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Unveiling Diabetes - Historical Milestones in Diabetology


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      His Home in St. Julien Became a Museum

      An Inspiring Relationship

      The lectures of Claude Bernard at the Collège de France were attended by famous people, including the Emperor of Brazil in 1873. Some of them disturbed the scientist, as he once reported himself: “On my right side was a beautiful, dark haired young woman. She was sitting on an elevated seat in the auditorium and therefore I could see her beautiful foot. She was wearing very nicely decorated shoes. On the left foot, the side of the heart, she was wearing a precious anklet with very expensive jewelry embracing the ankle from above. I must confess that this view was breath-taking.” Completely confused, he mixed up “aorta” and “carotis” and forgot half of his lecture.

      In 1869 a young Russian lady, Madame Marie Raffalovich, daughter of wealthy Jewish parents from Odessa, attended one of his lectures at the Collège de France. Some days later this young woman asked for a private meeting and was looking for personal information concerning gynecology. Mrs. Raffalovich was 37 years old when she met the 56-year-old Claude Bernard. At the age of 16 years she had married a rich Russian Banker and lived in Paris. She had a university education and had published about the cultural life and scientific events in Paris in St. Petersburg newspapers. She spoke eight languages fluently and helped Claude Bernard to translate German, Italian, English, and Russian publications. Together, they attended cultural events in Paris and she visited him repeatedly in St. Julien, when Claude Bernard was there for the grape harvesting. Claude Bernard wrote numerous letters from Paris and St. Julien to Madame Raffalovic – 488 of his letters have been preserved and some of them published. Her letters to him were burned as per her request, like Madame von Stein’s hundreds of letters she had addressed to Goethe.

      Claude Bernard’s Book: Lessons on Diabetes

      What Is the Legacy of a Genius?

      Claude Bernard did not only study metabolism. His research into neurology fills two volumes. He also studied the effects of curare and carbon monoxide, even the sensibility of plants. All his scientific work is discussed in detail in the outstanding biography by Mirko D. Grmek [9]. Gremek reports an anecdote about the question “what remains of the ideas of a researcher?” In a conversation between Pasteur and Claude Bernard, Pasteur said that he had the impression that his research had not been well received by the medical community. Claude Bernard replied: “It is quite the opposite. The physicians have already learned a lot from your research on infections. A cannula was introduced into my bladder by two colleagues, an older one and a younger one. Both of them washed their hands – the younger one before and the older one after the operation.”

      The First National Funeral for a Scientist

      On February 10, 1878 Claude Bernard died in his apartment at Rue des Ecoles 40 in Paris. His death was probably as a result of renal failure due to pyelonephritis. The following day, by virtue of a proposal by Gambetta, the parliament decided to organize a national funeral at the expense of the state. On Wednesday February 12, 1878, his obituary filled half of the title page of the Le Figaro newspaper. On February 16, an impressive funeral cortege accompanied Claude Bernard to the Père Lachaise cemetery, where his two sons were also buried.

      Immediately after his death, his friends and students collected money for a bronze monument in front of the Collège de France. Sadly, the bronze monument was melted during the Nazi occupation, but was replaced after the war with a stone one. Another monument can be found in the Claude Bernard University in Lyon. The city of Villefranche-sur-Saône debated the proposal of creating a monument but finally decided against it – it was mentioned that he, Claude Bernard, had been politically close to the Emperor and that he had been divorced. The European Association for the Study of Diabetes honored Claude Bernard by inaugurating a medal and lecture in his name. The first two winners of this lecture were subsequently awarded with the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine.

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