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Significant Scots
Henry
Blackwood |
BLACKWOOD, HENRY, brother to the subject of
the preceding article, and his senior by some years, was educated under
nearly similar circumstances, and, in 1551, taught philosophy in the
university of Paris. Having afterwards applied himself to the study of
medicine, he rose to be dean of that faculty at Paris, an office of the
very highest dignity which could then be reached by a member of the
medical profession. He appears to have been one of the earliest modern
physicians who gave a sanction to the practice of letting blood. He
published various treatises on medicine, and also upon philosophy, of
which a list is preserved in Mackenzie’s Lives of Scots Writers. He
acted at one time as physician to the Duke of Longueville, with a salary
of two hundred pistols. At another time, when the plague prevailed at
Paris, he remained in the city, and exerted himself so zealously in the
cure of his numerous patients, as to gain universal applause. He died, in
1613 or 14, at a very advanced age.
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