Sir William Withey Gull RCP Museum


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14655833 10.1007/BF03339960 On Friday, October 24, 1873, at a meeting of the Clinical Society of London, Sir William Gull achieved a coup de maitre by delivering two seminal reports. The first was called, "Anorexia Nervosa, (Apepsia Hysterica, Anorexia Hysterica)". The second was entitled, "On a Cretinoid State supervening in Adult Life in Women."


NPG x16941; Sir William Withey Gull, 1st Bt Portrait National

Sir William Withey Gull (1816-1890) Eur Neurol. 2006;55(1):53-6. doi: 10.1159/000091430. Author J M S Pearce 1. William Gull, a man of humble origins, became one of the outstanding, polymath physicians of the 19th century, and physician to Queen Victoria. Among several important and original contributions, this paper summarises his work on.


Sir William Withey Gull. Photograph by the London Stereoscopic

Sir William Gull, also known as Jack the Ripper, is the main antagonist in the IDW comic book From Hell and its 2001 film adaptation of the same name. He was a renowned surgeon and physician ordinary to the Royal Family, especially trusted by Queen Victoria. As a member of the Freemasons he considered it his duty to the crown to kill the five prostitutes who were aware that Prince Albert.


NPG x134639; Sir William Withey Gull, 1st Bt Portrait National

A series of murders that took place in the East End of London from August to November 1888 was blamed on an unidentified assailant who was nicknamed Jack the Ripper. Since that time, the identity of the killer or killers has been widely debated, and over 100 suspects have been named.


Sir William Withey Gull RCP Museum

His interesting life and his rise from humble origins and poverty to riches and fame has been subject of many monographs, including one titled Sir William Withey Gull (1816-1890) by Dr. JMS Pearce, a frequent contributor to Hektoen International. Reference: JMS Pearce: Sir William Withey Gull (1816-1890). Eur Neurol 2006;55:53-56.


Sir William Withey Gull physician to Her Majesty Queen Victoria

Sir William Withey Gull (1816-1890) The year 2016 is the bicentenary of Sir William Withey Gull's birth, a baronet and a court physician of the Prince of Wales and Queen Victoria, and also an outstanding clinician. Gull was the first to describe anorexia nervosa. He also conducted studies on the spinal cord and helped to expand the state of.


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Sir William Withey Gull, 1st Baronet (born Dec. 31, 1816, Colchester, Essex, Eng.—died Jan. 29, 1890, London) leading English physician of his time, lecturer and physician at Guy's Hospital, London, and an outstanding clinical teacher.


Sir William Withey Gull. Photogravure by Duclaud after Elliot & Fry

The birth of William Gull took place aboard a barge, "The Dove," owned by his father John Gull and temporarily moored in Colchester, Essex. The mother, Elizabeth Chilver, was 40 years at the time. William was their eighth and last child; two sibs died in infancy. When William was 10 years old his father died of cholera; the mother, a.


Sir William Gull Jack the Ripper Suspect

Sir William Withey Gull (1816-1890) In 1838 he passed his entrance exams to the University of London. Three years later he received his Bachelor of Medicine degree. In 1846 he became a physician and received a gold medal for his academic results. He lectured on physiology and comparative anatomy at Guy's Hospital.


William Withy Gull , the first Bart physician and Royal physician to

Jack the Ripper, pseudonymous murderer of at least five women in or near the Whitechapel district of London 's East End between August and November 1888. The case is one of the most famous unsolved mysteries of English crime. the discovery of one of Jack the Ripper's victims


Sir William Withey Gull. Coloured lithograph. Collection

William W. Gull was born on 31 December 1816 to Elizabeth Chilver and John Gull in Colchester, England. His father was a barge and wharf owner who died of Cholera in 1827, leaving Gull's mother to raise their three sons and three daughters.


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Sir William Withey Gull's court dress. Gull was born in Colchester on 31 December 1816. His father was a barge owner and wharfinger and he was the youngest of 8 children. In a period in which the privileged career of a physician was typically restricted to the well connected, Gull followed an unusual path into medicine.


NPG x16061; Sir (William) Cameron Gull, 2nd Bt Portrait National

Sir William Withey Gull, 1st Baronet (31 December 1816 - 29 January 1890) was an English physician. Of modest family origins, he established a lucrative private practice and served as Governor of Guy's Hospital, Fullerian Professor of Physiology and President of the Clinical Society.


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Sir William Withey Gull. View larger image. 1816-1890 Vol IV Pg 50 b.31 December 1816 d.29 January 1890 MD Lond Hon DCL Oxon Hon LLD Cantab Edin FRCP(1848) FRS(1869) William Gull was born at Colchester, but spent most of his boyhood at Thorpe-le-Soken, Essex, where his father John Gull was a barge-owner and wharfinger..


NPG Ax38686; Sir William Withey Gull, 1st Bt Portrait National

In the 1970s Sir William was named as a suspect in the 'Jack the Ripper' murders of 1888. The royal and masonic associations of which he was so proud were the reason his name was linked to the Whitechapel murders. Sir William Gull's origins were humble. He was born on a barge in Colchester the youngest of eight children and raised at.


First recorded accounts of the clinical features of adult

Sir William Withey Gull (1816-1890) Subject Area: Neurology and Neuroscience. J.M.S. Pearce. J.M.S. Pearce. William Gull, a man of humble origins, became one of the outstanding, polymath physicians of the 19th century, and physician to Queen Victoria. Among several important and original contributions, this paper summarises his work on.