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More Information About Thomas Muffet

Thomas Muffet
Title Page of Theatrum Insectorum (Theater of Insects)
Title Page of Theatrum Insectorum (Theater of Insects)
Born 1553
Shoreditch, London, England
Died 5 June 1604
Bulbridge Farm, Wilton, Wiltshire
Nationality English
Fields Natural Philosophy, Medicine
Alma mater Trinity College, Cambridge
Known for Insects in Medicine
Religious stance Puritanism

Thomas Muffet (1553 - 5 June 1604) also Moufet, Moffet was an English naturalist and physician. He is best known for his Puritan beliefs, his study of insects in regards to medicine (particularly spiders), his support of the Paracelsian system of medicine, and his emphasis on the importance of experience over reputation in the field of medicine.

Contents

Biography

Early life and education

Thomas Muffet was born in 1553 to Thomas Moffet in Shoreditch, London. From the ages 8 to 16 years, Muffet attended the Merchant Taylor's School. The following year, in May 1569, he entered Trinity College at Cambridge. He, however, only stayed there for two and a half years. In October of 1572, Muffet transferred to Gonville Hall. He continued his education there until his graduation the following year, in 1573, when he received his Bachelor Degree.[1] Afterward, Muffet studied medicine with Thomas Lorkin and John Caius. Three years later, he began his Master's program at Trinity College, at which point he was expelled from Gonville Hall. In Spring 1578 Muffet boarded with Felix Platter, chief physician of Basel, where he adopted the Paracelsian system of Medicine.[2] In 1579, Muffet was awarded his MD from Basel with a censored version of his thesis, entitled De amodinis medicamentis (1578).

Later life and post-graduate work

The year after receiving his MD, in 1580, Thomas Muffet studied silkworm anatomy in Italy before finally returning to England. That December, Muffet married his first wife, Jane, in St. Mary Colechurch, London. Two years later, he was recognized as a qualified physician by the College of Physicians in London. This was not expected, as Muffet was a strong advocate for the Paracelsian system of medicine, which was not widely respected by the medical community. The same year, Muffet met both Tycho Brahe and Petrus Severinus, though there is no evidence as to either's intellectual influence upon him. Two years later, in 1584, Muffet finished his De jure et praestantia chemicorum medicamentorum. This document is said to have anticipated Bacon's emphasis on the advancement of learning. That same year, Muffet wrote a letter attacking the London College of Physicians for Papist influences through the lense of his own Puritan beliefs. The following year, however, he was admitted to the College of Physicians, becoming a fellow in February 1588. Later in 1588, Muffet published his Nosomantica Hippocratea, advocating support for the work and writings of Hippocrates. Nine years later, in October 1597, Muffet was elected as a member of Parliament of Wilton. Three years later, in 1600, Muffet's wife, Jane, died. He married Catherine Brown that same year. Four years later, on June 5, 1604, Thomas Muffet died at the Bulbridge Farm, in Wilton, Wiltshire.

Scientific contributions

Insects

Thomas Muffet first studied silkworms while working in Italy, beginning his continued fascination with arthropods in general, particularly spiders. He is most well known for editing and expanding the work Theatrum Insectorum (Theater of Insects), an illustrated guide to the classification and lives of insects. Although he is popularly believed to have authored it, he merely inherited and furthered its progress toward publication, which would not occur until thirty years after his death. The prime reason it was published posthumously was that the English market for books on natural science was weak at the time. It appears that it was ready for the press in 1589 or 1590. The original title page (unused) is dated 1589. His negotiations with printers in The Hague failed in 1590. The original illustrations were given up as too expensive and replaced with the wood cuts that appear in the 1634 edition. There is the possibility that the same work appears under the name of Théodore Turquet de Mayerne (b. Geneva, Switzerland, 1573 - d. Chelsea, England, 1655), published in the same year, 1634. Only the introduction of this edition, however, is believed to have been written by de Mayerne.[3]

Good health and nutrition

Muffet's work in nutrition was collected in his book Health's Improvement which was designed more for the layman than for contemporary medical professionals. This work is the first list of British wildfowl, recognizing for the first time the migratory habits of many of them. This book was published even later than Theatrum Insectorum, not until 1655, in an edition edited by Christopher Bennet. Robert Lovell's Panzoologia is supposedly indebted[who?] to Muffet's descriptions of birds from Health's improvement and of insects from Theatrum Insectorum.

Nursery rhyme connection

It has been suggested that Muffet is the subject of the nursery rhyme 'Little Miss Muffet', which, it is argued refers to an incident with one of his step-children. Although the name and subject fit the verse, there is no clear evidence of a connection and the verse was only printed in 1805.[4]

Notes

  1. ^ Muffet, Thomas in Venn, J. & J. A., Alumni Cantabrigienses, Cambridge University Press, 10 vols, 1922–1958.
  2. ^ American Council of Learned Societies, Concise dictionary of scientific biography, Scribner's, 2000, ISBN 9780684806310, p. 612.
  3. ^ Matthew, H. C. G. and Brian Howard Harrison, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004, vol. 38, ISBN 9780198613886, p. 54
  4. ^ I. Opie and P. Opie, The Oxford Dictionary of Nursery Rhymes (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1951, 2nd edn., 1997), pp. 323-4.

Sources

  • Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee, Eds. Dictionary of National Biography (London: Oxford University Press, 1922)
  • Charles C. Gillispie, Ed. Dictionary of Scientific Biography (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1974)
  • Margaret Pelling, Medical Conflicts in Early Modern London (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2003)

External links

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