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John Elliotson

John Elliotson (29 October 1791 – 29 July 1868), M.D. (Edinburgh, 1810),[1] M.D.(Oxford, 1821), F.R.C.P.(London, 1822), F.R.S. (1829), professor of the principles and practice of medicine at University College London (1832), senior physician to University College Hospital (1834)[2] — and, in concert with William Collins Engledue M.D., the co-editor of The Zoist.

John Elliotson
John Elliotson
Born29 October 1791
Died29 July 1868(1868-07-29) (aged 76)
London
NationalityBritish
Alma materUniversity of Edinburgh
Known forMesmerism, Phrenology, The Zoist, introducing stethoscope to United Kingdom
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine

Elliotson was a prolific and influential author, a respected teacher, and renowned for his diagnostic skills as a clinician and, especially, his extremely strong prescriptions: "his students said that one should let him diagnose but not treat the patient".[3]

He was always at the 'leading edge' of his profession: he was one of the first in Britain to use and promote the stethoscope,[4] and one of the first to use acupuncture.[5]

Education edit

The son of the prosperous London chemist and apothecary John Elliotson and Elizabeth Elliotson, he was born in Southwark on 29 October 1791.

He was a private pupil of the rector of St Saviours, Southwark,[6] and went on to study medicine at the University of Edinburgh,[7] from 1805 to 1810[8] — where he was influenced by Thomas Brown, M.D. (1778–1820) — and then at Jesus College, Cambridge, from 1810 to 1821), from both of which institutions he took the degree of M.D.,[9] and subsequently in London at St Thomas' and Guy's hospitals. In 1831 he was elected professor of the principles and practice of physic in London University (now University College London), and in 1834 he became physician to University College Hospital.[2][10]

Physical characteristics edit

Barely 5 ft (152 cm) tall, with dark complexion and a very large head,[11] he was also lame (following an 1828 carriage accident).

His appearance presented a strong contrast to his 'intramural enemy' Robert Liston (1794-1847), F.R.C.S. (Edinburgh, 1818), F.R.S. (1841), the University College's Professor of Clinical Surgery, one of the fastest surgeons of all time (on one occasion Liston amputated a leg, mid-thigh, in 25 seconds), who was pale skinned, and at least 6 ft 2in (188 cm) tall. Liston was fiercely opposed to Elliotson's 'contamination' of the hospital with his demonstrations of 'higher states' of mesmerism (i.e., rather than its 'medical' applications).

Despite his unusual physical characteristics, Elliotson was greatly admired as a lecturer, both for the structured clarity of his lectures, and the theatrical liveliness of their delivery. Once he began lecturing at the University College, his widely respected lectures were extensively reported in the medical press; and he published a number of collections of his lectures over the years. At his peak, he was the first President of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society (in 1833), a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and the Royal Society, he had one of the largest private practices in London and, at his peak, was one of the pre-eminent physicians in the entire British Empire.

Phrenology and Mesmerism edit

He became interested in phrenology, and was founder and first President of the London Phrenological Society (in 1823). His interest in mesmerism had been aroused initially by the demonstrations conducted by Richard Chenevix in 1829, and re-awakened by Dupotet de Sennevoy's demonstrations in 1837.

The Okey sisters edit

This prompted Elliotson to begin experimenting with the Okey sisters, Elizabeth (17) and Jane (15), who had been admitted to his hospital, in April 1837, for treatment of their epilepsy.[12] Their surname was often given as O'Key and it was and is widely assumed they were Irish but in fact they came from an old English family (Okey comes from the oak tree). Elliotson soon began using them as subjects – in 1837 he inserted "a large seton needle with a skein of silk into it",[13] entirely painlessly, and without her even being aware that such a penetration had taken place, into the neck of Elizabeth Okey (the older sister) whilst she was mesmerized[14] — within the confines of the hospital, in public demonstrations of the so-called 'higher states' of mesmerism: clairvoyance, transposition of the senses (seeing with the fingers, etc.), thought transmission, physical rapport or "community of sensation", psychical rapport, etc. Convinced that the elder sister, Elizabeth, had a talent for medical clairvoyance (able to see into the body, diagnose illness, prescribe treatment, and deliver a prognosis), Elliotson took her down into the wards in the dead of night and had her both diagnose and prescribe treatments.[15]

 
Anonymous anti-Elliotson pamphlet

Thomas Wakley edit

In August 1838, Thomas Wakley conducted a series of experiments on the sisters in front of several witnesses. His tests focussed on whether the girls could tell 'mesmerised' from 'unmesmerised' water. When they failed to do this consistently, he denounced them as frauds and proclaimed mesmerism a complete fallacy. In fact, the experiments did not prove the girls were faking nor did they show that mesmerism was false.[16] By the end of 1838, however, Elliotson was forced to resign from the hospital. The Council of the University College, after months of deliberation, passed a resolution on 27 December 1838, "That the Hospital Committee be instructed to take such steps as they shall deem most advisable, to prevent the practice of Mesmerism or Animal Magnetism within the Hospital";[17] and Elliotson, on reading the contents of the resolution, resigned all of his appointments forthwith.[18]

Wakley did all that he could, as editor of The Lancet, and as an individual, to oppose Elliotson, and to place all of his endeavours and enterprises in the worst possible light;[19] for example, in addition to an extensive range of articles in The Lancet, over a number of years, there is also an anti-Elliotson (pseudonymous) work attributed to Wakley, Undeniable facts concerning the strange practices of Dr. Elliotson, ... with his female patients; and his medical experiments upon the bodies of ... E. & J. Okey, etc. (1842) which is held by the British Library,[20] and another, most likely written by either Wakley or one of his associates, held in the collection of the Wellcome Library (see right).[21]

The Zoist edit

Elliotson and William Collins Engledue were the co-editors of The Zoist: A Journal of Cerebral Physiology & Mesmerism, and Their Applications to Human Welfare, an influential British journal, devoted to the promotion of the theories and practices (and the collection and dissemination of reports of the applications) of mesmerism and phrenology, and the enterprise of "connecting and harmonizing practical science with little understood laws governing the mental structure of man",[22] that was published quarterly, without a break, for fifteen years: from March 1843 until January 1856.

 
John Elliotson in his last years

The Zoist, was printed on high quality paper, and issued quarterly to its subscribers. It was also published for a wider readership in annual volumes. Well-written in crisp, scientific English, it was devoted to the propagation of information about the applications of phrenology (rather than its theories) and to the collection, storage, and dissemination of reports of the therapeutic efficacy of mesmerism (with even less treatment of mesmeric theories than of phrenological theories) – in part, it acted as a disciplinary clearing house for information and the experiences of both amateur and professional practitioners (and their subjects) from all over Great Britain, and its colonies – and it placed great stress on the well-demonstrated usefulness of mesmerism, not only in the alleviation of disease and suffering, but in the provision of pain-free surgery, especially amputations.[23]

Harveian Oration edit

In 1846 – by this stage bereft of all his institutional affiliations – and despite many earnest efforts made to prevent him doing so, as the Royal College of Physicians' youngest fellow, Elliotson delivered the Harveian Oration to the Royal College of Physicians of London,[24] in which he controversially spoke of how William Harvey, the man whom the Oration was honouring, had been forced to fight against the entrenched conservatism of the medical profession and its initial incredulity and resistance to his discoveries, and stressed the strength of the analogy with the current (equally misguided and ignorant) critics of mesmerism.

"In 1846, Elliotson's turn came to deliver the Harveian Oration, but, as soon as it was known that he had accepted the office, he was attacked in the most savage manner, in order to prevent his appearing. For example, the Lancet called him a professional pariah, stated that his oration would strike a vital blow at legitimate medicine, and would be a black infamy degrading the arms of the College.

Undeterred by this, Elliotson made mesmerism the subject of his address. Without referring to the attacks which had been made upon him, he simply stated the result of his researches, and respectfully invited the College to examine alleged facts of overwhelming interest and importance.

He exhorted his hearers to study mesmerism calmly and dispassionately, and reminded them, with more truth than tact, that all the greatest discoveries in medical science, and the most important improvements in its practice, had been opposed by the profession in the most violent and unprincipled manner. As examples of scientific discoveries which had been received in this way, he cited those of the lacteal vessels, the thoracic duct, the sexual system of plants, the circulation of the blood, the sounds of the chest and their relation to the diseases of the heart and lungs and their coverings, etc. As instances of improvement in practice which had been treated in like manner, he referred to the employment of Peruvian bark, inoculation and vaccination for small-pox, the use of mild dressings, instead of boiling oil, in gun-shot wounds, the ligature of the bleeding vessels after operation, instead of the application of burning pitch or red-hot irons, etc.

We should, Elliotson said, never forget these things, nor allow authority, conceit, habit, or the fear of ridicule to make us hostile to truth. We should always have before our eyes that memorable passage in Harvey's works: "True philosophers, compelled by the love of truth and wisdom, never fancy themselves so wise and full of sense as not to yield to truth from any source and at all times: nor are they so narrow-minded as to believe any art or science has been handed down in such a state of perfection to us by our predecessors that nothing remains for future industry."

All this, Elliotson said, should be borne in mind when considering the alleged facts of mesmerism. In his opinion many of these were indisputable; for ten years he had shown how mesmerism could prevent pain during surgical operation, produce sleep and ease in sickness, and even cure many diseases which had been unrelieved by ordinary methods. It was the imperative and solemn duty of the profession to carefully and dispassionately examine the subject.

He therefore earnestly implored them to do so, if they cared for truth, their own dignity, and the good of mankind." — John Milne Bramwell (1903)[25]

Mesmeric Infirmary edit

Elliotson continued to provide mesmeric demonstrations from his own residence at 37 Conduit Street, Hanover Square (which he eventually quit in 1865). In partnership with Engledue, he began publishing The Zoist in 1843, and, in 1849 founded the London Mesmeric Infirmary. As his reputation rapidly declined, his once lucrative practice also disappeared, and he died, penniless, in 1868 in the London home of a medical colleague, Edmond Sheppard Symes (1805-1881), L.S.A. (1830), M.R.C.S (England, 1832), M.D. (Aberdeen, 1851).[15]

 
William Makepeace Thackeray's dedication to John Elliotson in the novel The History of Pendennis (1850)

"Elliotson firmly believed that mesmerism and phreno-mesmerism could be explained fully in physical terms [and, of] all Elliotson's achievements, The Zoist is probably the most useful, mainly because it provides a detailed record of a crucial thirteen year period in the development of Victorian psychology.

Elliotson was a relentless advocate for his "truth." His articulateness as a writer and his energy as an editor almost triumph over the limitations of his vision and the demands of advocacy … The wonder is that in the face of so much criticism Elliotson was able to maintain as much objectivity and professional rigor as he did, though clearly the pages of The Zoist need to be filtered carefully to distinguish what is of value from what is sheer advocacy and contentiousness … Elliotson made three important contributions to the history of psychology and medicine.

By stressing the physical basis of mesmeric phenomena and its underlying causes in so far as they had therapeutic potential, he demonstrated that mesmerism could be used effectively in illnesses associated with the nervous system and as an anaesthesia in surgical procedures. Elliotson's approach to the mind was through the body …

In addition, Elliotson was the first to attempt to detach the operations of mesmerism and the conditions of the procedure from conscious acts of will on the part of the subject and the operator, the patient and the doctor … In his appreciation of the non-rational and non-conscious elements within the procedure, [he] gave some direction and encouragement to those forces … that were laying the groundwork for Freud and other exponents of the relationship between the unconscious and psychiatric therapy.

Finally, Elliotson's imposing mid-century presence and his widely reported mesmeric activities provided both the degree of legitimacy and the intellectual stimulation that encouraged James Braid, a Manchester surgeon, to develop his theories on the role of suggestion and auto-suggestion in mesmerism". — Fred Kaplan (1982)[26]

Literary connections edit

He was highly regarded in literary circles. WM Thackeray's Pendennis was dedicated to his friend, Elliotson;[2] and the character, Dr Goodenough (in Thackeray's last novel, The Adventures of Philip (1862), was based on Elliotson,[27] who had attended Thackeray when suffered a life-threatening illness in 1849.[28]

Elliotson was a friend of Charles Dickens, and introduced Dickens to Mesmerism.[29] Wilkie Collins, a close friend of Dickens described Elliotson as "one of the greatest English physiologists," and cites an example of state-dependent memory from Elliotson's Human Physiology in The Moonstone.[30]

Works edit

  • 1817: Elliotson, J. (trans.), Blumenbach, J.F., The Institutions of Physiology (Institutiones Physiologicæ.
  • 1820: Elliotson, J., Numerous Cases Illustrative of the Efficacy of the Hydrocyanic Or Prussic Prussic Acid in Affections of the Stomach., etc., Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, (London), 1820.
  • 1827: Elliotson, J., "The Use of the Sulphate of Copper in Chronic Diarrhoea, to which are added some Observations on the use of Acupuncture in Rheumatism", Medico-Chirurgical Transactions, Vol.13, Part 2, (1827), pp. 451–468.
  • 1830: Elliotson, J., On the Recent Improvements in the Art of Distinguishing the Various Diseases of the Heart, etc., Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, and Green, (London), 1830.
  • 1832: Elliotson, J., "Acupuncture", pp. 32–34 in Forbes, J., Tweedie, A. & Conolly, J. (eds), The Cyclopædia of Practical Medicine: Comprising Treatises on the Nature and Treatment of Diseases, Materia Medica and Therapeutics, Medical Jurisprudence, etc. etc., Volume I (Abd-Ele), Sherwood, Gilbert, and Piper, (London), 1832.
  • 1835: Elliotson, J., Human Physiology, Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman, (London), 1835.
  • 1839: Elliotson, J. and Rogers, N., The Principles and Practice of Medicine, etc., Joseph Butler, (London), 1839.
  • 1843: Elliotson, J., Numerous Cases of Surgical Operations without Pain in the Mesmeric state, with Remarks upon the Opposition of many Members of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society and others to the Reception of the Inestimable Blessings of Mesmerism, H. Ballière, (London), 1843.
  • 1843: Engledue, W.C., Cerebral Physiology and Materialism, with the Result of the Application of Animal Magnetism to the Cerebral Organs: An Address delivered to the Phrenological Association in London, June 20, 1842, by W. C. Engledue, M.D.; With a Letter from Dr Elliotson, On Mesmeric Phrenology and Materialism, J. Watson, (London), 1843.
  • 1844: Elliotson, J, "Case of Epilepsy Cured by Mesmerism", The Zoist: A Journal of Cerebral Physiology & Mesmerism, and Their Applications to Human Welfare, Vol.2, No.6, (July 1844), pp. 194–238.
  • 1846: Elliotson, J., The Harveian Oration, Delivered before the Royal College of Physicians, London 1846, by John Elliotson, M.D. Cantab. F.R.S., Fellow of the College, With an English Version and Notes, (1846).
  • 1855: Elliotson, J., "An Instance of Sleep and Cure by Imagination only", The Zoist: A Journal of Cerebral Physiology & Mesmerism, and Their Applications to Human Welfare, Vol.12, No.48, (January 1855), pp. 396–403.

In popular culture edit

Elliotson is a major antagonist in the game Assassin's Creed: Syndicate, who performs brutal and fatal experiments on the insane at Lambeth Asylum and is a secret member of the Templar Order. He is later killed by the Master Assassin Jacob Frye.[31]

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Elliotson's doctoral dissertation "On Inflammation", was self-published in Edinburgh in 1810: see Elliotson, Joannes, Dissertatio medica inauguralis de inflammatione communi, Abernathy & Walker, (Edinburgh), 1810.
  2. ^ a b c Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Elliotson, John" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 9 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 291.
  3. ^ Gauld (2004).
  4. ^ Rosen (1936), p.601.
  5. ^ Elliotson (1827); Elliotson (1832).]
  6. ^ "King's Collections : Archive Catalogues : ELLIOTSON, John (1791-1868)". kingscollections.org. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  7. ^ The University of Edinburgh was also the alma mater of James Braid and James Esdaile.
  8. ^ "Students of Medicine, 1762-1826: Individual Record". www.archives.lib.ed.ac.uk. Retrieved 19 September 2020.
  9. ^ "Elliotson, John (ELT810J)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  10. ^ For a detailed and comprehensive description of his rather unusual medical education, see the transcript of the evidence that Elliotson gave to the House of Commons' Select Committee on Medical Education chaired by Henry Warburton on 24 March 1834: at Warburton (1834), pp. 104–117.
  11. ^ Cooter (1984), p.53.
  12. ^ Elliotson's Casebooks, UCL archives
  13. ^ Elliotson, John (1843). Numerous cases of surgical operations without pain in the Mesmeric state, with remarks upon the opposition ... to the perception of the inestimable blessings of Mesmerism. H. Baillière.
  14. ^ This had been witnessed by Surgeon General James Mouat, VC KCB, M.R.C.S., at the time a medical student, and clinical clerk under Elliotson (see "Testimony to the reality of the Mesmeric Phenomena in University College Hospital, by Mr. James Mouat, Army Surgeon", The Zoist, Vol.7, No.25, (April 1849), pp. 41–44).
  15. ^ a b Clarke (1874), pp. 155–169; Anon (1911).
  16. ^ Moore, (2017)
  17. ^ See, for example, "Note by The Zoist", The Zoist, Volume 10, No.38, (July 1852), p.218.
  18. ^ Clarke, J. F. (James Fernandez) (1874). Autobiographical recollections of the medical profession. University of California Libraries. London : J. & A. Churchill.
  19. ^ See, for example, Winter, (1998), pp. 93–108.
  20. ^ British Library system number: 003831461.
  21. ^ Wellcome Library reference number: 23360069: Anon, A full discovery of the strange practices of Dr. Elliotson on the bodies of his female patients! At his house, in Conduit Street, Hanover Sq. with all the secret experiments he makes upon them, and the curious postures they are put into while sitting or standing, when awake or Asleep! The whole as seen by an eyewitness, and now fully divulged!, E. Hancock, (London), 1842.
  22. ^ Godwin (1994), p.213.
  23. ^ Gauld (1992), pp. 205–208; Winter (1998), pp. 154–155.
  24. ^ Elliotson, (1846).
  25. ^ Bramwell, J.M., Hypnotism: Its History, Practice and Theory, Grant Richards, (London), 1903, pp. 7–8.
  26. ^ Kaplan (1982), pp.xii-xv.
  27. ^ Anon (1911).
  28. ^ Schneck (1963), p.126.
  29. ^ Connor, Steven (2010). "All I Believed is True: Dickens under the Influence". Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century. 19 (10). Retrieved 9 February 2016.
  30. ^ Collins, Wilkie (1905). The moonstone. University of California Libraries. New York : Century.
  31. ^ "Overdose". IGN. 23 October 2015. Retrieved 30 January 2018.

References edit

  • "Elliotson, John", p.404 in Venn, J. & Venn, J.A. (eds), Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900, Volume 2 (1752-1900), Part 2 (Chalmers-Fytche), Cambridge University Press, (Cambridge), 1944.
  • Anon, "The Elliotson Legend", The British Medical Journal, Vol.2, No.2654, (11 November 1911), pp. 1313–1314.
  • Clarke, J.F., "A Strange Chapter in the History of Medicine", pp. 155–169 in [1874], Clarke, J.F., Autobiographical Recollections of the Medical Profession, J. & A. Churchill, (London,), 1874.
  • Collyer, R.H., Psychography, or, The Embodiment of Thought: With an Analysis of Phreno-magnetism, "Neurology", and Mental Hallucination, Including Rules to Govern and Produce the Magnetic State, Zeiber & Co., (Philadelphia), 1843.
  • Cooter, R.J., "Phrenology and British Alienists, c.1825-1845, Part I: Converts to a Doctrine", Medical History, Vol. 20, No.1, (January 1976), pp. 1–21. doi=10.1017/S0025727300021761
  • Cooter, R.J., "Phrenology and British Alienists, c.1825-1845, Part II: Doctrine and Practice", Medical History, Vol.20, No.2, (April 1976), pp. 135–151. doi=10.1017/S0025727300022195
  • Cooter, R. J., The Cultural Meaning of Popular Science: Phrenology and the Organization of Consent in Nineteenth-Century Britain, Cambridge University Press, (Cambridge), 1984.
  • Gauld, A., A History of Hypnotism, Cambridge University Press, (Cambridge), 1992
  • Gauld, A., "Elliotson, John (1791-1868)", pp. 192–193 in Matthew, H.C.G. & Harrison, B.H. (eds.), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography: In Association with the British Academy: from the Earliest Times to the Year 2000, Oxford University Press, (Oxford), 2004.
  • Godwin, J., The Theosophical Enlightenment, State University of New York Press, (Albany), 1994.
  • Harte, R., Hypnotism and the Doctors, Volume I: Animal Magnetism: Mesmer/De Puysegur, L.N. Fowler & Co., (London), 1902.
  • Harte, R., Hypnotism and the Doctors, Volume II: The Second Commission; Dupotet And Lafontaine; The English School; Braid's Hypnotism; Statuvolism; Pathetism; Electro-Biology, L.N. Fowler & Co., (London), 1903.
  • James, C.D., "Mesmerism: a Prelude to Anaesthesia", Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, Vol.68, No.7, (July 1975), pp. 446–447.
  • Kaplan, F., John Elliotson on Mesmerism, Da Capo Press, (New York), 1982.
  • "Mesmeric Amputation", Medico-Chirurgical Review, and Journal of Practical Medicine, No.75, (1 January 1843), pp. 280–282.
  • Moore, W. (2017). The Mesmerist: The Society Doctor who Held Victorian London Spellbound. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  • Ridgway, E.S., "John Elliotson (1791-1868): A Bitter Enemy of Legitimate Medicine? Part I: Earlier Years and the Introduction to Mesmerism", Journal of Medical Biography, Vol.1, No.4, (November 1993), pp. 191–198.
  • Ridgway, E.S., "John Elliotson (1791-1868): A Bitter Enemy of Legitimate Medicine? Part II: The Mesmeric Scandal and Later Years", Journal of Medical Biography, Vol.2, No.1, (February 1994), pp. 1–7.
  • Rosen, G., "John Elliotson: Physician and Hypnotist", Bulletin of the Institute of the History of Medicine, Vol.4, (1936), pp. 600–603.
  • Rosen, G., "Mesmerism and Surgery: A Strange Chapter in the History of Anesthesia", Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, Vol.1, No.4, (October 1946), pp. 527–550. doi=10.1093/jhmas/1.4.527
  • Ruth, J., "'Gross Humbug' or 'The Language of Truth'? The Case of the Zoist", Victorian Periodicals Review, Vol.32, No.4, (Winter 1999), pp. 299–323.
  • Savage, G.H, The Harveian Oration on Experimental Psychology and Hypnotism Delivered before the Royal College of Physicians of London, October 18, 1909, Henry Frowde, (London), 1909.
  • Schneck, J.M., "John Elliotson, William Makepeace Thackeray, and Doctor Goodenough", International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis, Vol.11, No.2, (April 1963), pp. 122–130. doi=10.1080/00207146308409236
  • Topham, W. & Ward, W.S., Account of a Case of Successful Amputation of the Thigh, During the Mesmeric State, Without the Knowledge of the Patient. Read to the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London on Tuesday 22nd November, 1842, H. Baillière, (London), 1842.
  • Warburton, H., 602. Report from the Select Committee on Medical Education: With the Minutes of Evidence, and Appendix, Part I: Royal College of Physicians, London, House of Commons, (Parliament of Great Britain), 1834.
  • Wheeler, J.M., "Elliotson (John, M.D., FRS)", pp. 120–121 in Wheeler, J.M., A Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers of All Ages and Nations, Progressive Publishing Company, (London), 1889.
  • Winter, A., Mesmerized: Powers of Mind in Victorian Britain, The University of Chicago Press, (Chicago), 1998.
  • Yeates, L.B., James Braid: Surgeon, Gentleman Scientist, and Hypnotist, Ph.D. Dissertation, School of History and Philosophy of Science, Faculty of Arts & Social Sciences, University of New South Wales, January 2013.

External links edit

  • Student Record for John Elliotson -- University of Edinburgh, Centre for Research Collections, Individual Records, Students of Medicine (1762–1826)
  • Elliotson's (1810) M.D. graduation record: "Jo. Elliotson, Anglus. De inflammation" ("John Elliotson, England. [Title of inaugural dissertation]: Inflammation") – University of Edinburgh (1867), p.42.
  • Elliotson's entry in the first edition of the British Medical Directory (1853), The Lancet (1853)
  • Elliotson's (greatly diminished in size) entry in the second edition of the British Medical Directory (1854)—The Lancet (1854)
  • Elliotson's entry in the first edition of The Medical Register (1860)—The General Medical Council (1859). This entry verifies that Elliotson was registered (as of 1 January 1859, the first day of the registration system) as a practitioner under the Medical Act 1858.

john, elliotson, october, 1791, july, 1868, edinburgh, 1810, oxford, 1821, london, 1822, 1829, professor, principles, practice, medicine, university, college, london, 1832, senior, physician, university, college, hospital, 1834, concert, with, william, collins. John Elliotson 29 October 1791 29 July 1868 M D Edinburgh 1810 1 M D Oxford 1821 F R C P London 1822 F R S 1829 professor of the principles and practice of medicine at University College London 1832 senior physician to University College Hospital 1834 2 and in concert with William Collins Engledue M D the co editor of The Zoist John ElliotsonJohn ElliotsonBorn29 October 1791Southwark LondonDied29 July 1868 1868 07 29 aged 76 LondonNationalityBritishAlma materUniversity of EdinburghKnown forMesmerism Phrenology The Zoist introducing stethoscope to United KingdomScientific careerFieldsMedicineElliotson was a prolific and influential author a respected teacher and renowned for his diagnostic skills as a clinician and especially his extremely strong prescriptions his students said that one should let him diagnose but not treat the patient 3 He was always at the leading edge of his profession he was one of the first in Britain to use and promote the stethoscope 4 and one of the first to use acupuncture 5 Contents 1 Education 2 Physical characteristics 3 Phrenology and Mesmerism 3 1 The Okey sisters 3 2 Thomas Wakley 4 The Zoist 5 Harveian Oration 6 Mesmeric Infirmary 7 Literary connections 8 Works 9 In popular culture 10 See also 11 Footnotes 12 References 13 External linksEducation editThe son of the prosperous London chemist and apothecary John Elliotson and Elizabeth Elliotson he was born in Southwark on 29 October 1791 He was a private pupil of the rector of St Saviours Southwark 6 and went on to study medicine at the University of Edinburgh 7 from 1805 to 1810 8 where he was influenced by Thomas Brown M D 1778 1820 and then at Jesus College Cambridge from 1810 to 1821 from both of which institutions he took the degree of M D 9 and subsequently in London at St Thomas and Guy s hospitals In 1831 he was elected professor of the principles and practice of physic in London University now University College London and in 1834 he became physician to University College Hospital 2 10 Physical characteristics editBarely 5 ft 152 cm tall with dark complexion and a very large head 11 he was also lame following an 1828 carriage accident His appearance presented a strong contrast to his intramural enemy Robert Liston 1794 1847 F R C S Edinburgh 1818 F R S 1841 the University College s Professor of Clinical Surgery one of the fastest surgeons of all time on one occasion Liston amputated a leg mid thigh in 25 seconds who was pale skinned and at least 6 ft 2in 188 cm tall Liston was fiercely opposed to Elliotson s contamination of the hospital with his demonstrations of higher states of mesmerism i e rather than its medical applications Despite his unusual physical characteristics Elliotson was greatly admired as a lecturer both for the structured clarity of his lectures and the theatrical liveliness of their delivery Once he began lecturing at the University College his widely respected lectures were extensively reported in the medical press and he published a number of collections of his lectures over the years At his peak he was the first President of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society in 1833 a fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and the Royal Society he had one of the largest private practices in London and at his peak was one of the pre eminent physicians in the entire British Empire Phrenology and Mesmerism editHe became interested in phrenology and was founder and first President of the London Phrenological Society in 1823 His interest in mesmerism had been aroused initially by the demonstrations conducted by Richard Chenevix in 1829 and re awakened by Dupotet de Sennevoy s demonstrations in 1837 The Okey sisters edit This prompted Elliotson to begin experimenting with the Okey sisters Elizabeth 17 and Jane 15 who had been admitted to his hospital in April 1837 for treatment of their epilepsy 12 Their surname was often given as O Key and it was and is widely assumed they were Irish but in fact they came from an old English family Okey comes from the oak tree Elliotson soon began using them as subjects in 1837 he inserted a large seton needle with a skein of silk into it 13 entirely painlessly and without her even being aware that such a penetration had taken place into the neck of Elizabeth Okey the older sister whilst she was mesmerized 14 within the confines of the hospital in public demonstrations of the so called higher states of mesmerism clairvoyance transposition of the senses seeing with the fingers etc thought transmission physical rapport or community of sensation psychical rapport etc Convinced that the elder sister Elizabeth had a talent for medical clairvoyance able to see into the body diagnose illness prescribe treatment and deliver a prognosis Elliotson took her down into the wards in the dead of night and had her both diagnose and prescribe treatments 15 nbsp Anonymous anti Elliotson pamphletThomas Wakley edit In August 1838 Thomas Wakley conducted a series of experiments on the sisters in front of several witnesses His tests focussed on whether the girls could tell mesmerised from unmesmerised water When they failed to do this consistently he denounced them as frauds and proclaimed mesmerism a complete fallacy In fact the experiments did not prove the girls were faking nor did they show that mesmerism was false 16 By the end of 1838 however Elliotson was forced to resign from the hospital The Council of the University College after months of deliberation passed a resolution on 27 December 1838 That the Hospital Committee be instructed to take such steps as they shall deem most advisable to prevent the practice of Mesmerism or Animal Magnetism within the Hospital 17 and Elliotson on reading the contents of the resolution resigned all of his appointments forthwith 18 Wakley did all that he could as editor of The Lancet and as an individual to oppose Elliotson and to place all of his endeavours and enterprises in the worst possible light 19 for example in addition to an extensive range of articles in The Lancet over a number of years there is also an anti Elliotson pseudonymous work attributed to Wakley Undeniable facts concerning the strange practices of Dr Elliotson with his female patients and his medical experiments upon the bodies of E amp J Okey etc 1842 which is held by the British Library 20 and another most likely written by either Wakley or one of his associates held in the collection of the Wellcome Library see right 21 The Zoist editMain article The Zoist Elliotson and William Collins Engledue were the co editors of The Zoist A Journal of Cerebral Physiology amp Mesmerism and Their Applications to Human Welfare an influential British journal devoted to the promotion of the theories and practices and the collection and dissemination of reports of the applications of mesmerism and phrenology and the enterprise of connecting and harmonizing practical science with little understood laws governing the mental structure of man 22 that was published quarterly without a break for fifteen years from March 1843 until January 1856 nbsp John Elliotson in his last yearsThe Zoist was printed on high quality paper and issued quarterly to its subscribers It was also published for a wider readership in annual volumes Well written in crisp scientific English it was devoted to the propagation of information about the applications of phrenology rather than its theories and to the collection storage and dissemination of reports of the therapeutic efficacy of mesmerism with even less treatment of mesmeric theories than of phrenological theories in part it acted as a disciplinary clearing house for information and the experiences of both amateur and professional practitioners and their subjects from all over Great Britain and its colonies and it placed great stress on the well demonstrated usefulness of mesmerism not only in the alleviation of disease and suffering but in the provision of pain free surgery especially amputations 23 Harveian Oration editIn 1846 by this stage bereft of all his institutional affiliations and despite many earnest efforts made to prevent him doing so as the Royal College of Physicians youngest fellow Elliotson delivered the Harveian Oration to the Royal College of Physicians of London 24 in which he controversially spoke of how William Harvey the man whom the Oration was honouring had been forced to fight against the entrenched conservatism of the medical profession and its initial incredulity and resistance to his discoveries and stressed the strength of the analogy with the current equally misguided and ignorant critics of mesmerism In 1846 Elliotson s turn came to deliver the Harveian Oration but as soon as it was known that he had accepted the office he was attacked in the most savage manner in order to prevent his appearing For example the Lancet called him a professional pariah stated that his oration would strike a vital blow at legitimate medicine and would be a black infamy degrading the arms of the College Undeterred by this Elliotson made mesmerism the subject of his address Without referring to the attacks which had been made upon him he simply stated the result of his researches and respectfully invited the College to examine alleged facts of overwhelming interest and importance He exhorted his hearers to study mesmerism calmly and dispassionately and reminded them with more truth than tact that all the greatest discoveries in medical science and the most important improvements in its practice had been opposed by the profession in the most violent and unprincipled manner As examples of scientific discoveries which had been received in this way he cited those of the lacteal vessels the thoracic duct the sexual system of plants the circulation of the blood the sounds of the chest and their relation to the diseases of the heart and lungs and their coverings etc As instances of improvement in practice which had been treated in like manner he referred to the employment of Peruvian bark inoculation and vaccination for small pox the use of mild dressings instead of boiling oil in gun shot wounds the ligature of the bleeding vessels after operation instead of the application of burning pitch or red hot irons etc We should Elliotson said never forget these things nor allow authority conceit habit or the fear of ridicule to make us hostile to truth We should always have before our eyes that memorable passage in Harvey s works True philosophers compelled by the love of truth and wisdom never fancy themselves so wise and full of sense as not to yield to truth from any source and at all times nor are they so narrow minded as to believe any art or science has been handed down in such a state of perfection to us by our predecessors that nothing remains for future industry All this Elliotson said should be borne in mind when considering the alleged facts of mesmerism In his opinion many of these were indisputable for ten years he had shown how mesmerism could prevent pain during surgical operation produce sleep and ease in sickness and even cure many diseases which had been unrelieved by ordinary methods It was the imperative and solemn duty of the profession to carefully and dispassionately examine the subject He therefore earnestly implored them to do so if they cared for truth their own dignity and the good of mankind John Milne Bramwell 1903 25 Mesmeric Infirmary editElliotson continued to provide mesmeric demonstrations from his own residence at 37 Conduit Street Hanover Square which he eventually quit in 1865 In partnership with Engledue he began publishing The Zoist in 1843 and in 1849 founded the London Mesmeric Infirmary As his reputation rapidly declined his once lucrative practice also disappeared and he died penniless in 1868 in the London home of a medical colleague Edmond Sheppard Symes 1805 1881 L S A 1830 M R C S England 1832 M D Aberdeen 1851 15 nbsp William Makepeace Thackeray s dedication to John Elliotson in the novel The History of Pendennis 1850 Elliotson firmly believed that mesmerism and phreno mesmerism could be explained fully in physical terms and of all Elliotson s achievements The Zoist is probably the most useful mainly because it provides a detailed record of a crucial thirteen year period in the development of Victorian psychology Elliotson was a relentless advocate for his truth His articulateness as a writer and his energy as an editor almost triumph over the limitations of his vision and the demands of advocacy The wonder is that in the face of so much criticism Elliotson was able to maintain as much objectivity and professional rigor as he did though clearly the pages of The Zoist need to be filtered carefully to distinguish what is of value from what is sheer advocacy and contentiousness Elliotson made three important contributions to the history of psychology and medicine By stressing the physical basis of mesmeric phenomena and its underlying causes in so far as they had therapeutic potential he demonstrated that mesmerism could be used effectively in illnesses associated with the nervous system and as an anaesthesia in surgical procedures Elliotson s approach to the mind was through the body In addition Elliotson was the first to attempt to detach the operations of mesmerism and the conditions of the procedure from conscious acts of will on the part of the subject and the operator the patient and the doctor In his appreciation of the non rational and non conscious elements within the procedure he gave some direction and encouragement to those forces that were laying the groundwork for Freud and other exponents of the relationship between the unconscious and psychiatric therapy Finally Elliotson s imposing mid century presence and his widely reported mesmeric activities provided both the degree of legitimacy and the intellectual stimulation that encouraged James Braid a Manchester surgeon to develop his theories on the role of suggestion and auto suggestion in mesmerism Fred Kaplan 1982 26 Literary connections editHe was highly regarded in literary circles WM Thackeray s Pendennis was dedicated to his friend Elliotson 2 and the character Dr Goodenough in Thackeray s last novel The Adventures of Philip 1862 was based on Elliotson 27 who had attended Thackeray when suffered a life threatening illness in 1849 28 Elliotson was a friend of Charles Dickens and introduced Dickens to Mesmerism 29 Wilkie Collins a close friend of Dickens described Elliotson as one of the greatest English physiologists and cites an example of state dependent memory from Elliotson s Human Physiology in The Moonstone 30 Works edit1817 Elliotson J trans Blumenbach J F The Institutions of Physiology Institutiones Physiologicae 1820 Elliotson J Numerous Cases Illustrative of the Efficacy of the Hydrocyanic Or Prussic Prussic Acid in Affections of the Stomach etc Longman Hurst Rees Orme and Brown London 1820 1827 Elliotson J The Use of the Sulphate of Copper in Chronic Diarrhoea to which are added some Observations on the use of Acupuncture in Rheumatism Medico Chirurgical Transactions Vol 13 Part 2 1827 pp 451 468 1830 Elliotson J On the Recent Improvements in the Art of Distinguishing the Various Diseases of the Heart etc Longman Rees Orme Brown and Green London 1830 1832 Elliotson J Acupuncture pp 32 34 in Forbes J Tweedie A amp Conolly J eds The Cyclopaedia of Practical Medicine Comprising Treatises on the Nature and Treatment of Diseases Materia Medica and Therapeutics Medical Jurisprudence etc etc Volume I Abd Ele Sherwood Gilbert and Piper London 1832 1835 Elliotson J Human Physiology Longman Rees Orme Brown Green amp Longman London 1835 1839 Elliotson J and Rogers N The Principles and Practice of Medicine etc Joseph Butler London 1839 1843 Elliotson J Numerous Cases of Surgical Operations without Pain in the Mesmeric state with Remarks upon the Opposition of many Members of the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society and others to the Reception of the Inestimable Blessings of Mesmerism H Balliere London 1843 1843 Engledue W C Cerebral Physiology and Materialism with the Result of the Application of Animal Magnetism to the Cerebral Organs An Address delivered to the Phrenological Association in London June 20 1842 by W C Engledue M D With a Letter from Dr Elliotson On Mesmeric Phrenology and Materialism J Watson London 1843 1844 Elliotson J Case of Epilepsy Cured by Mesmerism The Zoist A Journal of Cerebral Physiology amp Mesmerism and Their Applications to Human Welfare Vol 2 No 6 July 1844 pp 194 238 1846 Elliotson J The Harveian Oration Delivered before the Royal College of Physicians London 1846 by John Elliotson M D Cantab F R S Fellow of the College With an English Version and Notes 1846 1855 Elliotson J An Instance of Sleep and Cure by Imagination only The Zoist A Journal of Cerebral Physiology amp Mesmerism and Their Applications to Human Welfare Vol 12 No 48 January 1855 pp 396 403 In popular culture editElliotson is a major antagonist in the game Assassin s Creed Syndicate who performs brutal and fatal experiments on the insane at Lambeth Asylum and is a secret member of the Templar Order He is later killed by the Master Assassin Jacob Frye 31 See also editThe Zoist A Journal of Cerebral Physiology amp Mesmerism and Their Applications to Human WelfareFootnotes edit Elliotson s doctoral dissertation On Inflammation was self published in Edinburgh in 1810 see Elliotson Joannes Dissertatio medica inauguralis de inflammatione communi Abernathy amp Walker Edinburgh 1810 a b c Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Elliotson John Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 9 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 291 Gauld 2004 Rosen 1936 p 601 Elliotson 1827 Elliotson 1832 King s Collections Archive Catalogues ELLIOTSON John 1791 1868 kingscollections org Retrieved 19 September 2020 The University of Edinburgh was also the alma mater of James Braid and James Esdaile Students of Medicine 1762 1826 Individual Record www archives lib ed ac uk Retrieved 19 September 2020 Elliotson John ELT810J A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge For a detailed and comprehensive description of his rather unusual medical education see the transcript of the evidence that Elliotson gave to the House of Commons Select Committee on Medical Education chaired by Henry Warburton on 24 March 1834 at Warburton 1834 pp 104 117 Cooter 1984 p 53 Elliotson s Casebooks UCL archives Elliotson John 1843 Numerous cases of surgical operations without pain in the Mesmeric state with remarks upon the opposition to the perception of the inestimable blessings of Mesmerism H Bailliere This had been witnessed by Surgeon General James Mouat VC KCB M R C S at the time a medical student and clinical clerk under Elliotson see Testimony to the reality of the Mesmeric Phenomena in University College Hospital by Mr James Mouat Army Surgeon The Zoist Vol 7 No 25 April 1849 pp 41 44 a b Clarke 1874 pp 155 169 Anon 1911 Moore 2017 See for example Note by The Zoist The Zoist Volume 10 No 38 July 1852 p 218 Clarke J F James Fernandez 1874 Autobiographical recollections of the medical profession University of California Libraries London J amp A Churchill See for example Winter 1998 pp 93 108 British Library system number 003831461 Wellcome Library reference number 23360069 Anon A full discovery of the strange practices of Dr Elliotson on the bodies of his female patients At his house in Conduit Street Hanover Sq with all the secret experiments he makes upon them and the curious postures they are put into while sitting or standing when awake or Asleep The whole as seen by an eyewitness and now fully divulged E Hancock London 1842 Godwin 1994 p 213 Gauld 1992 pp 205 208 Winter 1998 pp 154 155 Elliotson 1846 Bramwell J M Hypnotism Its History Practice and Theory Grant Richards London 1903 pp 7 8 Kaplan 1982 pp xii xv Anon 1911 Schneck 1963 p 126 Connor Steven 2010 All I Believed is True Dickens under the Influence Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century 19 10 Retrieved 9 February 2016 Collins Wilkie 1905 The moonstone University of California Libraries New York Century Overdose IGN 23 October 2015 Retrieved 30 January 2018 References edit Elliotson John p 404 in Venn J amp Venn J A eds Alumni Cantabrigienses A Biographical List of All Known Students Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge from the Earliest Times to 1900 Volume 2 1752 1900 Part 2 Chalmers Fytche Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1944 Anon The Elliotson Legend The British Medical Journal Vol 2 No 2654 11 November 1911 pp 1313 1314 Clarke J F A Strange Chapter in the History of Medicine pp 155 169 in 1874 Clarke J F Autobiographical Recollections of the Medical Profession J amp A Churchill London 1874 Collyer R H Psychography or The Embodiment of Thought With an Analysis of Phreno magnetism Neurology and Mental Hallucination Including Rules to Govern and Produce the Magnetic State Zeiber amp Co Philadelphia 1843 Cooter R J Phrenology and British Alienists c 1825 1845 Part I Converts to a Doctrine Medical History Vol 20 No 1 January 1976 pp 1 21 doi 10 1017 S0025727300021761 Cooter R J Phrenology and British Alienists c 1825 1845 Part II Doctrine and Practice Medical History Vol 20 No 2 April 1976 pp 135 151 doi 10 1017 S0025727300022195 Cooter R J The Cultural Meaning of Popular Science Phrenology and the Organization of Consent in Nineteenth Century Britain Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1984 Gauld A A History of Hypnotism Cambridge University Press Cambridge 1992 Gauld A Elliotson John 1791 1868 pp 192 193 in Matthew H C G amp Harrison B H eds Oxford Dictionary of National Biography In Association with the British Academy from the Earliest Times to the Year 2000 Oxford University Press Oxford 2004 Godwin J The Theosophical Enlightenment State University of New York Press Albany 1994 Harte R Hypnotism and the Doctors Volume I Animal Magnetism Mesmer De Puysegur L N Fowler amp Co London 1902 Harte R Hypnotism and the Doctors Volume II The Second Commission Dupotet And Lafontaine The English School Braid s Hypnotism Statuvolism Pathetism Electro Biology L N Fowler amp Co London 1903 James C D Mesmerism a Prelude to Anaesthesia Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine Vol 68 No 7 July 1975 pp 446 447 Kaplan F John Elliotson on Mesmerism Da Capo Press New York 1982 Mesmeric Amputation Medico Chirurgical Review and Journal of Practical Medicine No 75 1 January 1843 pp 280 282 Moore W 2017 The Mesmerist The Society Doctor who Held Victorian London Spellbound London Weidenfeld amp Nicolson Ridgway E S John Elliotson 1791 1868 A Bitter Enemy of Legitimate Medicine Part I Earlier Years and the Introduction to Mesmerism Journal of Medical Biography Vol 1 No 4 November 1993 pp 191 198 Ridgway E S John Elliotson 1791 1868 A Bitter Enemy of Legitimate Medicine Part II The Mesmeric Scandal and Later Years Journal of Medical Biography Vol 2 No 1 February 1994 pp 1 7 Rosen G John Elliotson Physician and Hypnotist Bulletin of the Institute of the History of Medicine Vol 4 1936 pp 600 603 Rosen G Mesmerism and Surgery A Strange Chapter in the History of Anesthesia Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences Vol 1 No 4 October 1946 pp 527 550 doi 10 1093 jhmas 1 4 527 Ruth J Gross Humbug or The Language of Truth The Case of the Zoist Victorian Periodicals Review Vol 32 No 4 Winter 1999 pp 299 323 Savage G H The Harveian Oration on Experimental Psychology and Hypnotism Delivered before the Royal College of Physicians of London October 18 1909 Henry Frowde London 1909 Schneck J M John Elliotson William Makepeace Thackeray and Doctor Goodenough International Journal of Clinical and Experimental Hypnosis Vol 11 No 2 April 1963 pp 122 130 doi 10 1080 00207146308409236 Topham W amp Ward W S Account of a Case of Successful Amputation of the Thigh During the Mesmeric State Without the Knowledge of the Patient Read to the Royal Medical and Chirurgical Society of London on Tuesday 22nd November 1842 H Bailliere London 1842 Warburton H 602 Report from the Select Committee on Medical Education With the Minutes of Evidence and Appendix Part I Royal College of Physicians London House of Commons Parliament of Great Britain 1834 Wheeler J M Elliotson John M D FRS pp 120 121 in Wheeler J M A Biographical Dictionary of Freethinkers of All Ages and Nations Progressive Publishing Company London 1889 Winter A Mesmerized Powers of Mind in Victorian Britain The University of Chicago Press Chicago 1998 Yeates L B James Braid Surgeon Gentleman Scientist and Hypnotist Ph D Dissertation School of History and Philosophy of Science Faculty of Arts amp Social Sciences University of New South Wales January 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to John Elliotson Student Record for John Elliotson University of Edinburgh Centre for Research Collections Individual Records Students of Medicine 1762 1826 Elliotson s 1810 M D graduation record Jo Elliotson Anglus De inflammation John Elliotson England Title of inaugural dissertation Inflammation University of Edinburgh 1867 p 42 Elliotson s entry in the first edition of the British Medical Directory 1853 The Lancet 1853 Elliotson s greatly diminished in size entry in the second edition of the British Medical Directory 1854 The Lancet 1854 Elliotson s entry in the first edition of The Medical Register 1860 The General Medical Council 1859 This entry verifies that Elliotson was registered as of 1 January 1859 the first day of the registration system as a practitioner under the Medical Act 1858 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title John Elliotson amp oldid 1180102045, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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