Jean d'Ailleboust


Jean d'Ailleboust or Jean Ailleboust was a French doctor and physician. He practiced in Auxerre, then in Sens, before becoming first physician to King Henry III. He died on 24 July 1594. Maximilien de Béthune named him M. Alibour in Sully's Les Œconomies royales. It is also found under the names Daliboux and Dalibourg. François Rousset called him Alibosius and Antoine Portal called him Albosius.

Biography

D'Ailleboust was a son of Pierre d'Ailleboust, ordinary physician to François I, Catholic, Autunois, and Pérette de Séez, his wife. He received a doctorate in medicine at the University of Basel. He was the sixth boy and the seventh child. He is the only one, with his sister Françoise, to have embraced the Reformed religion. His first sister Ferrine or Perrine, married Jean de Montrambault, a lawyer in Autun. His brother Jean, was a canon of Autun, as well as his other brothers Anatole and Hugues, Charles d'Ailleboust, another brother is bishop of Autun, another André d'Ailleboust, was a merchant of Autun, lord of Collonge-la-Madeleine, married to Odette Rolet, the daughter of the mayor of Autun, Hugues Rolet, the last, Françoise, married Jean Lalemant, Calvinist, doctor in Autun, known for his mathematical works.
From 1576 to 1583, he was physician to Duke François d'Alençon. He was forced to flee because of his religion and appears in 1586 in a list of Protestant refugees in Montbéliard. In 1590, he became adviser and first doctor to Henri IV. In 1592, he is said to have diagnosed infertility resulting from a venereal disease in Henri IV.

Works

  • Reprinted under the title Observatio lithopœdi Senosensis in Basel in 1588, In-8°
  • Also in Latin in: Hysterotomotokia  by François Rousset, as well as in a collection of pamphlets: De diuturnà graviditate, Amsterdam, 1662, in-12° 22
  • Exercitatio de hujus indurationis causis naturalibus, Sens, 1587, in-8°