John Stearne (1624–1669). Founder of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland and first Professor of Medicine in Trinity College Dublin
Joseph Harbison

TL;DR
This paper celebrates the life and achievements of John Stearne, a key figure in Irish medical history and founder of the Royal College of Physicians of Ireland.
Contribution
The paper provides a detailed historical account of Stearne's life and his role in the political and academic context of his time.
Findings
John Stearne founded the Fraternity of Physicians, which later became the Royal College of Physicians in Ireland.
Stearne's career and achievements are contextualized within the political turmoil and family influence of 17th-century Ireland.
He held multiple professorships and authored six books, contributing significantly to academia and medicine.
Abstract
John Stearne was the first Regius Professor of Medicine in Trinity College Dublin and founded the Fraternity of Physicians of Trinity Hall that later became the Royal College of Physicians in Ireland. He was born in Ardbraccan, County Meath in 1624 and was a great nephew of the Archbishop of Armagh and renowned scholar James Ussher who was his patron. He entered Trinity College in 1639 and was elected Scholar in 1641, before fleeing Dublin at the outbreak of the Confederate Wars later that year. He moved to Cambridge and studied medicine in Sidney Sussex College. After a short period practicing medicine in Bedfordshire, he returned to Trinity in 1651 and was appointed Professor of Medicine and College medicus. He later also became Professor of Hebrew and Professor of Law. He wrote six books and became a Senior Fellow of the College. In 1654, he established the Fraternity of Physicians…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHistorical Studies of British Isles · Medical History and Innovations
