Doctors and Popes

Authors

  • Milton Rizzi Miembro vitalicio de la Royal Society of Medicine. Miembro académico de la Academia Uruguaya de Historia Marítima y Fluvial.Ex presidente de las Sociedades de ORL del Uruguay y Uruguaya de Historia de la Medicina

Keywords:

PHYSICIANS, RELIGION AND MEDICINE

Abstract

In the history of Christianity, out of 266 Popes, only four were Medical Doctors.
In April 309 Eusebius, of Greek origin, was appointed Pope, but he soon exiled and died four months later in Sicily.
Sicilian Leon II, erudite, priest and Medical Doctor was appointed Pope in August 682. Ten months later he died in Rome. Leon’s feast day is July the 3rd.
Victor III, originally Dauferius, later Desiderius, was born in 1027 in Benevento, Lombardy, northern Italy. He studied Medicine under Constantinus Africanus at the Salernian Medical School. He was elected Pope in May 16th, 1086 and died sixteen months later in Montecassino. He was beatified. His day is September 16th.
In September 1276, Portuguese philosopher, theologist, juriconsult and Medical Doctor Peter Julianus was elected Pope as John XXI. He died eight months later at Viterbo, Italy, when a roof tumbled down upon him.
In 1783 Miguel Gorman, physician to the Viceroyalty of the River Plate, addressed the Medical Academy with a lecture on four medical scholars who were Popes.

References

(1) Gontard F. Historia de los Papas. v.1 Buenos Aires: Compañía General Fabril, 1961:492-528.
(2) Benton W, Hemingway Benton H. Eusebio, Pope Martyr Saint. En: New Encyclopaedia Britannica.v.3 Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica Press, 1975.
(3) Ferreiros U. Historia apologética de los Papas. v.3 Valencia: Federico Domenech, 1896.
(4) Blasco E. Eusebio. En: Blasco E. Glorias del Pontificado. v.1 Barcelona: Católica, 1885.
(5) Diccionario Enciclopédico Hispano-Americano. Madrid: Montaner & Simón, 1912. Hipatia; p.384-5.
(6) Benton W, Hemingway Benton H. Leo II, saint. En: New Encyclopaedia Britannica.v.6 Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica Press, 1975.
(7) Blasco E. León II En: Blasco E. Glorias del Pontificado. v.2 Barcelona: Católica, 1887.
(8) Real Academia Española. Diccionario de la Lengua española. v.2 Madrid: Espasa Calpe, 1984. Monofisismo-Monotelismo; p. 924.
(9) Benton W, Hemingway Benton H. Víctor III. En: New Encyclopaedia Britannica.v.10 Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica Press, 1975:418-9.
(10) Diccionario Enciclopédico Hispano-Americano. Madrid: Montaner & Simón, 1912. Desiderio; p.481.
(11) Blasco E. Víctor III. En: Blasco E. Glorias del Pontificado. v.3 Barcelona: Católica, 1887.
(12) Fitzgerald AW. Medical men: cannonized saints. Bull Hist Med 1948; 22:635-43.
(13) Sigerist H. The Great Doctors. New York: Norton, 1933.
(14) Benton W, Hemingway Benton H. John XXI, Pope. En: New Encyclopaedia Britannica.v.5 Chicago: Encyclopaedia Britannica Press, 1975:577-8.
(15) Blasco E. Juan XXI. En: Blasco E. Glorias del Pontificado. Barcelona: Católica, 1887.
(16) Rizzi M, Borras A. Historia de la Oftalmología en Uruguay. Montevideo: Tradinco, 2010:120-1.
(17) Cantone E. Miguel Gorman. Historia de la Medicina en el Río de la Plata. v.2 Madrid: Hernández y Galo Sáez, 1928:119-43.
(18) Bertran JM. Epistolario de Miguel Gorman. v.1 Buenos Aires: Universidad. Cátedra de Historia de la Medicina, 1938:40-68.

Published

2015-06-30

How to Cite

1.
Rizzi M. Doctors and Popes. Rev. Méd. Urug. [Internet]. 2015 Jun. 30 [cited 2024 Sep. 7];31(2):136-42. Available from: https://revista.rmu.org.uy/index.php/rmu/article/view/217

Issue

Section

History of Medicine