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William Cheselden (/ˈtʃɛsəldən/; 19
October 1688 – 10
April 1752) was an
English surgeon and
teacher of
anatomy and surgery, who was
influential in establishing...
- case was
reported in 1728 by the
surgeon William Cheselden. However,
there is no
evidence that
Cheselden's patient, a boy
named Daniel Dolins,
actually recovered...
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Faculty of
Anaesthetists (until 1988) The
Cheselden Medal was
instituted in 2009 in
honour of
William Cheselden "to
recognise unique achievements in, and...
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Auguste Nélaton (1807–1873),
Henry Thompson (1820–1904) and
William Cheselden (1688–1752). The
latter invented a
technique for
lateral vesical stone...
- It was not
until 1713 that this
movement was re-discovered by
William Cheselden and
subsequently recorded for the
medical community. It was rewritten...
- that his
lifelong friend Martha Blount was his lover. His
friend William Cheselden said,
according to
Joseph Spence, "I
could give a more
particular account...
-
surgeon William Cheselden at St Thomas' Hospital, and by 1727 had
produced a book, An
Account of the
Mechanism of the Eye,
dedicated to
Cheselden.
While his...
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December 2012. Houstoun, Robert;
Cheselden, William; Arbuthnot, John (1723).
Lithotomus castratus; or Mr.
Cheselden's Treatise on the high
operation for...
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Somerby (but the
village of
Burrough on the Hill) that the
surgeon William Cheselden was born. John Major's
daughter Elizabeth, aged 28,
married on Sunday...
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December 2012. Houstoun, Robert;
Cheselden, William; Arbuthnot, John (1723).
Lithotomus castratus; or Mr.
Cheselden's Treatise on the high
operation for...