Jean-Baptiste Joseph Tyrbas de Chamberet
Jean-Baptiste-Joseph-Anne-César Tyrbas de Chamberet (20 September 1779, Limoges – September 1870, Paris) was a French military physician.
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In 1808 he obtained his medical doctorate in Paris with the thesis "Dissertation sur une maladie de la peau désignée sous le nom de prurigo". Following graduation he worked as a military physician in Italy and then in Spain.[1] Under the Bourbon Restoration he became a professor of hygiene and physiology at the military hospital of instruction in Lille and in around 1840 was appointed professor and chief physician at Val-de-Grâce.[2][3]
In 1803 he became a member of the Société anatomique de Paris, and from April 1825 was an adjoint-correspondent to the Académie Nationale de Médecine.[2]
Published works
With Jean Louis Marie Poiret and François-Pierre Chaumeton, he was co-author of "Flore médicale" (medicinal plants).[4] Other significant written efforts by Tyrbas de Chamberet include:
References
- BIUSante Jean-Baptiste Tyrbas de Chamberet (1779-1870) Médecin militaire, acteur et témoin de son temps
- Prosopo Sociétés savantes de France
- "Parts of this paragraph are based on a translation of an equivalent article at the French Wikipedia".
- Biodiversity Heritage Library Flore médicale
- Google Search published works
- Google Search publications