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BARON
CLEMENS MARIA FRANZ VON BOENNINGHAUSEN (1785-1864)
Clemens Maria Franz Baron von Boenninghausen was one of the
closest follower and friend of Hahnemann. He was born in
Netherlands on 12 March 1785, on the ancestral estate of
Heringhaven in Oberyssel. He was the son of Ludwig Ernest von
Boenninghausen and Theresia. He was a Baron by inheritance, a
lawyer by profession and an agriculturist by inclination.
In 1824 he became Director of the Botanical Gardens of Munster,
retaining this position for several years. He came to be known
as “Sage of Munster”.
In autumn of 1827 he suffered from pulmonary purulent
tuberculosis. His health continued to decline until the spring
of 1828, when all hope of his recovery was given up. At this
time he wrote a letter to his close friend, Dr. August Weihe,
who was the first homoeopathic physician in the province of
Rhineland and Westphalia, though Boenninghausen was ignorant of
this fact. Weihe was deeply moved by the news and replied to
Boenninghausen's letter immediately, requesting a detailed
account of his symptoms and expressing the hope that he might be
able to save a friend whom he valued so highly. In response to
the reply that Boenninghausen sent to this letter, Weihe
prescribed ‘Pulsatilla’, which Boenninghausen took, following
also the course of advice that Weihe gave him regarding hygienic
measures. Boenninghausen's recovery was gradual but constant, so
that by the end of the summer he was considered as cured.
This event transformed Boenninghausen into a firm
believer in Homœopathy
From 1830 Boenninghausen was in close touch with Hahnemann,
until the end of Hahnemann's life. His literary work was
hampered by the permission to practice freely, and he did not
publish his books as frequently after that event, although he
spent much time at that labor.
Of his seven
sons the two eldest chose homoeopathy as their profession, which
was a great joy to him. The elder of these sons later went to
Paris where he married the adopted daughter of Hahnemann's
widow. He lived with Madame Hahnemann and her daughter, and had
access to Hahnemann's library and manuscripts.
CONTRIBUTIONS
• The Cure of Cholera and Its Preventatives, 1831
• Repertory of the Antipsoric Medicines, with a preface by
Hahnemann, 1932
• Summary View of the Chief Sphere of Operation of the
Antipsoric Remedies and of their Characteristic Peculiarities,
as an Appendix to their Repertory, 1833
• An Attempt at a Homoeopathic Therapy of Intermittent Fever,
1833
• Contributions to a Knowledge of the Peculiarities of
Homoeopathic Remedies, 1833
• Homoeopathic Diet and a Complete Image of a Disease, 1833
• Homoeopathy, a Manual for the Non-Medical Public, 1834
• Repertory of the Medicines which are not Antipsoric, 1935
• Attempt at Showing the Relative Kinship of Homoeopathic
Medicines, 1836
• Therapeutic Manual for Homoeopathic Physicians, for use at the
sickbed and in the study of the Materia Medica Pura, 1846
• Brief Instructions for Non-Physicians as to the Prevention and
Cure of Cholera, 1849
• The Two Sides of the Human Body and Relationships.
Homoeopathic Studies, 1853
• The Homoeopathic Domestic Physician in Brief, Therapeutic
Diagnoses – An Attempt, 1853
• The Homoeopathic Treatment of Whooping Cough in its Various
Forms, 1860
• The Aphorisms of Hippocrates, with Notes by a Homoeopath, 1863
• Attempt at a Homœopathic Therapy of Intermittent and Other
Fevers, especially for would be homoeopaths – Second augmented
and revised edition. Part 1. The Pyrexy, 1864
Boenninghausen’s Classics include his Classification of
characteristic symptoms and the compilation of the repertory of
antipsoric remedies. He classified characteristic symptoms into
Quis, Quid, Ubi, Quibus auxilus, Cur, Quomodo and Quando.
CONSTANTINE HERING
(1800-1880)
Dr. Constantine Hering, the "father" of homoeopathy in America,
was born on the midnight of January 1, 1800 in the town of
Oschatz in Saxony (now in Eastern Germany). He grew up in a
religious household.
Conversion to Homoeopathy
In 1817 he attended the Surgical Academy of Dresden for three
years and from 1820 he studied medicine at Leipzig University.
While at Leipzig he was the student-assistant of Dr. Henrich
Robbi, an antagonist of homoeopathy. Dr. Robbi was a critic of
Hahnemann and like other physicians ridiculed Homoeopathy and
Hahnemann.
In the winter of 1824, Hering received a dissecting wound. The
forefinger of his right hand was cut that became inflamed,
infected and gangrenous. He was advised to have his hand
amputated. Kummer, a disciple of Hahnemann prescribed Arsenic
album and he recovered completely. Hering was surprised and his
interest in homoeopathy grew. He contacted Hahnemann for further
instructions and light on homoeopathy.
Instead of writing the negative review, he immediately quit the
job and left the University to become one of the most
influential proponents of homeopathy of all time. Hering
graduated from the University of Leipzig in 1826. In his
doctoral thesis titled, "De Medicina Futura", Hering declared
himself to be a homoeopath.
In the years of 1827-1833, Hering was sent to Paramaribo,
Surinam by the King where he conducted Zoological and Botanical
research for his government. Soon after, the King attempted to
prevent Hering from publishing his homeopathic findings, but
instead, Hering resigned the post and became the
Physician-in-Attendance for the governor of Surinam's capitol,
Paramaribo.
Hering and Lachesis
Hering accidentally proved the remedy Lachesis while he was
triturating the Bushmaster’s venom in his home-laboratory in
Paramaribo. He was attempting to find an improved substitute for
the cowpox inoculation that Jenner was developing in Britain,
which Hering felt was extremely dangerous and very heavy-handed
for homeopathy. His interest and experience with snake venom led
him to surmise that the saliva of a rabid dog, or powdered
smallpox scabs, or any other disease products, viruses, or
venom's, might be prepared in the new Hahnemannian way to give a
fail-safe method of curing disease. He unwittingly paralyzed his
right side from further self-testing of higher and higher
attenuations of Lachesis. Hering stayed in Paramaribo for six
years and then emigrated to America and settled in Philadelphia
in 1833.
Hering and Homoeopathy
In 1848 he chartered the Hahnemann Medical College at Allentown,
Pennsylvania, which was considered to be one of greatest
homeopathic teaching institutions of all time and devised the
Homoeopathic Domestic Kit. Hering and his students treated over
50,000 patients a year and trained a total of 3500 homeopaths.
Hering began organizing his voluminous notes into his classic
“The Guiding Symptoms of Our Materia Medica” the year before he
died, in 1879, and it was completed by his students and
published posthumously in 1891.Hering was the first to use
nitroglycerine in medicine for headaches and heart problems (30
years before its first use in orthodox medicine). He suddenly
died one evening of a heart attack after returning from a house
call to a patient on 23 June 1880.
Hering is popularly known as "Father of American Homeopathy".
His influence extended across the USA with the result that
homoeopathy flourished in that country for about 70 years. He
believed that "The force of gentleness is great."
Contributions
• A Concise View of the Rise and Progress of Homoeopathic
Medicine, 1833
• The Homoeopathist, or Domestic Physician, 2 volumes, 1835
• Hahnemann's Three Rules Concerning the Rank of Symptoms
• Analytical Therapeutics
• The Guiding Symptoms of Our Materia Medica, 10 volumes, 1879 –
1891
• He was the Chief Editor of ‘North American Homoeopathic
Journal’, ‘The Homoeopathic News’, ‘The American Journal of
Homoeopathic Materia Medica’.
• Hering proved 72 drugs, including Cantharis, Colchicum, Iodium,
Mezereum, Sabadilla, Sabina, Psorinum, Nux moschata, Lachesis,
Crotalus, Apis, Hydrophobinum, Phytolacca, Platina, Glonoine,
Gelsemium, Kalmia, Ferrum met, Fluoric acid, Phosphoric acid,
etc
JAMES TYLER KENT
(1849-1916)
Dr. James Tyler Kent was born in Woodhull, New York, on 31 March
1849. After completing two undergraduate degrees by the age of
21, Kent undertook two postgraduate courses at the Eclectic
Medical Institute of Cincinnati, Ohio. At 26 years of age he set
up practice as an eclectic physician in St Louis, Missouri and
soon became a distinguished member of the Eclectic National
Medical Association.
In 1928, Kent’s second wife, Lucy, became ill. In spite of
Lucy’s symptoms of "nervous weakness, insomnia, and anaemia"
being treated by both orthodox and eclectic physicians, her
condition continued to deteriorate and she was bedridden for
months. Under ridicule and opposition from Kent, the
homoeopathic physician, Dr Richard Phelan was called in to see
Lucy. Following his prescription, she made a dramatic recovery.
As a result, Kent elected to study with Phelan and changed his
allegiance from eclecticism to homoeopathy. He considered
homoeopathy to be the only therapy that was guided by laws and
principles and the only one to address the fundamental cause of
illness.
He then became a student of Hahnemann's Organon and other works
of the new school, that resulted in his complete conversion to
homoeopathy, his resignation from the Eclectic Medical
Association in 1879 and his appointment to the chair of Anatomy
in the Homoeopathic Medical College of Missouri, which he held
from 1881 until 1883, was appointed professor of Materia Medica
at the Homoeopathic Medical College of St Louis, Missouri, from
1883 until 1888, became professor of Materia Medica and Dean of
the Post-Graduates’ School of Homœopathy at the Hahnemann
Medical College (Philadelphia) and occupied the chair of
professor of Materia Medica at the Hering Medical College and
Hospital, Chicago. During this period, Kent’s second wife died.
Both Lectures on Homoeopathic Philosophy and Lectures on
Homoeopathic Materia Medica were compiled by Kent’s students
from notes they had taken during class lectures. In 1916, his
students insisted he take a holiday. Kent agreed, deciding he
would write a "proper" book. Not long after commencing his
vacation, his catarrhal bronchitis developed into Bright’s
disease (glomerulonephritis) and he died 2 weeks later, on 6
June 1916 at Stevensville, Montana.
Contributions
• Repertory of the Homoeopathic Materia Medica (1897) -
Initially compiled by him for his own use. Other homoeopaths
began asking for their own copies. Revised by his widow Clara
(and others) up to 1961. Forms the basis of many of the more
recent repertories.
• What the Doctor Needs to Know in Order to Make a Successful
Prescription (1900)
• Lectures on Homoeopathic Philosophy (1900)
• Lectures on Homoeopathic Materia Medica (1904). Drawn from his
lectures on remedies from Hering’s Guiding Symptoms of our
Materia Medica.
• New Remedies, Clinical Cases, Lesser Writings, Aphorisms and
Precepts (1926).
• High potency prescription (200C and above for chronic cases)
• Single remedy prescribing
• Emphasis on "Mentals" and "Generals"
• "Wait and Watch" methodology from the 4th Edition Organon (the
dry dose medicine was not repeated until all improvement from
the previous dose had ceased)
• Kent discovered that just as there are octaves of musical
tones, so there are octaves in the simple substance, through
which it is possible to correspond with the various planes of
the interior organism of the animal cells. These planes
correspond to similar remedy in 30th, 200th, 1M, 10M, 50M, CM,
DM and MM potencies. He found that when the action of 30th is
completed the patient needs the 200th potency to keep him under
the remedial action for a time, but when the action of 200th
potency is exhausted, the patient requires 1M potency of the
same remedy and so on.
• Kent proved drugs like Alumina phos, Alumina silicata, Aurum
ars, Aurum iod, Calcarea silicata, etc.
CYRUS MAXWELL BOGER
(1861-1935)
Dr. Cyrus Maxwell Boger was born on May 13, 1861 in western
Pennsylvania, the son of Cyrus and Isabelle Maxwell Boger.
He graduated in pharmacy from the Philadelphia College of
Pharmacy and later in medicine from Hahnemann Medical College of
Philadelphia.He settled in Parkersburg in 1888 and engaged
himself in the practice of medicine, patients consulting him
from neighboring states and from distant states and countries.
He devoted all his time to teaching and writing but never gave
up his practice. However, he frequently lectured before
scientific audiences at the Pulte Medical College in Cincinnati
and was a teacher of philosophy, Materia Medica, and repertory
study in the American Foundation for Homoeopathy Postgraduate
School from 1924 until his death.
CONTRIBUTION
He was a devoted follower of the Boenninghausen method of a
repertory study.
• Boger, a German scholar, brought Boenninghausen's
Characteristics and Repertory into the English Language in 1905
- Boger Boenninghausen's Characteristics and Repertory
• Edition of Boenninghausen’s Therapeutic Pocket Book
• Boenninghausen's Antipsorics
• Studies in the Philosophy of Healing
• Study of Materia Medica and Case Taking
• Boger's Diphtheria, The Homoeopathic Therapeutics of
• A Synoptic Key of the Materia Medica
• General Analysis with Card Index
• Samarskite-A Proving
• The Times of the Remedies and Moon Phases - which characterize
the Appearance and Aggravation of the Symptoms and their
Remedies
• Alphabetic Repertory of Homoeopathic Remedies
• Editor of Homoeopathic Recorder
He died on September 2, 1935, aged 74, from food poisoning after
eating a tin of home-preserved tomatoes.
DR. JOHN MARTIN HONIGBERGER
The history of homoeopathy in India is linked with the French
Physician Dr. Honigberger.
Dr. Honigberger arrived at Lahore in 1829-30. His first patient
at Lahore was the adopted son of General Allard. His fame spread
only when he cured some soldiers who had been bitten by a mad
jackal and were beginning to signs of hydrophobia.
Maharaja Ranjit Singh was impressed by him when he treated his
favorite horse of its bad ulcers of the leg. He was later
invited to treat Maharaja Ranjit Singh of Punjab who was
seriously ill.
Being homesick, Honigberger returned back in 1834. Next year he
went to Paris and met Dr. Hahnemann. In 1836, he went to Vienna
and suffered from an infection of cholera and was treated by
Ipecac. He then set up his practice in Constantinople. On
learning that Maharaja Ranjit Singh wanted him back, he reached
Lahore in 1839. Later he stayed on in Lahore even after the
death of the Maharaja and wrote a book about his experiences –
‘Thirty five Years in the East’.
It can be said that Dr. Honigberger was the first man to
introduce the name of Dr. Hahnemann and his healing art to
India.
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