- John (Jean)
Misaubin (1673 – 20
April 1734) was an 18th-century
Huguenot French and
British physician and "quack." He was born in Mussidan, in the Dordogne...
-
doctor John
Misaubin beside the
dying body of
their patient, Moll Hackabout. The
contrast between Rock (German,
short and fat) and
Misaubin (French, tall...
- Jean
Misaubin on the
right (white hair)
argue over
their medical methods,
which appear to be a
choice of
bleeding (Rock) and
cupping (
Misaubin). A woman...
- the
jurisdiction of the City
trade guilds.
Huguenot preacher:
Jacques Misaubin (left) was
pastor of a
French church in
Spitalfields — the only locality...
- Day M****acre.
Daniel Peter Layard (1721–1802),
doctor and midwife. John
Misaubin, French-born
British physician Lucie Odier (1886–1984), nurse,
member of...
- of A Harlot's
Progress where he is seen
arguing over
treatments with Dr
Misaubin while Moll
Hackabout dies
unattended in the corner.
Hogarth revisited Morning...
-
Martha (Marthe)
married another Huguenot apothecary in London, John (Jean)
Misaubin, in 1709, who also had
premises on St. Martin's Lane and was
famously depicted...
- figure, and
there is a
connection between Gregory and the real life John
Misaubin, of whom
Fielding dedicates The Mock Doctor. However, the wife and husband...
-
hefty markup. For
those suffering from syphilis, she
supplied Dr. Jean
Misaubin's ****le.
According to the
Nocturnal Revels, her
customers included "Prince...