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Christopher Girtanner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Portrait Christoph Girtanner 1792

Prof Christopher Girtanner FRSE (1760–1800) was a short-lived but influential Swiss author, physician and chemist. He was also Privy Councillor to the Duke of Saxe-Coburg.

Life

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He was born in St. Gallen in Switzerland on 7 December 1760, the son of Hieronymus Girtanner, a banker and his wife, Barbara Felicitas. He studied variously at St. Gallen, Lausanne, Paris, Edinburgh and London. He received his doctorate (MD) from the University of Göttingen in 1782.

He spent some years in the United Kingdom, and apparently owned a "salt manufactory near Edinburgh" (presumably at Joppa) in 1789.[1] In 1790, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh. His proposers were Daniel Rutherford, Andrew Duncan and John Playfair.[2]

In 1796, he analysed the appearance of syphilis into Europe in the late-fifteenth century.[3] The ongoing debate of his day was as to whether the disease appeared spontaneously in Europe or was brought by the discovery of the Americas.[4]

He died in Göttingen, in what is now part of modern-day Germany on 17 May 1800.

Family

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In 1790 he married Catherina Maria Erdmann.

Publications

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  • Historical Information and Political Remarks concerning the French Revolution, 7 volumes (1792–94)[5]
  • The Antiquity of Syphilis (1796)
  • Observations on the Nature and Cure of Calculus, Sea Scurvy etc. (1797)

References

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  1. ^ Literary and Miscellaneous Memoirs by Joseph Cradock, John Bowyer Nichols 1828, p.309-310
  2. ^ Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 – 2002 (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0-902-198-84-X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 10 July 2016.
  3. ^ Edinburgh Medical and Surgical Journal 1830, p.170
  4. ^ The Philadelphia Journal of the Medical and Physical Sciences vol2 p.229-230, 1821
  5. ^ The Monthly Review 1795