Christian Franz Paullini (25 February 1643 – 10 June 1712) was a German physician, theologian, and writer.
Biography
Paullini was born in Eisenach to a family of merchants and scholars. His parents wanted him to become a priest and his initial education was designed with this in mind, but Paullini was attracted to the medicinal arts and studied both theology and medicine.[1]
He attended middle school and secondary school in Thuringia and graduated from Coburg.
In his long life of approximately 70 years, Paullini wrote 68 books, of which several editions were printed.
Paullini died in 1712 in his home town.
Works
Paullini made extensive reference and resorted to both ancient and contemporary medical authorities and to folk medicine (sailors, farmers, common people). His works reflected a deep learning based on the four temperaments theory and the outcome of a lengthy process of compiling the data obtained from his observation.
Amongst his essential works, there was a textbook on how to use human and animal excrement to cure internal or external diseases (Heilsame Dreck-Apotheke: wie nemlich mit Koth und Urin die meisten Krankheiten und Schäden glucklich geheilet worden), such as fecal bacteriotherapy.[3][4]
He wrote a treatise (Flagellum salutis) on the advantage of the whip for curative purposes in various disorders and a handbook on the toad's therapeutic properties (Bufo juxta methodum et leges illustris Academiae Naturae curiosorum breviter descriptus).
As a botanist, he gave his name to Paullinia cupana known as guarana, a climbing plant native to the Amazon basin and especially common in Brazil. As a zoologist, he described the kraken in 1706 after Francesco Negri in Animalia fabulosa.[5]
In the same way, Christian Franz Paullini bolstered support for women's education by publishing his works in favor of learned German ladies in 1705[7] and in 1712.[8] In his book he listed alphabetically all the learned German women known to him.[9]
His poor reputation came 130 years after his death from false historiographies: Rerum et antiquitatum Germanicarum Syntagma, Chronicon Mindense,[10]Chronicon Hüxariense, Carmen de Brunsburgo and Annales Corbeienses.[11]