- René-Nicolas Dufriche Desgenettes
Infobox biography
name = René-Nicolas Dufriche-Desgenettes
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caption =Portrait byAntoine-François Callet .
birth_date =23 May 1762
birth_place =Alençon
death_date =1837
death_place =Paris
nationality =France
occupation =Military doctorRené-Nicolas Dufriche, baron Desgenettes (23 May 1762,
Alençon - 3 February 1837, Paris) was a French military doctor. He was chief doctor to the French army in Egypt and at Waterloo.Life
Early life
Son of a lawyer at the
Parliament of Rouen , he first studied at theJesuit college atAlençon . He studied classics atSainte-Barbe and thecollège du Plessis inParis , but left off these studies to follow the course taught at thecollège de France , from then on studying medicine with devotion. Trained in the hospital services of Pelletan and Vicq d’Azyr, he also studied under John Hunter andMoore in London andDesbois de Rochefort and Boyer inFrance . In trying to perfect his skills he made several journeys to England and Italy (spending 4 years atFlorence andSiena thenRome andNaples ), where his good manners brought him the acquiantance of many of the most distinguished scholars of the day.Returning to France in the course of 1789, he was made a doctor at
Montpellier , in the wake of his remarkable thesis entitled : "Essai physiologique sur les vaisseaux lymphatiques" ("Physiological essay on the lymphatic vessels") [This was not his first work - he had already published many writings, including "Analyse du système absorbant ou lymphatique" ("Analysis of the absorbing or lymphatic system") - and he had already been received as a member of the Académie des sciences de Montpellier and a corresponding member of theAcadémie royale de médecine .]Revolution and Italy
In 1791, he went to
Paris , where political unrest was at its height. He joined the Girondins and then, on their elimination by the Montagnards during theReign of Terror , he took refuge inRouen . The events of 1792 and early 1793 had caused the whole of Europe to take up arms against France and so, on the advice of his former teacher Vicq-d’Azyr and driven by a desire to serve the Republican fatherland, he got himself sent as a surgeon to the army gathering on the borders of Italy in February 1793. He soon became one of the top army surgeons through his energy and courage, and in March 1793 was attached to the field hospital of thearmée de la Méditerranée due to his knowing Italian.In effect, during this first campaign, always at the advanced outposts, he was involved in the reorganisation of Frenh military hospitals. In the
Armée d'Italie from 1793 to 1795, he got to knowNapoleon Bonaparte and dazzled him with his intelligence and his range of cultural awareness. A few years later, Bonaparte remembered him and made him chief doctor to the Egyptian expedition. Attached to the division commanded by general Masséna, he successfully faced atyphus epidemic.After Italy
On 24 nivôse year II, he took up leadership of the hospital at
Antibes , all of whose patients were cured, and returned to the army on 30 fructidor to be head of the hospital service of the right division, then moved toLoano and the representatives there, on 2 nivôse year III, to organise the medical service for the maritime expedition assigned to reconquer Corsica (taken by the English). After this expedition, he rejoined the active army atAlbenga , where he learned that on Barras's request and Bonaparte's recommendation he had on 7 brumaire year IV been made "médecin ordinaire" of the hospital ofVal-de-Grâce and of the 17e division militaire (Paris ). A year later he became professor of physiology and medical physics.The following year Bonaparte, who had appreciated Desgenettes' merit, reiterated it to the Directory and tried to get them to get him attached to his army. However, in a fit of jealousy, the directeurs kept Desgenettes in Paris, under the pretext that he could be more use to the Republic in a medical school rather than serving with the field hospitals. It was thus during this period of rest that Desgenettes edited his
mémoire on the usefulness of artificial anatomical models. In this, after tracing their history and giving details of the magnificent collection of them atFlorence , he called on the French government to found a similar institution in Paris. Shortly after the Revolution, he frequented the salon of Anne-Catherine Helvétius. Nevertheless, forCharles Mullié , it was painful to say that, in his roles as professor, Desgenettes the scholar's only reward for his sacrificing his fortune and his own health by indifference and ingratitude - four times in floréal year V he rendered his resignation, and four times the ministry refused to accept it.Egypt
On returning to Paris after the
Treaty of Campo Formio , Bonaparte obtained his protégé Desgenettes an attachment to thearmée d'Angleterre on 23 nivôse year VI ; it is now known that the organisation of this army on the Channel coast was only a cover for preparations for the French invasion of Egypt. Also, on 1 pluviôse, Desgenettes received the order to report toToulon , to be attached to general Bonaparte's army as doctor in chief. In 1798, he was made chief physician of the Armée d'Orient and Bonaparte invited him on board the admiral's flagship "Orient".Desgenettes had hardly arrived in Egypt when he was assailed by the several diseases brought on the army by the burning heat, continual bivouacing and lack of drinkable water. He installed hygiene measures and rigorous preventative measures - washing (both bodies and clothes), disinfection of areas, supervision of nutrition. The many cases of
smallpox ,scurvy , "fièvre de Damiette ", severe and contagiousconjunctivitis anddysentery observed by him here gave him further experience of military medicine. During the expedition into Syria, as head doctor of the armée d’Orient, Desgenettes had to face abubonic plague epidemic [One day Berthollet came to tell Desgenettes his ideas on the ways by which allowed the pestilentialmiasma to penetrate the body. According to Berthollet, saliva was the primary vehicle. That same day, a plague-carrier whom Desgenettes was treating and who was about to die accidentally left behind a portion of his prescribed medicine in its glass. Without moving or hesitating, Desgenettes took this patient's glass, refilled it and drank. This action gave the patient some small hope, but made all his assistants go pale and recoil in horror - a second inoculation more fearsome than the first, of which Desgenettes seems to have taken so little account.] in the course of the army's march across Syria's desert. To sustain the troops' morale, he denied the disease's existence and forbade any mention of its name [Fully knowing and braving the danger, Desgenettes calmly visited the plague-affected quarters and hospitals and disguised the present dangers with false names. These calm words passed to the sick and, to reaffirm shaken spirits, he took alancet , soaked it in pus from abubo and gave himself a double dose of it into his own groin and armpit, causing two minor inflammations but no more. Desgenettes tells this anecdote himself in his "Histoire médicale de l’armée d’Orient", and is also found in explicit terms in the relation published by Berthier : what could be more authentic, but also what could be more equivocal? In particular conversations, in public ceremonies, Desgenettes instead strongly denied the story.] .When Bonaparte found himself forced to raise the siege of the fortress at
Saint-Jean-d'Acre on28 April 1798 , he demanded that the medical staff evacuate the wounded and ill and kill the plague cases with fatally-strong doses of opium, but Desgenettes determinedly refused to do so, forcing Bonaparte to instead transport them as far as Jaffa. [Mullié affirms that one of Bonaparte's first concerns in Egypt was to createlazaret s and impose quarantines ; when he came to destroy them, by fire and the effects of the plague-cases, along with even the shacks in which soldiers' bodies had lain for a moment - indeed, wherever the shadow of plague had passed. Was this reason or prejudice? If prejudice, was it Napoleon's or Desgenettes'? And in any case, was it not a neew reason for us to admire the resolution they both upheld? - Napoleon in visiting the hospital at Jaffa, to mix with the nurses and act as nurse himself, thus to sustain and relieve the plague-cases, whilst Desgenettes gave his assistants an example of carrying out the most menial tasks, moving about heaps of rags and rotten scraps delivered to the camp (tiring but necessary work, making it necessary for him to go out into the clear air often, to escape and breathe pure air).] The two men's friendship then cooled again over the question of evacuating the plague cases from Jaffa.Return to France
On returning to France, around the end of fructidor year IX, Desgenettes was designated as head doctor of the military training-hospital of
Strasbourg . However, due to his new role as professor adjined to the École de médecine de Paris and his need for stability after a punishing campaign, he begged the favour of instead continuing as doctor to the hospital at Val-de-Grâce. Napoleon approved this request, on 8 nivôse year X. Made a member of the Institut and an associate member of the Sociétés de médecine ofMarseille and ofMontpellier that same year, around the start of year XI he published his "Histoire médicale de l’armée d’Orient", creating a great sensation in the scholarly world.Made a member of the
Légion d’honneur on 25 prairial year XII, on the day after the proclamation of theFirst French Empire he was made inspector-general of the Army Health Service (Service de Santé des Armées). In year XIII, he then became a member of the commission sent to Tuscany by Napoleon to study the character of the epidemic raging there, and in year XIV he then went to Spain with other French doctors to carry out research onyellow fever . He re-assumed his duties at Val-de-Grâce in January 1806.War
Since hostilities had recommenced, the exertions of three consecutive campaigns had introduced several diseases into the French army. On
6 April 1807 , Desgenettes received the emperor's order to rejoin the grand quartier général ; his only son was dying, but he stopped caring for him and left with 24 hours. In 1807, he was made chief doctor of theGrande Armée and in this role assisted at the battles of Eylau, Friedland and Wagram. After thepeace of Tilsitt , he asked to return to private life and devote himself wholly to his family, but Napoleon refused. He was allowed a vacation, leaving Berlin for Paris in May 1808, and returning to Napoleon in October, by which time he was in Spain, where he judged Desgenettes' presence to be necessary.Loaded with favours from Napoleon but despairing at the curbs set by his army work on his liberty and independence, he was made a knight of the empire in 1809, then a baron in 1810. Taking part in the Russian campaign, he organised the care of the officers. Taken prisoner at
Vilnius on10 December 1812 during the retreat from Russia, he was the only one captured that day mentioned by name as worth being freed. TsarAlexander III of Russia freed him when he heard of the care he had taken of Russian soldiers and had him escorted by hisCossack guard to the French forward-lines atMagdeburg on20 March 1813 . Desgenettes set out from there for Paris, charged with a secret mission from the viceroy to Napoleon, which he acquitted. In the course of April he then left Paris again to reassume his duties as head-doctor of the Grande Armée.He was trapped in the citadel of
Torgau after the defeat atLeipzig during the campaign in Germany. A typhus epidemic was raging in the citadel at the time, and he was still holed up there when an imperial decree of5 October 1813 made him chief-doctor of the Imperial Guard, which circumstances thus preventing him from taking up immediately. On the site's capitulation on2 January 1814 , he wished to return to France but was instead, in disregard for the treaties, held back inDresden as a prisoner. It was only at the end of May that he could return to Paris, where he found that minister Dupont de l’Étang had withdrawn his title as chief-doctor to the Guard. Alongside these persecutions on the part of the military administration, he was also ejected from his chair of hygiene at theFaculté de médecine de Paris , given him by the Consulate in reward for his services atSaint-Jean-d'Acre . To make up for these injustices, he was made a knight of theLégion d'honneur . On acceding to the ministry,Nicolas Jean-de-Dieu Soult returned to Desgenettes his roles as chief-doctor and professor at the hospital of Val-de-Grâce and Napoléon, on his return, reinstated him as chief inspector of the health service and as chief doctor of the Guard, adding on20 May an appointment as chief doctor of thearmée du Nord .Hundred Days and after
During the
Hundred Days , Desgenettes re-assumed his role as chief-doctor of the Imperial Guard and assisted at theBattle of Waterloo .He came back to Paris with the army, and
Louis XVIII confirmed him in his role atVal-de-Grâce on 1 July and at the Faculté de Médecine in Paris, where he was charged with teaching hygiene and readmitted into the Conseil général de Santé des armées in 1819 (formerly the Inspection générale). He only gave up his roles as inspector-general in January 1816, when the title was suppressed.In 1820, he was received as a member of the Académie Royale de Médecine, though he was expelled in 1822 following student demonstrations, only to be re-admitted in 1830 and elected a member of the Académie des sciences under the
July Monarchy .After the
July Revolution , on14 November , Baron Desgenettes was made mayor of the10th arrondissement of Paris , a role he filled until the municipal elections of 1834.On
2 March 1832 , he was made chief doctor ofLes Invalides . His name features on theArc de Triomphe . He was also a member of theAcadémie de Caen .Alexandre Dumas described Desgenettes as "old, bawdy, very witty and very cynical".Notes
elected works
* "Histoire médicale de l’armée d’Orient", 1812 ;
* "Essais de Biographie médicale", 1835.
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