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Madhusudan Gupta

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Children
  
Gopal Chandra Gupta

Nationality
  
British India

Name
  
Madhusudan Gupta


Ethnicity
  
Bengali

Died
  
1856, Kolkata

Occupation
  
Doctor

Parents
  
Balaram Gupta

Madhusudan Gupta uploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthumb662

Born
  
1800
Baidyabati, Hooghly Bengal, British India

Known for
  
Carrying out the first human dissection in modern India and Asia

Cause of death
  
Diabetic septicemia

Ex mla madhusudan gupta exclusive interview talking politics with idream 164


Pandit Madhusudan Gupta (Bengali: মধুসূদন গুপ্ত) (1800 – 15 November 1856) was an Indian doctor and the first Indian trained in Western medicine to dissect a human corpse. When the Medical College was set up in Kolkata, Gupta, broke prevalent social taboos and came forward to dissect human corpse. On 28 October 1836, Gupta became the first Indian to dissect a corpse. He was assisted by Raj Krishna Dey, Umacharan Sett, Dwarkanath Gooptu, and Nabin Chandra Mitra, students of the Medical College. The British East India Company administration honoured him by firing guns from the Fort William. It should be noted that ancient Indian sages such as the legendary surgeon Sushruta had almost certainly performed human autopsies to gain their knowledge of the human body. However, Dr. Madhusudan Gupta was the first Indian to do it as a practitioner of modern Western medicine.

Contents

Ex mla madhusudan gupta exclusive interview promo talking politics with idream 164


Early life

Gupta came from a Baidya family, who were practitioners of Ayurveda by tradition. He was born to Balaram Gupta in Baidyabati, Hooghly sometime in the year 1800. After completing his school, he took admission in Sanskrit College. He was a student in the Baidyak discipline.

Career

In 1830, he was appointed a professor at the Sanskrit College, replacing Khudiram Visharad, which created a ripple among the student community.

In 1835, the Medical College was set up. The Baidyak discipline was discontinued at the Sanskrit College and Gupta joined Medical College as an assistant teacher. He studied Western medicine along with the students and passed in 1840. In 1845, he became the Superintendent of the Hindusthani medium. In 1848, he was promoted to a first class sub-assistant surgeon. In 1852, the Bengali medium was opened at the Medical College for the first time. Gupta took charge as the Superintendent of the Bengali medium.

Gupta had significant contribution to the history of Calcutta Medical College (CMC) and hospital. During the prima stage of medical college, Indian students were not coming to join the course partly because they were from aristocratic Indian families who had disdain for surgery (reluctant to touch the dead body) and partly because the Ayurvedic and Unani systems of medicine were popular at that time. He was a Sanskrit scholar and Ayurvedic doctor and he did proclaim that he will dissect the dead body and that created waves among the people and after that many came to join the medical education at CMC. The British government fired 50 cannon shot to honour him. It is difficult to conceive that 50 gun-salutes were made. Because there was rumour of "cutting up a kid" and the college gates were closed to prevent encroachment. The government was happy because they broke past the custom thought prevailing there to some extent which in fact went against "The Native Medical Institution (NMI)" which was practicing Ayurvedic and Unani medicine culture. He was one among the first batch of students passed from the CMC. He did not pass in the first batch of CMC graduates. Moreover, R Havlock Charles dismises Madhusudan's role as the first dissector. Madhusudan's role may be viewed as one of the first internalizers of modern anatomical education who acted as the agency for the Company's education.

Books

  • Anatomy arthat Sharir Vidya in Bengali
  • Translated London Pharmacopoeia in Bengali
  • Translated Anatomist Vade Mecum in Sanskrit
  • References

    Madhusudan Gupta Wikipedia