- Matilda Chaplin Ayrton
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Dr. Matilda Chaplin Ayrton MD (c. 1846 — 19 July 1883) was a British physician. She studied medicine in London, Edinburgh and Paris, pursuing higher studies at the latter's universities. She travelled to Japan, where she opened a school for midwives, and was an author of anthropological studies on its peoples.
Life
Matilda Chaplin was born at Honfleur, France around 1846. After beginning her studies in art she commenced the study of medicine in 1867, and continued to do so until her death. She spent two years at the London Medical College for Women, and having passed the preliminary examination at Apothecaries' Hall in 1869, she presented herself for the later examination, but was refused admission on the ground of her gender. She proceeded to Edinburgh and matriculated there, but was barred from instruction in higher branches of medicine. Legal intervention allowed her to gain high honours in anatomy and surgery at the extramural examinations held in 1870 and 1871 at Surgeons' Hall, Edinburgh, before a judgment in 1872 finally prohibited women students.
In 1871, when she found the chief medical classes in England and Scotland closed to her, she resolved to complete her education at Paris, where every facility was afforded her. The University of Paris recognised her abilities by bestowing upon her the degrees of Bachelier ès-Sciences and Bachelier ès-Lettres. During her studies Chaplin maintained connection with Edinburgh, attending some of the classes open to her there.[citation needed]
In 1872 she married her cousin, the noted scientist William Edward Ayrton,[1] an Edinburgh student, and a distinguished pupil of Sir William Thomson. Early in the following year she obtained a certificate in midwifery from the London Obstetric Society, the only medical qualification then obtainable by women in England, and shortly afterwards accompanied her husband to Japan, where he had been appointed to a professorship in the Imperial College of Engineering in Tokyo.[citation needed]
While in Japan, she pursued anthropological researches, and opened a school for Japanese midwives, in which she lectured herself, with the aid of an interpreter. In 1877 symptoms of tuberculosis made themselves apparent, focing her return to Europe. In 1879 she took the degree of M.D. at Paris, and presented as her thesis the result of her Japanese studies, which was printed under the title of Recherches surles dimensions générales et sur le développement du corps chez les Japonais (Paris, 1879). She became a licentiate of the King and Queen's College of Physicians in Ireland, and, although the only female candidate, came out first in the examination. In 1880 she lived in London, chiefly studying diseases of the eye at the Royal Free Hospital.[citation needed]
But her health was rapidly breaking down, and she was compelled for the next two years to winter abroad, but at the hospital of Algiers during one winter, and in the physiological laboratory at Montpelier[disambiguation needed ] during another, she continued her studies. Mrs. Ayrton died in London on 19 July 1883, aged 37.
Legacy
From the time of her journey to Japan Mrs. Ayrton contributed to The Scotsman and other periodicals a large number of articles on very various topics, including Japanese politics and customs, and the educational problems of the West. She published in London in 1879 a book entitled Child Life in Japan, which was illustrated from her own sketches. Mrs. Ayrton always took a lively interest in attempts to improve the educational opportunities and social position of women. She actively aided the establishment of a club for women students in Paris, and helped to organise the Somerville Club for women in London.[2]
Chaplin and Ayrton's daughter was the feminist and author Edith Ayrton, wife of Israel Zangwill and mother of Oliver Zangwill.[1]
References
- ^ a b Nyenhuis, Jacob E. (2003). "notes". Myth and the creative process: Michael Ayrton and the myth of Daedalus, the maze maker. Detroit: Wayne State University Press. p. 207. ISBN 0-8143-3002-9.
- ^ Lee, Sidney (1885). "Ayrton, Matilda Chaplin". In Leslie Stephen. Dictionary of National Biography. 02. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- Attribution
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: "Ayrton, Matilda Chaplin". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
Categories:- 1840s births
- 1883 deaths
- Midwifery
- French physicians
- 19th-century English medical doctors
- British journalists
- British expatriates in Japan
- Foreign educators in Japan
- Deaths from tuberculosis
- Infectious disease deaths in the United Kingdom
- Women physicians
- People from Edinburgh
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