Sir Francis Anthony, Kt.

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Francis Anthony, Kt.

Birthdate:
Birthplace: London, Middlesex, England
Death: May 26, 1623 (73)
London, Middlesex, England
Place of Burial: St. Bartholomew, London, London, England
Immediate Family:

Son of Francis Anthony and Judith Anthony
Husband of Jane Anthony
Father of Francis Anthony; Elizabeth Fichars; Thomas Anthony; Alice Anthony; John Anthony, M.D. and 6 others
Brother of Edward Anthony and Charles Anthony

Managed by: Floyd Bliss Hanson, Prof.
Last Updated:

About Sir Francis Anthony, Kt.

[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Anthony]

Francis Anthony

Francis Anthony (16 April 1550 – 26 May 1623) was a 16th-century physician and chemist. His father was a goldsmith in London, employed in the jewel office of Queen Elizabeth. He attended the University of Cambridge, receiving a Master of Arts degree in 1574. He studied the theory and practice of chemistry, leaving Cambridge at the age of 40. In 1598, he sent abroad his first treatise concerning the excellency of medicine drawn from gold.

"Aurum Potable"

He commenced medical practice in London without a license from the College of Physicians, and after six months was called before the president of the College of Physicians. He was interdicted practice; for disregarding this injunction, he was fined five pounds and committed to prison, whence he was released by a warrant of the lord chief justice. The college however got him recommitted and Anthony submitted. Being again prosecuted for the same offense and refusing to pay a heavy fine, he was kept in prison for eight months until released on the petition of his wife on the grounds of poverty in 1602. But he continued to practice in defiance of the college and further proceedings were threatened but not carried out, probably because Anthony had powerful friends in court.[1]

His practice consisted chiefly, if not entirely, in the prescription and sale of a secret remedy called "Aurum Potable", which means "Drinkable Gold" in Latin, from which he derived a considerable fortune.[1]

Family

Francis married Susan Howe. He died on 26 May 1623, Leaving two sons, John, and Charles. John became a Physician in London and Charles practiced at Bedford. According to the writer of the Biographia Britannica (1747 I 169) who professed to have derived his information from family manuscripts, Anthony was a man of high character and very liberal to the poor.[1]

Death

He died in his seventy-fourth year and was buried in the church of St. Bartholomew the Great, in the isle that joins the north side of the chancel, where a handsome monument has been erected to his memory with a very remarkable inscription:

Image

  • "Sacred to the memory of the worthy and learned Francis Anthony, Dr. of Physic"
  • "There needs no verse to beautify thy praise,
  • Or keep in memory thy spotless name.
  • Religion, virtue and thy skill did rise
  • A three-fold pillar to thy lasting fame.
  • Though poisonous envy ever fought to blame
  • Or hide the fruits of thy intention,
  • Yet shall they commend that high design
  • Of purest gold to make a medicine,
  • That feel thy help by that, thy rare invention."[2]

The career of Anthony and his conflict with the college of Physicians illustrated the condition of the medical profession in the 17th century. He was obnoxious to the college not only because he kept the composition of his remedy a secret and put it forward as a panacea for all diseases.[1]

Anthony was a man of some learning and defended his panacea in several pamphlets, in which he quotes several Authors, chiefly chemists, as Raymond, Lully, and Arnold, de Villa, Nora. He refers to Paracelsus with an apology, but disclaims any special debt to him, and among other authorities, to Conrad Gessner who had written of "Aurum Potable" in his writings. Anthony labors to show that metals are excellent medicines, gold, most of all; that by his method it was dissolved in potable form and furnished a universal medicine.[1]

His adversaries denied the superiority of metals to other medicines and the special efficacy of gold, and that there was no such thing as a universal medicine, and that Anthony's method did not dissolve gold. Anthony desired to demonstrate his process to certain select witnesses and a trial actually took place at the college of physicians in 1609 in the presence of Thomas Lord Knyvet, master of the mint, and other skilled persons, when an ounce of gold was given to Anthony which by his method failed to dissolve.[1]



References

  • Probated Will [https://www.geni.com/documents/view?doc_id=6000000178099158043]
  • [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Anthony] This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Payne, Joseph Frank (1885). "Anthony, Francis". In Stephen, Leslie (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography.
  • 2. London: Smith, Elder & Co. White, F. V. Anthony, Francis (1550–1623)
  • Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/590. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  • Further reading Thomson, C. J. S. Quacks of Old London (Brentano, 1928) p. 31 ff. The Anthony Family *Memorial
  • FInd a Grave: Dr Frances Anthony
  • Genealogy of the Anthony family from 1495 to 1904 traced from William Anthony, Cologne, Germany, to London, England, John Anthony, a descendant, from England to America (1904) C.L. Anthony in English Archive.Org has errors
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Sir Francis Anthony, Kt.'s Timeline

1550
April 16, 1550
London, Middlesex, England
April 16, 1550
St. Mary, London, Woolnoth, England, UK
April 16, 1550
St. Mary Woolnoth London, Middlesex, England
1575
1575
London, Middlesex, England
1577
1577
London, Middlesex, England
1578
1578
Probably St. Mary Woolnoth, London, Middlesex, England
1579
1579
London, London, England
1580
1580
London, Middlesex, England
1581
1581
London, London, England
1584
1584