Dr. Sergei Petrovich Botkin
Famous Botkins in Russia
Vasily
Petrovich Botkin, a man who was born in both 1811 and 1812, was a writer,
critic, and translator. He was an acquaintance of the great critic Belinksy,
with whom he carried on a long correspondence, later published. Letters from
Spain is Botkin’s most well-known published work. A typical Western
liberal, Botkin wanted social change but opposed the idea of violent
revolution. In his article on the poet A.A. Fet’s work (1857), he spoke out in
favor of “pure art.” He died in 1869. Why was he born in two different years?
Because in his day Russia still went by the old Julian calendar, which lagged
behind the Gregorian calendar of the West. He was born on December 27, 1811, in
Russia, which was January 8, 1812, in Western Europe. Lots of people in Russia
were born, or died, in two different years. But nobody was born, or died, in
two different millennia. Because in 1918, long before the changing of the
millennium that you and I were lucky enough to experience, the Soviets adopted
the Gregorian calendar.
One
of the most famous doctors in Russian history was Sergei Petrovich Botkin
(1832-1889). He studied at the medical faculty of Moscow State University
(1850-1855); served as field doctor in the Crimean War (1855); wrote his
dissertation “On Absorption of Fat in the Bowels” (1860); served as field
doctor in the Russo-Turkish War, worked out novel ways to treat wounded
soldiers on the battlefield (1877). A specialist in internal diseases, Botkin
was one of the first to work out diagnosis and treatment of floating kidney. He
played an active role in women’s rights, helped organize medical courses for
women in 1872. He was curator of St. Petersburg city hospitals and member of
the city Duma, 1881-1889.
The
Botkin Hospital in Moscow is named after the great physician. In the summer of
1972, I was a patient there. In 1959, Lee Oswald was a patient there.
Porfiry Petrovich Goes to Visit Dr. Botkin
In
Fyodor Dostoevsky’s Crime and Punishment the examining magistrate
Porfiry Petrovich is a hypochondriac. He complains of problems with
hemorrhoids, of his “confounded laughter,” which causes him to shake for half
an hour at a time; he’s afraid he might have a stroke. He goes to consult with
the renowned Dr. Botkin, who spends thirty minutes examining each patient.
“He
just laughed when he looked at me. He sounded me and listened to my chest.
‘Incidentally,’ he says to me, ‘tobacco is no good for you; your lungs are
affected.’”
C and P, Part 6,
Chapter 2
And then, of course, there's Vladimir Nabokov's Botkin (Kinbote), lunatic protagonist of the novel Pale Fire.
[excerpted from the book by U.R. Bowie, Here We Be. Where Be We?]
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