Misplaced Pages

Marie Colinet: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 15:18, 28 November 2017 editCelynnebeaudoin (talk | contribs)41 editsmNo edit summaryTag: Visual edit← Previous edit Revision as of 15:58, 30 November 2017 edit undoCelynnebeaudoin (talk | contribs)41 editsmNo edit summaryTag: Visual editNext edit →
Line 5: Line 5:


==Career== ==Career==
By training, Colinet was a midwife-surgeon who improved the techniques in ] of ] delivery (which had not changed since the days of ]). Aside from being a midwife, Colinet was also an obstetrician and ophthalmologist.<ref name="Schelbert" /> In addition, she assisted her husband in his surgical practice and took care of his patients while he was traveling. She did everything from minor surgery to C-sections. The professional highlight of her career came when she encountered a patient whose sight was being threatened by a sliver of metal.<ref name="León">{{cite book|last=León|first=Vicki|title=Uppity Women of Medieval Times|year=1997|publisher=Conari Press|page=83}}</ref> By training, Colinet was a midwife-surgeon who improved the techniques in ] of ] delivery (which had not changed since the days of ]). Colinet was regarded as the "most famous midwife of Switzerland" and performed the first successful caesarean section in 1603.<ref name=":0" /> Aside from being a midwife, Colinet was also an obstetrician and ophthalmologist.<ref name="Schelbert" /> In addition, she assisted her husband in his surgical practice and took care of his patients while he was traveling. She did everything from minor surgery to C-sections. The professional highlight of her career came when she encountered a patient whose sight was being threatened by a sliver of metal.<ref name="León">{{cite book|last=León|first=Vicki|title=Uppity Women of Medieval Times|year=1997|publisher=Conari Press|page=83}}</ref>


==Contribution== ==Contribution==
In 1624, after her husband had attempted unsuccessfully to extract metal from a patient's eye, she came up with the idea to use a magnet—a technique which worked then and still is in use today. Although her husband gave her full credit for this technique, he often receives full credit for the procedure.<ref name="Alic" /> She used heat to expand and stimulate the uterus in childbirth, performed Caesarian sections, and successfully removed eye splinters.<ref name=Schelbert /> In one especially difficult case of a man with two shattered ribs, she had to open his chest and wire together the fragments of bone. On re-closing the wound, she covered it with a dressing of oil of roses and a plaster of barley flows, powdered roses, and wild pomegranate flowers, mixed with cypress nuts and raw eggs. Then bandaged it with padded splints. After that, she regulated his diet and stayed with him for ten days. The man was well after four weeks.<ref name=Stanley /> Her complex herbal plasters prevented infection and promoted healing.<ref name=Hopkins /> Her husband wrote a detailed description of the procedure in his ''Centuriae'', where he praised her skill as bonesetter and placed an effective dressing containing oil of dressing. <ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/science/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/medical-role-women-women-patients-and-practitioners|title=The Medical Role of Women: Women as Patients and Practitioners - Dictionary definition of The Medical Role of Women: Women as Patients and Practitioners {{!}} Encyclopedia.com: FREE online dictionary|website=www.encyclopedia.com|language=en|access-date=2017-11-28}}</ref> He went on to explicitly mention his wife as inventing this specific procedure, however, it was he who was given credit for her work.<ref>Stanley, Autumn, "Women Hold Up Two-Thirds of the Sky: Notes for a Revised History of Technology". In Hopkins, Patrick D., ed. (1998). , p. 24. Indiana University Press.</ref> In 1624, after her husband had attempted unsuccessfully to extract metal from a patient's eye, she came up with the idea to use a magnet—a technique which worked then and still is in use today. Although her husband gave her full credit for this technique, he often receives full credit for the procedure.<ref name="Alic" /> She used heat to expand and stimulate the uterus in childbirth, performed Caesarian sections, and successfully removed eye splinters.<ref name=Schelbert /> In one especially difficult case of a man with two shattered ribs, she had to open his chest and wire together the fragments of bone. On re-closing the wound, she covered it with a dressing of oil of roses and a plaster of barley flows, powdered roses, and wild pomegranate flowers, mixed with cypress nuts and raw eggs. Then bandaged it with padded splints. After that, she regulated his diet and stayed with him for ten days. The man was well after four weeks.<ref name=Stanley /> Her complex herbal plasters prevented infection and promoted healing.<ref name=Hopkins /> Her husband wrote a detailed description of the procedure in his ''Centuriae'', where he praised her skill as bonesetter and placed an effective dressing containing oil of dressing. <ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.encyclopedia.com/science/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/medical-role-women-women-patients-and-practitioners|title=The Medical Role of Women: Women as Patients and Practitioners - Dictionary definition of The Medical Role of Women: Women as Patients and Practitioners {{!}} Encyclopedia.com: FREE online dictionary|website=www.encyclopedia.com|language=en|access-date=2017-11-28}}</ref> He went on to explicitly mention his wife as inventing this specific procedure, however, it was he who was given credit for her work.<ref>Stanley, Autumn, "Women Hold Up Two-Thirds of the Sky: Notes for a Revised History of Technology". In Hopkins, Patrick D., ed. (1998). , p. 24. Indiana University Press.</ref> Marie Colinet was extremely intelligent and educated. She went on to write two books.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.rp-online.de/nrw/staedte/hilden/sekundarschule-hilden-heisst-nach-marie-colinet-aid-1.6071343|title=Hilden: Sekundarschule Hilden heißt nach 'Marie Colinet'|last=ONLINE|first=RP|website=RP ONLINE|access-date=2017-11-30}}</ref>


==Honors== ==Honors==
Line 14: Line 14:


== Praises == == Praises ==
In 1993, a street in Hilden was named after Marie Colinet. In addition, a school in Hilden has been named after her- Marie-Colinet-Sekundarschule Hilden. This school has been named after Colinet because of her admirable personality and strength as a woman. The schools states that Marie Colinet was a "self-confident woman and a very good role model for students." <ref>{{Cite web|url=http://sekundarschule-hilden.de/index.php?s=1&u=99|title=Marie-Colinet-Sekundarschule Hilden|last=Ernst|first=Marco|website=sekundarschule-hilden.de|access-date=2017-11-28}}</ref> In 1993, a street in Hilden was named after Marie Colinet. In addition, a secondary school in Hilden (since 2016) has been named after her- Marie-Colinet-Sekundarschule Hilden. This school has been named after Colinet because of her admirable personality and strength as a woman. The schools states that Marie Colinet was a "self-confident woman and a very good role model for students." <ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=http://sekundarschule-hilden.de/index.php?s=1&u=99|title=Marie-Colinet-Sekundarschule Hilden|last=Ernst|first=Marco|website=sekundarschule-hilden.de|access-date=2017-11-28}}</ref>


==References== ==References==

Revision as of 15:58, 30 November 2017

Marie Colinet (Fabry) (ca. 1560 - ca. 1640), a midwife and surgeon, introduced the use of heat for dilating and stimulating the uterus during labor, performed caesarian sections successfully, and the first to use a magnet to extract a piece of metal from a patient's eye.

Background

Marie Colinet was born in Geneva, Switzerland in 1560, the daughter of a Swiss printer. Her work spanned the late 16th and early 17th centuries. She was originally a midwife in Geneva. On July 25, 1587, at St. Gervais church in Geneva, she married a surgeon, Wilhelm Fabry (also William Fabry, Guilelmus Fabricius Hildanus, or Fabricius von Hilden, b. June 25, 1560, d. February 15, 1634, often called the "Father of German surgery"). Wilhelm Fabry became Germany's foremost 17th-century surgeon and a prolific author of medical treatises. Her husband taught Colinet surgery, but by his own admission she excelled him. Documents of her whereabouts after the death of her husband have not yet been found. From 1602 to 1610, the Fabrys stationed in Payerne, CT. Vaud, after which they traveled through Switzerland, Holland and the Rhineland, finally in 1615, they settled in Bern, where both were recognized by the award of citizenship. She was the mother of eight children, only one of whom (Johannes, later a surgeon himself) outlived her.

Career

By training, Colinet was a midwife-surgeon who improved the techniques in Germany of Caesarean section delivery (which had not changed since the days of Julius Caesar). Colinet was regarded as the "most famous midwife of Switzerland" and performed the first successful caesarean section in 1603. Aside from being a midwife, Colinet was also an obstetrician and ophthalmologist. In addition, she assisted her husband in his surgical practice and took care of his patients while he was traveling. She did everything from minor surgery to C-sections. The professional highlight of her career came when she encountered a patient whose sight was being threatened by a sliver of metal.

Contribution

In 1624, after her husband had attempted unsuccessfully to extract metal from a patient's eye, she came up with the idea to use a magnet—a technique which worked then and still is in use today. Although her husband gave her full credit for this technique, he often receives full credit for the procedure. She used heat to expand and stimulate the uterus in childbirth, performed Caesarian sections, and successfully removed eye splinters. In one especially difficult case of a man with two shattered ribs, she had to open his chest and wire together the fragments of bone. On re-closing the wound, she covered it with a dressing of oil of roses and a plaster of barley flows, powdered roses, and wild pomegranate flowers, mixed with cypress nuts and raw eggs. Then bandaged it with padded splints. After that, she regulated his diet and stayed with him for ten days. The man was well after four weeks. Her complex herbal plasters prevented infection and promoted healing. Her husband wrote a detailed description of the procedure in his Centuriae, where he praised her skill as bonesetter and placed an effective dressing containing oil of dressing. He went on to explicitly mention his wife as inventing this specific procedure, however, it was he who was given credit for her work. Marie Colinet was extremely intelligent and educated. She went on to write two books.

Honors

- The honorary Parisian citizenship, 1615
- The first to use a magnet to remove fragments of iron or steel from the eye - Mentioned by Judy Chicago in her art work The Dinner Party: Heritage Floor

Praises

In 1993, a street in Hilden was named after Marie Colinet. In addition, a secondary school in Hilden (since 2016) has been named after her- Marie-Colinet-Sekundarschule Hilden. This school has been named after Colinet because of her admirable personality and strength as a woman. The schools states that Marie Colinet was a "self-confident woman and a very good role model for students."

References

  1. ^ Alic, Margaret (1986). Hypatia's Heritage: A History of Women in Science from Antiquity Through the Nineteenth Century. Beacon Press. p. 57.
  2. ^ Stanley, Autumn (1995). Mothers and Daughters of Invention: Notes for a Revised History of Technology. Rutgers University Press. p. 102.
  3. ^ Schelbert, Leo (2007). Historical Dictionary of Switzerland. Scarecrow Press. p. 107.
  4. ^ Hopkins, Patrick D. Sex/machine: Readings in Culture, Gender, and Technology.
  5. ^ Ernst, Marco. "Marie-Colinet-Sekundarschule Hilden". sekundarschule-hilden.de. Retrieved 2017-11-28.
  6. León, Vicki (1997). Uppity Women of Medieval Times. Conari Press. p. 83.
  7. "The Medical Role of Women: Women as Patients and Practitioners - Dictionary definition of The Medical Role of Women: Women as Patients and Practitioners | Encyclopedia.com: FREE online dictionary". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2017-11-28.
  8. Stanley, Autumn, "Women Hold Up Two-Thirds of the Sky: Notes for a Revised History of Technology". In Hopkins, Patrick D., ed. (1998). Sex/Machine: Readings in Culture, Gender, and Technology, p. 24. Indiana University Press.
  9. ONLINE, RP. "Hilden: Sekundarschule Hilden heißt nach 'Marie Colinet'". RP ONLINE. Retrieved 2017-11-30.
  10. "Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art: The Dinner Party: Heritage Floor". Brookyln Museum. Retrieved 5 December 2013.
Categories: