Jacques Coitier
Jacques Coitier (c. 1430 – 22 October 1506) was a French doctor. He was chief physician to Louis XI of France and president of the Chambre des comptes.
Coitier was born at Poligny, Franche-Comté. His name is spelled in several ways, most often Coictier (the spelling used by Victor Hugo in his novel The Hunchback of Notre-Dame), but also Coittier, Cotier, Coytier or Coctier. An analysis of his signatures by Achille Chereau has allowed Coitier to become the standard spelling - this was the name cited most often in medical annals.[1] He died in Paris.
Bibliography
- (in French) Mémoires de Philippe de Commines in Mémoires pour servir à l'histoire de France, Michaud et Poujalat, Paris, 1837
- (in French) Nouvelle Biographie Générale, t11, Firmin Didot, 1855, pp. 86–89
- (in French) Masson et Asselin, Dictionnaire Encyclopédique des Sciences Médicales, t. 18, 1876, pp. 717–718
- (in French) Bulletin de la Société française d'histoire de la médecine, n°11, 1912, pp. 315–322
- (in French) Émile Aron, Louis XI et ses guérisseurs, CLD, 1983
- (in French) Victor Advielle, Discussion historique sur le véritable lieu de naissance de Jacques Coitier, médecin du roi Louis XI, H. Damelet, 1865
- (in French) Achille Chéreau, Jacques Coitier, médecin de Louis XI, roi de France, Mareschal, 1861
gollark: It's somewhat funny that the people saying "no, the existing rules describe it fine" seem to now be perfectly happy with the rules actually being slightly written out now.
gollark: I've mentioned it on the thread, meaning the issue will be ignored until... 2069.
gollark: Lowering standards much?
gollark: They'll probably just say "you know what you did - telling people the rules is pure evil".
gollark: Fairness in action.
References
- Achille Chéreau, Jacques Coitier, médecin de Louis XI, roi de France, Mareschal, 1861
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