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  1. William Battie was born and baptised on 1 September 1703 at Modbury in Devonshire where his father, the Rev Edward Battie was vicar, having formerly been a master at Eton College. After attending Eton himself as a King's Scholar William went on to King's College, Cambridge where, frustrated from reading for the Bar he studied medicine. ...

  2. William Battie (1703-1776) was born in Modbury, Devonshire, as the son of a vicar. He was schooled at Eton and King’s College, Cambridge. After receiving his license in medicine in 1730, he practised as a physician in Cambridge where he also held lectures on anatomy. He moved to London in 1738 and, in 1742, was elected one of the “governors ...

  3. William Beattie Booth (Perthshire, ca. 1804 - 1874) fue un botánico escocés. Fue reconocido como un experto en Camelias, y en 1829 presentó una exhautiva ponencia sobre el tema en dos reuniones de la Sociedad de Horticultura de Londres [1] Booth se especifica en los documentos publicados como "Garden Clerk (Secretario de Jardín)".

  4. William Battie, resident physician and driving force behind the foundation of St Luke's asylum, published what was probably the first English medical monograph devoted to madness in 1758. A ...

  5. F. William Battie's classifications of madness: John Monro gave credit for the terms, original and consequential to Battie, although the underlying concepts were in print and practices long before: "Of what use it may hereafter prove to have thus divided madness into original and consequential is not my business to enquire at present. The first ...

  6. William Battie, manchmal William Batty, (* 1. September 1703 oder 1704 in Modbury in Devonshire; † 13. Juni 1776 in London) war ein begüterter englischer Arzt. Battie schrieb das erste Lehrbuch für Psychiatrie (Treatise on Madness), unterrichtete Studenten in der psychiatrischen Praxis und betrieb verschiedene Einrichtungen für psychisch ...

  7. William Battie was a physician who published in 1758 the first lengthy book on the treatment of mental illness, 'A Treatise on Madness’, and by extending methods of treatment to the poor as well as the affluent, helped raise psychiatry to a respectable specialty.He was the first and only psychiatrist to become President of the Royal College of Physicians.