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José Camillo Lisboa

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(Redirected from Julia Rodrigues Lisboa)

José Camillo Lisboa (5 March 1823[1] – 1 May 1897) was a Portuguese-Goan physician and botanist. He was among the first Portuguese Indian physicians and graduated from the inaugural class of the Grant Medical College in Bombay. After graduating in 1851, he worked as a doctor at the Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy Hospital in Bombay. Along with his wife Julia Rodrigues Lisboa, he studied the grasses of western India and published a special volume on the useful plants of the region as part of the Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency in 1886.

Life and work

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Lisboa was born in Assagão, Bardez, son of Antonio Xavier Lisboa. His early education was at home under an uncle who was also a priest. He then studied in the Parish Music School before going to Margao where he studied Portuguese, Latin, mathematics and history. He studied at the 22nd Regiment School in Poona and was among the first eight students to study at the Grant Medical College in Bombay and graduated in 1851. He then worked briefly as a sub-assistant surgeon under John Peet at the Jamsetjee Jeejeebhoy Hospital and Grant Medical College and then began a private practice after rejecting a transfer to Karachi. In 1871 he established the Grémio Lusitano where he gave lectures on the plants of the Bible. He was elected a member of the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) in 1886 and took a keen interest in botany, publishing in the society's journal[2][3] specializing later on the grasses.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10] He also examined floral and climate change in Mahabaleshwar.[11] He married Júlia Rodrigues (1840–1926), daughter of Prof. António Filipe Rodrigues. She too was interested in botany and independently contributed notes on grasses[12][13] to the Journal of the BNHS. In 1886 he also compiled a list of useful plants in the Bombay Presidency classified by usage including a list of plants eaten during famines. This was published as a part of the Gazetteer of Bombay Presidency edited by James Macnabb Campbell after whom Lisboa named a plant Arundinella campbelliana (now considered a synonym of Jansenella griffithiana).[14] After the death of Lisboa at his home in Poona in 1897 following paralysis some months prior,[15] Julia established a Gold Medal at the Bombay University with an award of Rupees 6000 (Lisboa himself established a scholarship in botany at the Grant Medical College in 1882). The Assagão Union founded a school in his memory in 1923[16] called the Dr J C Lisboa School which existed until 1951.[17][18][19][20]

Lisboa was politically outspoken and was a supporter of Padroado[a] favouring the accountability of the King of Portugal and wrote in the bilingual newspaper Abelha de Bombaim. He was also a supporter of the Konkani language and active in the Instituto Luso-Indiano.[16]

Lisboa's medical studies including those on leprosy (where he tried the extracts of Psoralea corylifolia),[22] and the medical properties of opium. He was one of the witnesses who gave evidence to the Indian Hemp Commission[23] where he was in favour of moderate use of opium for relief under certain circumstances.[24] Lisboa served also as a Justice of Peace, had been a member of the Bombay Natural History Society, the Asiatic Society of Bombay, a fellow of the Linnean Society of London (elected 1888, withdrew 1893, re-elected 1894[25]), the Geographical and Medical Society of Lisbon and the Academie Internationale de Geographique Botanique. A road in Assagao is named after him.[20] The grasses Tripogon lisboae and Ischaemum lisboae have been named after Júlia R. Lisboa who corresponded with botanists in England after the death of her husband (her name is sometimes given in the Portuguese form as Donna Lisboa[26]).[b]

Notes

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  1. ^ For more on the schism see Hull (1920)[21]
  2. ^ Note that some works like Clifford & Bostock (2007) incorrectly attribute it to J.C. Lisboa. The Latin ending -ae is feminine.[27]

References

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  1. ^ Abreu, Miguel Vicente de (1874). Noção de alguns filhos distinctos da India Portugueza (in Portuguese). Nova-Goa. pp. 27–28.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^ Lisboa, J.C. (1896). "The poisonous plant Sheula (Amorphophallus commutatus Engler). A corrected description". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 10 (3): 527–530.
  3. ^ Lisboa, J. C. (1887). "Notes on Mahableshwar and other Indian arrowroot yielding plants". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 2: 140–147.
  4. ^ Lisboa, J.C. (1890). "Bombay grasses. Part III". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 5: 337–349.
  5. ^ Lisboa, J.C. (1890). "Bombay grasses. Part II". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 5: 226–232.
  6. ^ Lisboa, J.C. (1890). "List of Bombay grasses. Part I". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 5: 116–131.
  7. ^ Lisboa, J.C. (1891). "Bombay Grasses. Part IV". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 6: 189–219.
  8. ^ Lisboa, J.C. (1892). "Bombay Grasses. Part V." Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 7: 357–390.
  9. ^ Lisboa, J.C. (1893). "Bombay Grasses. Part VI". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 8: 107–119.
  10. ^ Lisboa, J.C. (1892). "Hereditary disease of the branches and leaves of Ficus tsiela". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 7: 76–84.
  11. ^ Parasnis, D.B. (1916). "Short notes on the present altered climate of Mahableshwar and its causes". Mahalabeshwar. Bombay: Lakshmi Art Printing Works. pp. 26–40.
  12. ^ Lisboa, Mrs J.C. (1889). "Short notes on the odoriferous grasses (Andropogons) of India and Ceylon, with a description of a supped new species". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 4: 118–124.
  13. ^ Lisboa, Mrs J. C. (1891). "A List of the Odoriferous Grasses of India, with a Description of a New Species of Andropogon [A. Huegelii, Hack.]". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 6: 64–71.
  14. ^ Lisboa, J.C. (1886). "Useful plants of the Bombay Presidency Gazetter of Bombay Presidency". Gazetteer of the Bombay Presidency. Volume 25. pp. 1–401.
  15. ^ "Obituary: J. C. Lisboa". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 11: 339. 1897.
  16. ^ a b Gonsalves, Shirley Louise (2018). The Luso-Indian Stethoscope. A Community's Participation in the Medical Profession in Nineteenth-Century Bombay. Goa: Goa 1556. pp. 97–103. ISBN 9788193423691.
  17. ^ Costa, Aleixo Manuel da (1997). Dicionário de Literatura Goesa. Vol. 2. pp. 192–194.
  18. ^ Vicente, Filipa Lowndes (2017). "Portuguese-speaking Goan Women Writers in Late Colonial India (1860-1940)". Portuguese Studies Review. 25 (1): 315–345.
  19. ^ Frenz, Margret (2021). "To Be or Not To Be … a Global Citizen: Three doctors, three empires, and one subcontinent". Modern Asian Studies. 55 (4): 1185–1226. doi:10.1017/S0026749X20000256. ISSN 0026-749X. S2CID 228902654.
  20. ^ a b Pandya, Sunil (2018). Medical Education in Western India: Grand Medical College Medical Education and Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy's Hospital. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. pp. 487–491.
  21. ^ Hull, Ernest Reginald (1920). Bombay mission history : with a special study of the padroado question. Bombay: Examiner Press.
  22. ^ "The late Dr J.C. Lisboa". The Lancet. 149 (3851): 1719. 1897. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(01)13384-2.
  23. ^ Indian Hemp Drugs Commission. Volume 7. Evidence of Witnesses from Bombay, Sind, Berar, Ajmere, Coorg, Baluchistan, and Burma. Calcutta: Government of India. 1894. p. vii.
  24. ^ "Medical evidence given before the Royal Commission on Opium". The Indian Medical Record. 6: 212–214. 1894.
  25. ^ "Obituary". Proceedings of the Linnean Society of London. 110: 41.
  26. ^ Bole, P.V.; Almeida, M.R. (1987). "Material for the flora of Mahabaleshwar-8". Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. 84: 372–391.
  27. ^ Clifford, H. Trevor; Bostock, Peter D. (2007). Etymological Dictionary of Grasses. Springer. p. 172. ISBN 978-3-540-38434-2.
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