Tag archive for: 800 years

In 2020, our Faculty will celebrate its 800th anniversary! To mark this milestone, we have put together a program featuring more than 34 events throughout the year. These events are designed for local, national, and international medical, scientific, and academic communities, as well as the general public in Montpellier. Here’s a look back at the program announced this Thursday, December 19, at a press conference.

 

A little history…

Founded on August 17, 1220 , our Faculty— formerly known as the “University of Medicine –Universitas Medicorum” —was established in Montpellier after Cardinal Conrad of Urach, the apostolic legate of Pope Honorius III, granted it its first charter. These statutes thus enabled the various medical schools in Montpellier to unite into a single community. This facilitated exchanges between the different medical cultures—Jewish, Arab, and Christian—that coexisted in Montpellier, then at the crossroads of Eastern and Western civilizations.

The medical school then flourished for eight centuries, guided by a unique academic ethos: humanism, rooted in the teachings of Hippocrates.

 

800th Anniversary Press Conference

“Hippocrates envisioned a form of medicine that engages with science, philosophy, religion, climate, and the environment—in other words, a medicine that is a science of humanity. This enduring tradition is a hallmark of the Faculty of Medicine in Montpellier.” – Prof. Thierry Lavabre-Bertrand, Associate Dean

And today…?

While our faculty is the oldest in the world still in operation, it is nonetheless one of the most modern. This is evidenced by the 2017 opening of our new Arnaud de Villeneuve Health Campus. Equipped with the latest simulation-based teaching technologies, it allows our students to practice while adhering to the key principle of “never try it on a patient for the first time.”

But these technologies have in no way diminished the values our Faculty has upheld for eight centuries. Medical humanism thus remains a central focus of our teaching, leading us to develop—for the first time in France— workshops dedicated to the patient-caregiver relationship.

 

 

 

Events throughout 2020

To celebrate this anniversary and these values of humanism, multiculturalism, and scientific curiosity, we have put together a packed program of events running from January through December 2020.

Our hope? That various communities—including academics, healthcare professionals, and the people of Montpellier—will have the opportunity to (re)discover our Faculty and join us in celebrating medicine and its history through a variety of scientific, educational, and recreational events. Exhibitions will also be featured throughout the year, highlighting our heritage.

“We will be hosting high-profile events.For example, a symposium featuring leading international scientific publishers, a symposium on humanity and science that examines medicine and society as well as the public’s skepticism toward scientific facts, (…). We will also have sessions on ‘ethics and cancer,’ ‘gender equality in health,’ ‘medicinal plants,’ and a day dedicated to contemporary history and the major advances in medicine during the 20th century.” – Michel Mondain, Dean

 

Our students will also take center stage with the organization of an International Student Gala in June, to mark the visit of the Coimbra Group, Europe’s leading network of universities. They will also be honored at the Agnès McLaren Thesis Award ceremony in November.

Finally, there will also be fun and festive events, including the TAUST game nights and the Murder Mystery Nights at the Manoir du Crime…

 

 

For further reading…

 

In 2020, the Faculty of Medicine celebrates its 800th anniversary. To kick off the celebrations, discover the most valuable works from the historic medical library in a special exhibition titled: “Books and People: The Birth of the Montpellier School of Medicine Library.” Discover numerous rare books in the Tekné Makré rooms of the Historic Building, from September 21 to November 9.

A long humanist tradition

From Henri Haguenot to the collector Xavier Atger, via Chaptal, Prunelle, and Barthez, the richness of Montpellier’s medical library is also a testament to the great humanists who built it up beginning in the second half of the 18th century. Through personal donations, bequests, purchases, and revolutionary confiscations, this encyclopedic collection reflects a strong commitment to making available to doctors, students, and the general public “the best works written on each subject” (Prunelle).

 

 

An exceptional heritage collection

Medieval and modern manuscripts, incunabula, books, journals, theses… This exhibition offers a chance to discover the rare and diverse items held in these collections: the Montpellier Songbook, Charlemagne’s Psalter, Arnaud de Villeneuve’s Treatise on Wine, works by Hippocrates and Galen, and Redouté’s Liliaceae… So many treasures for the public to discover. An essential reminder of a humanistic and encyclopedic vision of knowledge, of which these works remain magnificent testaments to this day.

 

Guided tours

  • Thursday, October 3, at 12 p.m.: by Elizabeth Denton, co-curator of the exhibition
  • Tuesday Tuesday, October 15 at 1:00 p.m. : by Elizabeth Denton and Pascaline Todeschini, co-curators of the exhibition

    No registration required; the event will take place at the historic building of the School of Medicine. Please meet in the courtyard, in front of the Tekné Makré exhibition halls.

 

“Books and People: The Birth of the School of Medicine Library,” September 21–November 9. Historic building of the School of Medicine, 2 Rue de l’École de Médecine. Tuesday through Saturday, 1:00 p.m. to 5:30 p.m.

FacMedMtp-BH

This Wednesday, September 11, 2019, tune in to France 3 in the evening for a segment from the show “Des Racines et des Ailes” featuring the Hérault department! Among other things, you’ll see the Faculty of Medicine, a leading center for medical education for nearly 800 years…

 

As part of its “Passion Patrimoine” series, the program *Les Racines et les Ailes* sets out to explore the Hérault. From the Salagou region to the northern part of the department, including Pic-Saint-Loup and the Cirque de Mourèze, the program will explore all aspects of our department, particularly the city of Montpellier, whose history is closely tied to the teaching of medicine.

This is a great opportunity to highlight the various exceptional sites related to the history of medicine that Montpellier is home to, including our Faculty! Check out the trailer for the show below.

 

 

"Des Racines et des Ailes," a 119-minute film produced by 3e Oeil Production and directed by Arcadie Varlamoff-Kouchner and Franck Dhelens. Airs Wednesday, September 11, at 9:00 p.m. Available for on-demand viewing after the broadcast here.