Niall Ó Glacáin | |
Other Names: | Nellanus Glacanus Nellano Glacan Nellani Ó Glacan Neil O'Glacan |
Birth Place: | Tyrconnell, Ireland |
Death Date: | 1653 |
Death Place: | Bologna, Papal States |
Nationality: | Irish |
Occupation: | Physician |
Years Active: | 1602–1653 |
Niall Ó Glacáin[1] (sometimes anglicised as Nial O'Glacan;[2] – 1653) was an Irish physician and plague doctor who worked to treat victims of bubonic plague outbreaks throughout continental Europe. He was a physician to Hugh Roe O'Donnell and King Louis XIII.
Working as a physician to the prominent O'Donnell clan during the Irish Nine Years' War, he may have followed their chief to Spain after the Siege of Kinsale, where he spent two decades practicing medicine. He moved to France in the 1620s, settling in Toulouse to publish his work Latin: Tractatus de Peste, a treatise on plague treatment. Later in life he took up a post at the University of Bologna as Professor of Medicine.
Ó Glacáin was a pioneer in pathological anatomy, with his work predating that of anatomist Giovanni Battista Morgagni by several decades.
Ó Glacáin was born in Tyrconnell in the latter half of the sixteenth century. Some historians give him a birth date of around 1563, owing to a 1653 engraving that gives his age as 90. Professor Giorgio Scharpes estimated Ó Glacáin to be about 48 when recommending him to the University of Bologna in the 1630s, which would mean he was born in the 1580s. Moreso, The Dictionary of Ulster Biography estimates Ó Glacáin's birthdate as 1590,[3] and other historians estimate it as 1600, though Conall MacCuinneagáin has pointed out that as Ó Glacáin treated Hugh Roe O'Donnell in 1602, these birthdates are unlikely.
Ó Glacáin's medical education was founded on the works of Greek physicians Galen and Hippocrates, whom he refers to in his later works. He probably received his early education from the local Donlevy family, a hereditary family of physicians. At the time, most medical families were attached to a powerful clan – the Donlevys were the personal physicians of Tyrconnell's ruling O'Donnell clan. Conversely, Charles Cameron suggests Ó Glacáin received his medical education abroad.
Owen Ultach MacDonlevy – the last recorded ollam leighis (official physician) of the O'Donnells – died in 1586.[4] By the early 1600s, it is clear Ó Glacáin was working as the O'Donnells' physician.
After the Irish confederacy's defeat at the Battle of Kinsale, clan chief Hugh Roe O'Donnell travelled to Spain to secure reinforcements.[5] Historian Kate Newmann has suggested that Ó Glacáin left Ireland due to his support for O'Donnell. O'Donnell fell ill at Simancas and was treated by Ó Glacáin for a bubonic plague sore at the Spanish court. During this time Ó Glacáin also assisted ill citizens of Madrid – there was a major bubonic plague outbreak in Spain from 1595 to 1602. O'Donnell died at Simancas in 1602, and Ó Glacáin subsequently spent many years practicing medicine in Salamanca. In 1622, he moved to Valencia for two years.
In 1621, Ó Glacáin attended the Irish College in Bordeaux under Archbishop François d'Escoubleau de Sourdis.[6] In July 1625, he graduated from the (later part of the University of Toulouse) with a bachelor's degree of medicine. It is also possible Ó Glacáin attended the Irish College in Toulouse, Bordeaux's sister school.[7]
Around 1628, he worked as a travelling plague doctor, treating victims at local hospitals in towns such as Fons, Figeac, Capdenac, Cajarc, Rouergue and Floyeac. His work was encouraged by the Bishop of Cahors. He had settled in Toulouse in time to treat victims of the plague outbreak of 1628. MacCuinneagáin states that Ó Glacáin "gained high esteem and general consideration because of the devotion which he showed in braving the contagion to succor the sick. He was appointed physician at the Latin: [[Xenodochium|xenodochium pestiferorum]], the plague hospital at Toulouse in 1628". Ó Glacáin became a member of the University of Toulouse's faculty on 31 May 1630, with the title Premier Professor of Medicine.Ó Glacáin also spent time in Paris as both physician and Privy Councillor to King Louis XIII.
By now a respected authority on plague treatment, Ó Glacáin published his most famous work, Latin: Tractatus de Peste, Seu Brevis, Facilis et Experta Methodus Curandi Pestem ('A Treatise on Plague, or A Short, Easy, and Expert Method for the Curing of Plague') at Toulouse in May 1629. It contained his descriptions of the plague and its various effects on different patients such as buboes, rashes, headaches, vomiting and coma. Suggested treatments including bloodletting, the use of enema and laxatives, and the fumigation of miasma. Ó Glacáin describes conducting four post-mortems where he noted the occurrence of petechial haemorrhages which "covered the surface of the victims' lungs and also the swelling of the spleen".
Ó Glacáin eventually moved to Italy. He was "head-hunted" by the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Bologna, which had a tradition of employing very eminent foreign doctors as their Latin: Medicina Sopraordinaria (Professor of Medicine). To this end, the university's senate asked Giorgio Scharpes (Professor of Medicine, 1634–1637) to write a report on Ó Glacáin, whose fame by then spanned all of Europe. Scharpes' reply was as follows:
In 1646, Ó Glacáin became Professor of Medicine at the University of Bologna. He held this office until his death.
During his years in Bologna, Ó Glacáin wrote his final work, Latin: Cursus Medicus ('A Physician's Course'), which was published in three volumes in 1655. The first volume dealt with physiology, the second pathology, and the third – published after his death – on the theory of signs. This final volume dealt with the different diagnosis by doctors, descriptions of diseases, and was overall an introduction to the modern concept of differential diagnosis. Two Irish residents of Bologna, Gregory Fallon and Jesuit Phillip Roche, wrote commendatory verses prefixing the second volume.
Although the details of Ó Glacáin's personal life are almost unknown, many of his associates are referenced in contemporary records. He entertained Bishop of Ferns Nicholas French and Sir Nicholas Plunkett at his home in Bologna, when the latter were on their way to Rome in 1648. In collaboration with them, he wrote eulogistic poems in Latin to Pope Innocent X, titled Latin: Regni Hiberniae ad Sanctissimi Innocenti Pont. Max. Pyramides Encomiasticae. Ó Glacáin himself visited Rome at some point.
In his later work, he mentions another friend, the Franciscan catechist and grammarian Froinsias Ó Maolmhuaidh.[8] Ó Glacáin was also an associate of Irish bishop Peter Talbot and Portuguese physician Gabriel da Fonseca, personal physician to Innocent X. Other friends in Italy include Gerard O'Fearail and John O'Fahy.
Ó Glacáin died in 1653, probably in Bologna.[9] The final volume of Latin: Cursus Medicus begins with his eulogy, as written by Peter von Adrian Brocke, Professor of Eloquence at Lucca: