Alessandro Riberi

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Alessandro Riberi
Alessandro Riberi's bust in Turin
Born(1794-04-24)24 April 1794
Stroppo, Italy
Died18 November 1861(1861-11-18) (aged 67)
Cuneo, Italy
NationalityItalian
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine, politics

Alessandro Riberi (Stroppo, 24 April 1794 – Cuneo, 18 November 1861) was a surgeon, physician, academic and Italian politician. He was considered to be the most distinguished Italian physician of his time.[1] He founded the Italian army medical corps.[2]

Biography

Alessandro Riberi was born on 24 April 1794 in Stroppo. He graduated at the University of Turin in Surgery in 1815 and then in Medicine at the University of Genoa in 1817. In 1820 he became assistant in the clinic of San Giovanni Hospital. In 1822 he was appointed assistant surgeon and anatomic engraver in the same hospital. In the same year he was named major surgeon by King Charles Felix. In 1826 he became operative surgery and obstetrics professor and then he founded the Laboratory of Anatomy and Surgery. When Charles Albert became the King of Sardinia in 1831, Riberi was appointed surgeon of the Royal House.

In 1843 he was named president of the Major Military Council of Health and he founded the Giornale di Medicina Militare.

Italian Senate. In 1848 he became counselor of the king and then member of the Superior Council of Education. In 1849 he went to Oporto to cure his dying friend Charles Albert.[5] He was a member of the Superior Council of Health, board of directors of the clinic of San Giovanni Hospital, the Work of Motherhood Administration and of Charity General Hospice in Turin. He was also a member of the French Académie nationale de médecine, the St. Petersburg Imperial Medical and Surgical Academy, the Accademia Fisio-Medico-Statistica di Milano, Marsiglia Academic Society of Medicine, and the Barcelona and Lisbon Medical Societies. He was president of the faculty of Medicine and Surgery of the University of Turin. He was a skillful surgeon. Riberi's students could admire his safety, his calm, his foresight and his orderliness during surgical operations.[6] In 1861 he tried to treat in vain Camillo Benso, Count of Cavour
.

He never married.[7] In the last years of his life he opened a pathological museum in San Giovanni Hospital in which he had been surgeon for thirty-five years. He renounced his salary to improve the hospital. He died in 1861 as a result of entero rheumatic peritonitis. He is buried in the Monumental Cemetery of Turin.

Selected works

Riberi was a prolific writer.[8]

Some of his treatises have been digitized, including:

Sulla cancrena contagiosa; o, Nosocomiale con alcune cenni sopra una risipola contagiosa (1820)

Trattato di blefarottalmo-terapia operativa (1836)

Dei seni e delle fistole in genere e delle principali malattie delle vie lagrimali colle operazioni che le ragguardano (1832)

References

  1. ^ Deaths. The Medical times and gazette. 1861. p. 570.
  2. ^
    PMID 14860571
    .
  3. ^ Mario Umberto Dianzani, Excursus sulla storia della Facoltà di Medicina, Biblioteca Centralizzata di Medicina e Chirurgia – Polo biologico (Sito Università Degli studi di Torino Archived 25 July 2014 at the Wayback Machine)
  4. ^ Bruno P. Pieroni, Sanita: nuovo potere , Fatti e personaggi degli ultimi 30 anni raccontati da un inviato nel mondo della salute, Springer-Verlag, Milano 2004, p.77 (on line).
  5. ^ Atti della reale accademia di Medicina di Torino, Vol. V, Tipografia C. Favale e Compagnia, Torino 1869, pp.218–220 (on line).
  6. ^ Gazzetta medica italiana. Province Sarde, Anno XII, Serie II, Vol. XI, Tipografia di Gaetano Biancardi, Torino 1861, p.380 (on line).
  7. ^ Death of Professor Riberi. The Lancet. 7 December 1861. p. 561.
  8. PMID 30164717
    .