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Transactions of the Medical Society of the College of Physicians

  • Part III. Medical Miscellany
  • Reports, Retrospects, and Scientific Intelligence
  • Published:
Dublin Quarterly Journal of Medical Science

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Reference

  1. Notes of a Case of Recovery from Traumatic (?) Tetanus. ByS. M. M’Swiney, M.D., Physician to Jervis-street Hospital.

Reference

  1. Memoir of Sir Patrick Dun (Knt.), M.D., sometime President of the King and Queen’s College of Physicians in Ireland; including his Will, his Deed for Constituting a Professor of Physic; and Several Important Records concerning the Profession of Physic in Ireland, never before published. ByT. W. Belcher, M.D., Dublin; B.M. and M.A. Oxon. and Dublin; Fellow and Censor of the King and Queen’s Coolege of Physicians, &c.

  2. For May, 1865.

References

  1. “Of which family was the famous Duns Scotus.”-Nisbet’s Heraldry, 1722.

References

  1. Memoir of James Young, &c.,supra cit. NoteG., p. xii.

  2. See Charter of Charles II., in my Memoir of Dr. Stearne.

  3. Charles Willoughby, or “C. Willughby,” as he signed himself in some letters of his which I have seen, was one of the Fellows of the College of Physicians, nominated in the Charter of 1667, and also in the charter of 1692. He was a physician of note in Dublin, and died in 1694. He left his library to T.C.D.

References

  1. Register of the King and Queen’s College of Physicians in Ireland, &c, 1866. Pp, 101, 102. In this book I have given all the authorities for the above statements, so that they need not be here repeated. See Preface to Appendix, p. 99.

  2. For a full account of this notable Society, the first of the kind in Ireland, see Mr. (now Sir William) Wilde’s Contributions to the History of Medicine in Ireland. Dub., 1846 (reprinted from Dub. Quart. Journ. of Medical Science, Feb., 1846). In this Society Dun appears to have made powerful friends.

  3. Memoir of Sir Patrick Dun. Dublin Quarterly Journal of Medical Science, Vol. ii., 1846, p. 290.

  4. See my Memoir of Dr. Stearne, p. 38.

Reference

  1. See Register of the College of Physicians for 1866, p. 26.

Reference

  1. Dr. Osborne in his “Annals”supr. cit., says that Dun was State Physician; but Dr. A. Smith in his letter, now in the Archives of the College of Physicians, states that that office did not exist until 1725.

Reference

  1. Richard Butler, Earl of Arran, second son of James Duke of Ormond.

References

  1. Wexford water, a chalybeate. Fashionable invalids resorted to the wells in Dun’s time, and for many years after. See Rutty on Mineral Waters, p. 143. Dublin, 1757.

References

  1. Wife of Sir John Castleton, Lord Mayor of Dublin in 1686.

References

  1. See Harris’s Ware.

  2. Principal Secretary of State for Ireland. Obiit. 1702. Ancestor of Viscount Southwell.

Reference

  1. Journals of the Irish House of Commons, 10th October, 1692 (Vol. ii., p. 11).

References

  1. App. to Journals, p. cciii.

  2. Thomas Margetson, one of the Fellows nominated in the Charter of 1667. For an account of him see “Monk’s Roll of R. Coll. Phys.” London, Vol. i.

References

  1. See “Munk’s Roll,”supr. cit.

References

  1. Chosen Fellow about 1684; and nominated in the Charter of 1693. Obiit, 1724.

References

  1. So far as apothecaries, druggists, &c, are concerned, this power was enlarged and confirmed by 9 Geo. II. cap. 10, which, after several re-enactments, was transformed into Lucas’s Act, still in force. For the provisions of this, see Register K. and Q.C., P. 1866, p. 11.

  2. Confirmed by Lucas’s Act.-See Note to Clause XXI.

  3. See Note to Clause XX.

  4. See Note to Clause XX.

  5. See Note to Clause XX.

References

  1. D’Olins’ book, described on p. 28 of my memoir of Stearne; and “No. 7 Old Accounts,” supr.cit.

Reference

  1. “Dr. Gwythers, a Physician and Fellow (probably of Coll. of Physicians), brought over Frogs in 1692 from England, which were first in the ditches of the Coll. Park. See Swift’s Works, note Tatler, Vol. iv., page 206.” Barrett MS. Miscells. Papers, No. 7.

References

  1. “In Summer, 1843, the writer of this note, accomponied by a gentleman connected officially with Dun’s Hospital, having been furnished with the requisite permission from the parochial authorities of St. Michan’s, made an unsuccessful search for the bodies of Sir Patrick and Lady Dun, in the vault stated to have been purchased by the deceased knight for his own interment and that of his wife, and especially ordered by his will to have been closed; a direction which was found to have been entirely neglected; so ignorant, indeed, on this topic, were the persons in charge of the church, &c, that it was only on referring back to the church books in the years in which Sir Patrick and Lady Dun had respectively died, that it was made apparent to the parish officers of St. Michan’s that the couple in question had been interred below the church.”-“A Short Memoir of James Young, &c. ” (op. supr, cit.) note G., p. xii.

  2. Book of Electors Proceedings.

References

  1. Vol. xix. of Journals.

References

  1. See notes to the will.

  2. Memoir of James Young, &c.-Note G.

References

  1. See Report on certain Charitable Establishments in the City of Dublin, which received Aid from Parliament. Dublin, printed by Grierson in 1809.

References

  1. This first appeared in the Dublin Quarterly Journal in 1846.

References

  1. See Dr. Moore (W. D.) “On the History of Pharmacy In Ireland” (Dab. Qu. Journ., Aug., 1848). This is one of the most interesting of Dr. Moore’s many and valuable papers.

  2. Sec. 3.

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Beatty Transactions of the Medical Society of the College of Physicians. Dub.Quart.J.Med.Sci. 42, 210–293 (1866). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02947419

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