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Ralph Bathurst

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Ralph Bathurst
Portrait of Bathurst, 1676, by David Loggan.
Born1620 (1620)
Died1704 (aged 83–84)
Alma materTrinity College, University of Oxford
Occupation(s)Theologian, physician
TitleVice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford
Term1673–1776
PredecessorPeter Mews
SuccessorHenry Clerke

Ralph Bathurst, FRS (1620 – 14 June 1704) was an English theologian and physician.

Early life

He was born in Hothorpe, Northamptonshire in 1620 and educated at King Henry VIII School, Coventry.[1]

He graduated with a B.A. degree from Trinity College, Oxford in 1638, where he had a family connection with the President, Ralph Kettell (1563–1643).[2]

Oxford science and medicine

He originally intended a career in the Church of England, and was ordained in 1644, but his prospects were disrupted by the English Civil War, and he turned to medicine. He collaborated with Thomas Willis, and it was to Bathurst that Willis dedicated his first medical publication, the Diatribae Duae of 1659.

Bathurst was active in the intellectual ferment of the time, and very well connected. In the account given by John Wallis of the precursor groups to the Royal Society of London, Bathurst is mentioned as one of the Oxford experimentalists who gathered from 1648–9. Also in that group were Willis, William Petty and Seth Ward.[3] The group expanded in the 1650s when it gathered around John Wilkins of Wadham College, close however to Oliver Cromwell, and then included also Jonathan Goddard, Thomas Millington, Laurence Rooke, and Christopher Wren.[4] Later Robert Boyle joined.

Bathurst belonged also to the overlapping circle of physicians following the tradition of William Harvey, and which included again Willis, George Ent, Walter Charleton, Nathaniel Highmore, and Charles Scarburgh;[5] these were royalists who had attended Charles I of England.[6] In the celebrated case of Anne Greene, who survived a hanging, the physicians intending to dissect the cadaver were Bathurst, Petty, Willis, and Henry Clerke.[7]

He worked in practical medicine under the physician Daniel Whistler (1619–1684). This was during the First Anglo-Dutch War of 1652 to 1654, when Whistler was in charge of wounded naval personnel.[2] He theorised fruitfully in 1654 on respiration, in a dissertation for his higher medical degree, and his ideas were later taken up, by Boyle and John Mayow.[2][8]

Later life

On the English Restoration in 1660 he reverted to a career in the church. There is a story that he had acted as archdeacon and deputy to Robert Skinner, Bishop of Oxford, who was imprisoned by the Parliamentarians.[9] He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1663, and was made President of Trinity College in 1664, where he initiated building work to designs by Christopher Wren, a personal friend.[10] He also swayed Samuel Parker from Presbyterian views to an Anglican outlook.[11]

In 1670, he was Dean of Wells Cathedral. For three years from 1673, he was Vice-Chancellor of the University of Oxford, earning a complimentary reference in a John Dryden poem.[12] John Harris, a Trinity College student in the 1680s, wrote about the intellectual and scientific atmosphere of the college under Bathurst.[13]

A biography was written by Thomas Warton.[citation needed]

Family

He was one of thirteen sons of George Bathurst.[14] This large royalist family suffered greatly in the Civil War, with six of Ralph Bathurst's brothers being killed.[2]

Theodore Bathurst (died 1651), known as a neo-Latin poet, was a nephew.[15] Another nephew was Ralph Bohun (1639–1716), a poet and experimentalist.[16]

References

Template:Research help

  1. ^ "Person Page 11814". thePeerage.com. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  2. ^ a b c d Andrew Pyle (editor), Dictionary of Seventeenth Century British Philosophers (2000), pp. 74–75.
  3. ^ Modern History Sourcebook: Dr. John Wallis: The Origin of The Royal Society, 1645–1662 at the Wayback Machine (archived 29 June 2011). fordham.edu
  4. ^ Jardine, Lisa (2003). The Curious Life of Robert Hooke. p. 69.
  5. ^ anon. "Susan Holder (1627-1688)". Retrieved 17 September 2009.
  6. ^ Jardine, Lisa (2002). On a Grander Scale. p. 54. ISBN 006095910X.
  7. ^ Shaw, Jane (2006). Miracles in Enlightenment England. Yale University Press. pp. 58–. ISBN 978-0-300-11272-6.
  8. ^ Tyacke, Nicholas (1984). The History of the University of Oxford. Vol. Vol IV: Seventeenth-Century Oxford. Oxford University Press, USA. p. 15. ISBN 0199510148. {{cite book}}: |volume= has extra text (help)
  9. ^ Some stories and notes at the Wayback Machine (archived 10 April 2009). ray-jones.org.uk
  10. ^ A Historical Guide at the Wayback Machine (archived 22 March 2009). Trinity College Oxford
  11. ^ Jonathan Bruce Parkin (1999). Science, Religion, and Politics in Restoration England: Richard Cumberland's De Legibus Naturae. Boydell & Brewer Ltd. pp. 37–. ISBN 978-0-86193-241-2. Retrieved 10 May 2012.
  12. ^ "The Poetical Works of John Dryden, Vol II by John Dryden: Epilogue spoken at Oxford by Mrs Marshall". Online-literature.com. 26 January 2007. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  13. ^ Dictionary of Scientific Biography. Chlt.org (1946-01-06). Retrieved on 2012-05-10.
  14. ^ "Trinity College | A History of the County of Oxford: Volume 3 (pp. 238–251)". British-history.ac.uk. 31 December 1948. Retrieved 17 September 2011.
  15. ^ Concise Dictionary of National Biography.
  16. ^ Jardine, On a Grander Scale (2002), p. 240 ISBN 006095910X.

Sources

Academic offices
Preceded by President of Trinity College, Oxford
1664–1704
Succeeded by
Preceded by Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University
1673–1676
Succeeded by