French Revolution as logomachy'. There is more recent relevant material in Sophia Rosenfeld, A revolution in language: the problem of signs in late eighteenth-century France, Stanford University Press, 2001, pp. 138-9, 150, 164-72, 181-3, 307-8. Some references that appear to be relevant to the new revolutionary vocabulary in fact reflect the concern in this period to replace various regional languages within France by French.
    • (1984) Politics, Culture and Class in the French Revolution
    • Hunt, L.1
  • 6
    • 0004036339 scopus 로고
    • Cambridge University Press
    • Several authors have shown a special interest in political discourse, e.g. Keith Baker, The political culture of the old regime, Oxford, Pergamon, 1987. There is a valuable perspective in Lynn Hunt, Politics, culture and class in the French Revolution, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1984, ch. 1, 'The rhetoric of revolution'. I am particularly indebted to François Furet (Interpreting the French Revolution, Cambridge University Press, 1981) for his argument for the importance of language in the revolutionary period. Both he and Mona Ozouf have shown an interest in language, yet in their massive and wide-ranging Critical dictionary of the French Revolution (transl. Arthur Goldhammer, Cambridge, MA, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1989), one looks in vain for some article on discourse, language or vocabulary. It may be too early to expect a satisfactory comprehensive treatment of French revolutionary language. See also John Renwick (ed.), Language and rhetoric of the Revolution, Edinburgh University Press, 1990, especially ch. 2: Philippe Roger, The French Revolution as logomachy'. There is more recent relevant material in Sophia Rosenfeld, A revolution in language: the problem of signs in late eighteenth-century France, Stanford University Press, 2001, pp. 138-9, 150, 164-72, 181-3, 307-8. Some references that appear to be relevant to the new revolutionary vocabulary in fact reflect the concern in this period to replace various regional languages within France by French.
    • (1981) Interpreting the French Revolution
  • 7
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    • transl. Arthur Goldhammer, Cambridge, MA, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press
    • Several authors have shown a special interest in political discourse, e.g. Keith Baker, The political culture of the old regime, Oxford, Pergamon, 1987. There is a valuable perspective in Lynn Hunt, Politics, culture and class in the French Revolution, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1984, ch. 1, 'The rhetoric of revolution'. I am particularly indebted to François Furet (Interpreting the French Revolution, Cambridge University Press, 1981) for his argument for the importance of language in the revolutionary period. Both he and Mona Ozouf have shown an interest in language, yet in their massive and wide-ranging Critical dictionary of the French Revolution (transl. Arthur Goldhammer, Cambridge, MA, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1989), one looks in vain for some article on discourse, language or vocabulary. It may be too early to expect a satisfactory comprehensive treatment of French revolutionary language. See also John Renwick (ed.), Language and rhetoric of the Revolution, Edinburgh University Press, 1990, especially ch. 2: Philippe Roger, The French Revolution as logomachy'. There is more recent relevant material in Sophia Rosenfeld, A revolution in language: the problem of signs in late eighteenth-century France, Stanford University Press, 2001, pp. 138-9, 150, 164-72, 181-3, 307-8. Some references that appear to be relevant to the new revolutionary vocabulary in fact reflect the concern in this period to replace various regional languages within France by French.
    • (1989) Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution
  • 8
    • 2042494582 scopus 로고
    • Edinburgh University Press, especially ch. 2
    • Several authors have shown a special interest in political discourse, e.g. Keith Baker, The political culture of the old regime, Oxford, Pergamon, 1987. There is a valuable perspective in Lynn Hunt, Politics, culture and class in the French Revolution, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1984, ch. 1, 'The rhetoric of revolution'. I am particularly indebted to François Furet (Interpreting the French Revolution, Cambridge University Press, 1981) for his argument for the importance of language in the revolutionary period. Both he and Mona Ozouf have shown an interest in language, yet in their massive and wide-ranging Critical dictionary of the French Revolution (transl. Arthur Goldhammer, Cambridge, MA, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1989), one looks in vain for some article on discourse, language or vocabulary. It may be too early to expect a satisfactory comprehensive treatment of French revolutionary language. See also John Renwick (ed.), Language and rhetoric of the Revolution, Edinburgh University Press, 1990, especially ch. 2: Philippe Roger, The French Revolution as logomachy'. There is more recent relevant material in Sophia Rosenfeld, A revolution in language: the problem of signs in late eighteenth-century France, Stanford University Press, 2001, pp. 138-9, 150, 164-72, 181-3, 307-8. Some references that appear to be relevant to the new revolutionary vocabulary in fact reflect the concern in this period to replace various regional languages within France by French.
    • (1990) Language and Rhetoric of the Revolution
    • Renwick, J.1
  • 9
    • 85039535109 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The French Revolution as logomachy
    • There is more recent relevant material in Sophia Rosenfeld, Stanford University Press
    • Several authors have shown a special interest in political discourse, e.g. Keith Baker, The political culture of the old regime, Oxford, Pergamon, 1987. There is a valuable perspective in Lynn Hunt, Politics, culture and class in the French Revolution, Berkeley, University of California Press, 1984, ch. 1, 'The rhetoric of revolution'. I am particularly indebted to François Furet (Interpreting the French Revolution, Cambridge University Press, 1981) for his argument for the importance of language in the revolutionary period. Both he and Mona Ozouf have shown an interest in language, yet in their massive and wide-ranging Critical dictionary of the French Revolution (transl. Arthur Goldhammer, Cambridge, MA, Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1989), one looks in vain for some article on discourse, language or vocabulary. It may be too early to expect a satisfactory comprehensive treatment of French revolutionary language. See also John Renwick (ed.), Language and rhetoric of the Revolution, Edinburgh University Press, 1990, especially ch. 2: Philippe Roger, The French Revolution as logomachy'. There is more recent relevant material in Sophia Rosenfeld, A revolution in language: the problem of signs in late eighteenth-century France, Stanford University Press, 2001, pp. 138-9, 150, 164-72, 181-3, 307-8. Some references that appear to be relevant to the new revolutionary vocabulary in fact reflect the concern in this period to replace various regional languages within France by French.
    • (2001) A Revolution in Language: The Problem of Signs in Late Eighteenth-century France , pp. 138-139
    • Roger, P.1
  • 12
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    • De l'influence de la liberté sur la santé
    • vendémiaire year II
    • François Lathenas, 'De l'influence de la liberté sur la santé', Journal de Médecine, Chirurgie et Pharmacie, vendémiaire year II [1793], p. 8. It is interesting that P J G Cabanis spoke of the medical profession as a kind of priesthood: "Sous certains rapports, la profession de médecine est une espèce de sacerdoce". Du degré de certitude de la médecine, [Paris, Firmin Didot] nivôse year VI, 1798, 2nd ed., 1803, reprinted Geneva, 1989, p. 151n.
    • (1793) Journal de Médecine, Chirurgie et Pharmacie , pp. 8
    • Lathenas, F.1
  • 13
    • 85039535150 scopus 로고
    • Sous certains rapports, la profession de médecine est une espèce de sacerdoce
    • [Paris, Firmin Didot] nivôse year VI, 1798, 2nd ed. reprinted Geneva, 1989, p. 151n
    • François Lathenas, 'De l'influence de la liberté sur la santé', Journal de Médecine, Chirurgie et Pharmacie, vendémiaire year II [1793], p. 8. It is interesting that P J G Cabanis spoke of the medical profession as a kind of priesthood: "Sous certains rapports, la profession de médecine est une espèce de sacerdoce". Du degré de certitude de la médecine, [Paris, Firmin Didot] nivôse year VI, 1798, 2nd ed., 1803, reprinted Geneva, 1989, p. 151n.
    • (1803) Du Degré de Certitude de la Médecine
  • 14
    • 16244415744 scopus 로고
    • Le malade imaginaire (1673), e.g. Troisième intermède. See also Le médecin malgré lui (1666), e.g. Act 2, Scene 2. For a full analysis of Molière's criticisms, see Laurence Brockliss and Colin Jones, The medical world of early modern France, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1997, pp. 336-44.
    • (1673) Le Malade Imaginaire
  • 15
    • 84900957955 scopus 로고
    • Le malade imaginaire (1673), e.g. Troisième intermède. See also Le médecin malgré lui (1666), e.g. Act 2, Scene 2. For a full analysis of Molière's criticisms, see Laurence Brockliss and Colin Jones, The medical world of early modern France, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1997, pp. 336-44.
    • (1666) Le Médecin Malgré Lui
  • 16
    • 0039022333 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Oxford, Clarendon Press
    • Le malade imaginaire (1673), e.g. Troisième intermède. See also Le médecin malgré lui (1666), e.g. Act 2, Scene 2. For a full analysis of Molière's criticisms, see Laurence Brockliss and Colin Jones, The medical world of early modern France, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1997, pp. 336-44.
    • (1997) The Medical World of Early Modern France , pp. 336-344
    • Brockliss, L.1    Jones, C.2
  • 17
    • 0039022333 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note 6 above
    • Brockliss and Jones, op. cit., note 6 above, p. 549. See also Toby Gelfand, Professionalizing modern medicine: Paris surgeons and medical science and institutions in the eighteenth century, Westport, CT, Greenwood Press, 1980.
    • The Medical World of Early Modern France , pp. 549
    • Brockliss1    Jones2
  • 20
    • 85039535403 scopus 로고
    • 6 vols, Paris, Imprimerie nationale
    • 'Rapport sur l'ère de la République, par G. Romme', Convention, Séance du 20 septembre 1793, reprinted in J Guillaume (ed.), Procèsverbaux du Comité d'Instruction publique de la Convention nationale, 6 vols, Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1891-1957, vol. 2, pp. 440-51. The revolutionary calendar, like most of the revolutionary medical terms, enjoyed only temporary favour.
    • (1891) Procèsverbaux du Comité d'Instruction Publique de la Convention Nationale , vol.2 , pp. 440-451
    • Guillaume, J.1
  • 24
    • 26244455150 scopus 로고
    • Paris, Bordas
    • Ferdinand Brunot, Histoire de la langue française des origines à1900, Paris, Colin, 1967, vol. 9, part 2. Jean-Pierre Seguin, La langue française au XVIIIe siècle, Paris, Bordas, 1972.
    • (1972) La Langue Française au XVIIIe Siècle
    • Seguin, J.-P.1
  • 28
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    • New York, Science History Publications
    • F Dreyfus, L'Assistance publique sous le Législative et la Convention (1792-95), Paris, 1904, p. 73, quoted by George Rosen, From medical police to social medicine, New York, Science History Publications, 1974, p. 243.
    • (1974) From Medical Police to Social Medicine , pp. 243
    • Rosen, G.1
  • 30
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    • London, Longman
    • A word may need to be said about the successions of legislatures in the revolutionary period. After a financial crisis had led to the calling of the Estates General in May 1789, the clergy and nobility were supplanted by the Third Estate, led by the bourgeoisie. They declared themselves to be the true representatives of the nation and called themselves the National (Constituent) Assembly, which sat until the end of September 1791. This was succeeded by the Legislative Assembly, which lasted for a year, being replaced by the Convention (September 1792-October 1795). The most extreme measures that took place in this period, including mass executions, may in a small part have been excused by the war emergency. A more equable period, the Directory, followed from 1795 to 1799, during which the five Directors were guided by the Council of Elders and the Council of 500. The coup d'état of Bonaparte in November 1799 brought the Directory to an end and inaugurated the Consulate until 1804. The medical world was in a state of flux under these successive regimes. Although medical problems were raised occasionally in these assemblies, detailed proposals were usually handed down to committees, of which the one most relevant to this paper was the Health Committee (Comité de Salubrité). For a general source of information on many aspects of the revolution, see Colin Jones, The Longman companion to the French Revolution, London, Longman, 1988.
    • (1988) The Longman Companion to the French Revolution
    • Jones, C.1
  • 31
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    • Lawyers (avocats or procureurs) became "hommes de loi"
    • Cf. Lawyers (avocats or procureurs) became "hommes de loi".
  • 32
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    • Cambridge University Press
    • Thus, for example, in Matthew Ramsey, Professional and popular medicine in France, 1770-1830 (Cambridge University Press, 1988) many of the references to officiers de santé are to the nineteenth-century inferior practitioners. For a full discussion of these practitioners, see Robert Heller, 'Officiers de santé: the second-class doctors of nineteenth-century France', Med. Hist., 1978, 22: 25-43.
    • (1988) Professional and Popular Medicine in France, 1770-1830
    • Ramsey, M.1
  • 33
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    • Officiers de santé: The second-class doctors of nineteenth-century France
    • Thus, for example, in Matthew Ramsey, Professional and popular medicine in France, 1770-1830 (Cambridge University Press, 1988) many of the references to officiers de santé are to the nineteenth-century inferior practitioners. For a full discussion of these practitioners, see Robert Heller, 'Officiers de santé: the second-class doctors of nineteenth-century France', Med. Hist., 1978, 22: 25-43.
    • (1978) Med. Hist. , vol.22 , pp. 25-43
    • Heller, R.1
  • 34
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    • 39 vols, Lausanne, 'Docteur en médecine'
    • "... une subordination fondée sur la nature des choses, et sur l'objet même de leur êtude". Denis Diderot and Jean Le Rond D'Alembert (eds), Encyclopédie, 39 vols, Lausanne, 1778-1782, vol. 5, 'Docteur en médecine', pp. 8-9. The author of the article was a certain Lavirotte, Doctor of the Paris Faculty of Medicine.
    • (1778) Encyclopédie , vol.5 , pp. 8-9
    • Diderot, D.1    Le Rond D'Alembert, J.2
  • 36
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    • Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press
    • E H Ackerknecht, Medicine at the Paris hospital, 1794-1848, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1967, p. 32. This idea was opposed by both the Paris Faculty of Medicine and the College of Surgery, Gelfand, op. cit., note 7 above, p. 156.
    • (1967) Medicine at the Paris Hospital, 1794-1848 , pp. 32
    • Ackerknecht, E.H.1
  • 37
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    • note 7 above
    • E H Ackerknecht, Medicine at the Paris hospital, 1794-1848, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins Press, 1967, p. 32. This idea was opposed by both the Paris Faculty of Medicine and the College of Surgery, Gelfand, op. cit., note 7 above, p. 156.
    • Medicine at the Paris Hospital, 1794-1848 , pp. 156
    • Gelfand1
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    • The politics of professional monopoly in nineteenth-century medicine: The French model and its rivals
    • Gerald L Geison, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press
    • Matthew Ramsey, 'The politics of professional monopoly in nineteenth-century medicine: the French model and its rivals', in Gerald L Geison, Professions and the French State, 1700-1900, Philadelphia, University of Pennsylvania Press, 1984, pp. 225-305, on p. 225.
    • (1984) Professions and the French State, 1700-1900 , pp. 225-305
    • Ramsey, M.1
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    • note 20 above
    • Diderot and D'Alembert, op. cit., note 20 above, vol. 14, pp. 628-30. See also William Coleman, 'Health and hygiene in the Encyclopédie: a medical doctrine for the bourgeoisie', J. Hist. Med. Allied Sci., 1974, 29: 399-421.
    • Professions and the French State, 1700-1900 , vol.14 , pp. 628-630
    • Diderot1    D'Alembert2
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    • Health and hygiene in the Encyclopédie: A medical doctrine for the bourgeoisie
    • Diderot and D'Alembert, op. cit., note 20 above, vol. 14, pp. 628-30. See also William Coleman, 'Health and hygiene in the Encyclopédie: a medical doctrine for the bourgeoisie', J. Hist. Med. Allied Sci., 1974, 29: 399-421.
    • (1974) J. Hist. Med. Allied Sci. , vol.29 , pp. 399-421
    • Coleman, W.1
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    • Le droit de l'homme à la santé: Une belle idée devant l'Assemblée Constituante, 1790-1791
    • Dora B Weiner, 'Le droit de l'homme à la santé: une belle idée devant l Assemblée Constituante, 1790-1791', Clio Medica, 1970, 5: 209-23. Despite its promising title, a large part of the article is devoted to the rivalry between J I Guillotin and J G Thouret, who represented the interests of the rival Comité de Mendicité.
    • (1970) Clio Medica , vol.5 , pp. 209-223
    • Weiner, D.B.1
  • 54
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    • On 27 germinal year II (16 April 1794) a law was passed permitting foreign medical practitioners to stay in France as ouvriers de santé. This class was obviously intended to be subservient to the officiers de santé
    • On 27 germinal year II (16 April 1794) a law was passed permitting foreign medical practitioners to stay in France as ouvriers de santé. This class was obviously intended to be subservient to the officiers de santé.
  • 57
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    • Paris, C Lavouzelle, De l'Antiquité d la révolution
    • For example, Règlement fait par ordre du roi pour établir dans les hôpitaux militaires de Strasbourg, Metz et Lille des amphithéatres destinés à former en médecine, chirurgie et pharmacie des officiers de santé pour le service des hôpitaux militaires du royaume et des armées, Paris, 1775, cited by Vess, op. cit., note 1 above, p. 198. The standard French army medical history (Jean Guillermaud, Histoire de la médecine aux armées, Paris, C Lavouzelle, 1982, vol. 1, De l'Antiquité d la révolution) is less than helpful on the question.
    • (1982) Histoire de la Médecine aux Armées , vol.1
    • Guillermaud, J.1
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    • Also the term officier de santé, apart from its military use, described below, had been applied to the medical attendants of the royal household
    • Also the term officier de santé, apart from its military use, described below, had been applied to the medical attendants of the royal household.
  • 59
    • 85039536895 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Ramsey speaks of a "populace, dazzled by the health officer's title", op. cit., note 19 above, p. 81; see also p. 184, where the title is described as an "official sounding credential"
    • Ramsey speaks of a "populace, dazzled by the health officer's title", op. cit., note 19 above, p. 81; see also p. 184, where the title is described as an "official sounding credential".
  • 60
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    • 6 vols, Paris, Baudouin, year XIII
    • See 'Lieutaud' [Joseph, first president of the Société de Médecine] in Félix Vicq-d'Azyr, Oeuvres, 6 vols, Paris, Baudouin, year XIII, 1805, vol. 3, p. 26. Vicq-d' Azyr actually introduced the term officier de santé quite casually after speaking of Lieutaud's concern for public health. He used the term to describe medical practitioners in the provinces, who would need some support (appui), and he said that they should have the protection of the government.
    • (1805) Oeuvres , vol.3 , pp. 26
    • Vicq-d'Azyr, F.1
  • 62
    • 85039514261 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Decree of the Convention, 1 August 1793, Ancien Moniteur, vol. 17, p. 300. The inclusion of pharmacists in the military context under the label of officiers de santé should be noted.
    • Ancien Moniteur , vol.17 , pp. 300
  • 63
    • 2042431976 scopus 로고
    • February-May
    • Convention nationale (February-May 1794), 23, p. 101. Physicians and Apothecaries of the first class were to receive 400 livres a month, second class 300 livres, and third class 200 livres.
    • (1794) Convention Nationale , vol.23 , pp. 101
  • 64
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    • reprint, Lichtenstein, Series 1 (18 frimaire year II [1793])
    • Archives Parlementaires de 1787 à 1860, reprint, Lichtenstein, 1969, Series 1, vol. 81 (18 frimaire year II [1793]), p. 128.
    • (1969) Archives Parlementaires de 1787 à 1860 , vol.81 , pp. 128
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    • The French medical profession's perception of its social function between 1776 and 1830
    • Terence D Murphy, 'The French medical profession's perception of its social function between 1776 and 1830', Med. Hist., 1979, 23: 259-78, p. 265.
    • (1979) Med. Hist. , vol.23 , pp. 259-278
    • Murphy, T.D.1
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    • year V, 2: 237ff
    • From 27 pluvise year V (15 February 1797). See Recueil de la Société de Santé, year V, 2: 237ff. for a discussion of the changes of name.
    • Recueil de la Société de Santé
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    • Nouveau plan de constitution pour la médecine en France
    • reprinted in A de Beauchamp (ed.), Paris
    • F Vicq-d'Azyr, 'Nouveau plan de constitution pour la médecine en France', reprinted in A de Beauchamp (ed.), Enquêtes et documents relatifs à l'enseignement supérieur, Paris, 1888, vol. 28. A full analysis is given by Hannaway, op. cit., note 32 above, ch. 8.
    • (1888) Enquêtes et Documents Relatifs à l'Enseignement Supérieur , vol.28
    • Vicq-d'Azyr, F.1
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    • note 32 above, ch. 8
    • F Vicq-d'Azyr, 'Nouveau plan de constitution pour la médecine en France', reprinted in A de Beauchamp (ed.), Enquêtes et documents relatifs à l'enseignement supérieur, Paris, 1888, vol. 28. A full analysis is given by Hannaway, op. cit., note 32 above, ch. 8.
    • Enquêtes et Documents Relatifs à l'Enseignement Supérieur
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    • Medical services were provided by barber surgeons
    • Medical services were provided by barber surgeons.
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    • transl. A M Sheridan, London, Routledge
    • Ramsey, op. cit., note 19 above, p. 72. Michel Foucault, The birth of the clinic, transl. A M Sheridan, London, Routledge, 1989, pp. 33-5.
    • (1989) The Birth of the Clinic , pp. 33-35
    • Foucault, M.1
  • 79
    • 84866553363 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note 19 above
    • Heller, op. cit., note 19 above. The rural officiers de santé were in some ways a reincarnation of the barber surgeons of the old regime.
    • Réimpression de l'Ancien Moniteur
    • Heller1
  • 80
    • 85039512973 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • The choice of the term officier de santé for second-class doctors was perhaps implicitly an admission of its association with practitioners of doubtful credentials
    • The choice of the term officier de santé for second-class doctors was perhaps implicitly an admission of its association with practitioners of doubtful credentials.
  • 81
    • 85039523582 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Standards were raised over the course of the century
    • Standards were raised over the course of the century.
  • 82
    • 85039519647 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Legally they were second-class physicians, the term doctor being reserved for doctors of medicine and surgery
    • Legally they were second-class physicians, the term doctor being reserved for doctors of medicine and surgery.
  • 83
    • 85039524462 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • op. cit., note 45 above
    • Archives Parlementaires, op. cit., note 45 above, vol. 23, pp. 625-30.
    • Archives Parlementaires , vol.23 , pp. 625-630
  • 87
    • 0017561753 scopus 로고
    • L'art de guérir. Médecine savante et médecine populaire dans la France de 1790
    • Jean-Pierre Ooubert, 'L'art de guérir. Médecine savante et médecine populaire dans la France de 1790', Annales, Economies, Sociétés, Civilisations, 1977, 2: 908-926, p. 911.
    • (1977) Annales, Economies, Sociétés, Civilisations , vol.2 , pp. 908-926
    • Ooubert, J.-P.1
  • 90
    • 85039513192 scopus 로고
    • Conseil de 500, Rapport par Cabanis sur l'organisation des écoles de médecine, 1798, p. 10. See also, however, Martin S Staum, Cabanis: Enlightenment and medical philosophy in the French Revolution, Princeton University Press, 1980, pp. 269-70.
    • (1798) Rapport par Cabanis sur l'Organisation des Écoles de Médecine , pp. 10
  • 92
    • 85039517929 scopus 로고
    • For example, in 1797 (17 prairial year V) Baraillon brought to the Council of 500 a project which would have made it compulsory for all medical practitioners to possess a diploma from one of the écoles de santé. J F Baraillon, Defense d'exercer l'art de guérir ... sans titre authentique, 1797, p. 2.
    • (1797) Defense d'Exercer l'Art de Guérir ... Sans Titre Authentique , pp. 2
    • Baraillon, J.F.1
  • 95
    • 85039518421 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • See, for example, Sur l'origine de l'Inéganlité, Part 1, in Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Oeuvres complètes, ed. B Gagnebin and M Raymond, Paris, Gallimard, 1964, vol. 3, p. 139. I owe this reference to Philip Robinson.
    • Sur l'Origine de l'Inéganlité, Part 1
  • 96
    • 0000298515 scopus 로고
    • ed. B Gagnebin and M Raymond, Paris, Gallimard
    • See, for example, Sur l'origine de l'Inéganlité, Part 1, in Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Oeuvres complètes, ed. B Gagnebin and M Raymond, Paris, Gallimard, 1964, vol. 3, p. 139. I owe this reference to Philip Robinson.
    • (1964) Oeuvres Complètes , vol.3 , pp. 139
    • Rousseau, J.-J.1
  • 102
    • 85039533603 scopus 로고
    • vendémiaire year VI (September)
    • See, for example, the discussion on compulsory examinations, Procès-verbaux du Conseil de 500, vendémiaire year VI (September 1797), pp. 128-31, 217-18, 220-4.
    • (1797) Procès-verbaux du Conseil de 500 , pp. 128-131
  • 103
    • 85039540640 scopus 로고
    • A report of 1798 gives an estimate of the number of officiers de santé in France as greater than 12, 000. De l'état actuel de l'école de santé de Paris, 1798, p. 22n. This compares with not many more than a hundred graduating in the early years from the Paris school, the largest of the three. However, the school grew rapidly and by the year X (1801-2), there were 1, 390 students. Ackerknecht, op. cit., note 22 above, p. 36.
    • (1798) De l'État Actuel de l'École de Santé de Paris
  • 104
    • 85039523062 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note 22 above
    • A report of 1798 gives an estimate of the number of officiers de santé in France as greater than 12, 000. De l'état actuel de l'école de santé de Paris, 1798, p. 22n. This compares with not many more than a hundred graduating in the early years from the Paris school, the largest of the three. However, the school grew rapidly and by the year X (1801-2), there were 1, 390 students. Ackerknecht, op. cit., note 22 above, p. 36.
    • De l'État Actuel de l'École de Santé de Paris , pp. 36
    • Ackerknecht1
  • 105
    • 85039523062 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note 6 above
    • It was not until 1798 that the medical schools began to issue certificates to graduates. Brockliss and Jones, op. cit., note 6 above, p. 820. According to Weiner "some medical students asked for and received 'certificates of capacity" from the Paris Health School during the ten years when medical diplomas did not exist officially", op. cit., note 33 above, p. 391.
    • De l'État Actuel de l'École de Santé de Paris , pp. 820
    • Brockliss1    Jones2
  • 106
    • 85039523062 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note 33 above
    • It was not until 1798 that the medical schools began to issue certificates to graduates. Brockliss and Jones, op. cit., note 6 above, p. 820. According to Weiner "some medical students asked for and received 'certificates of capacity" from the Paris Health School during the ten years when medical diplomas did not exist officially", op. cit., note 33 above, p. 391.
    • De l'État Actuel de l'École de Santé de Paris , pp. 391
  • 109
    • 85039540454 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Fourcroy, however, had been hostile to the extreme conservatism of the Faculty
    • Fourcroy, however, had been hostile to the extreme conservatism of the Faculty.
  • 112
    • 85039516268 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • Although still described as officiers de santé, graduates of the new medical schools from 1798 were at least issued with a certificate of competence
    • Although still described as officiers de santé, graduates of the new medical schools from 1798 were at least issued with a certificate of competence.
  • 113
    • 85039532711 scopus 로고
    • 18 May
    • See, for example, Moniteur, 18 May 1803, p. 1003.
    • (1803) Moniteur , pp. 1003
  • 114
    • 85039519247 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • note 2 above
    • Quoted by Rosenfeld, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 168.
    • Moniteur , pp. 168
    • Rosenfeld1
  • 115
    • 2042531750 scopus 로고
    • London, printed for J Callow by Smith and Davy
    • John Cross, Sketches of the medical schools of Paris, London, printed for J Callow by Smith and Davy, 1815. See also Ackerknecht, op. cit., note 22 above, ch. 16, and John Harley Warner, 'Remembering Paris: memory and the American disciples of French medicine in the nineteenth century', Bull. Hist. Med., 1991, 65: 301-25.
    • (1815) Sketches of the Medical Schools of Paris
    • Cross, J.1
  • 116
    • 85039523749 scopus 로고    scopus 로고
    • London, note 22 above, ch. 16
    • John Cross, Sketches of the medical schools of Paris, London, printed for J Callow by Smith and Davy, 1815. See also Ackerknecht, op. cit., note 22 above, ch. 16, and John Harley Warner, 'Remembering Paris: memory and the American disciples of French medicine in the nineteenth century', Bull. Hist. Med., 1991, 65: 301-25.
    • Sketches of the Medical Schools of Paris
    • Ackerknecht1
  • 117
    • 0026230435 scopus 로고
    • Remembering Paris: Memory and the American disciples of French medicine in the nineteenth century
    • John Cross, Sketches of the medical schools of Paris, London, printed for J Callow by Smith and Davy, 1815. See also Ackerknecht, op. cit., note 22 above, ch. 16, and John Harley Warner, 'Remembering Paris: memory and the American disciples of French medicine in the nineteenth century', Bull. Hist. Med., 1991, 65: 301-25.
    • (1991) Bull. Hist. Med. , vol.65 , pp. 301-325
    • Warner, J.H.1


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