Sir Fielding Ould (1710–29 November 1789) was an Irish doctor and medical writer.
Ould was the son of British Army Captain Abraham Ould (1689–1715) and a Miss Shawe of Galway, in which city he was born. He studied in Paris and settled in Golden Lane, Dublin as a medical practitioner in 1736. He published an enormously influential treatise on midwifery in 1742, although it was criticized for a number of factual errors.
An obstetrician, he acquired a huge practice and was master of the Rotunda Hospital (the Dublin lying-in hospital). After a lengthy battle, he was eventually granted his licence as a physician. In 1759, he was knighted for services to the medical profession.
Ould was one of 49 physicians and chirurgeons who declared their public support for the construction of a Publick Bath in Dublin in May 1771 and named Achmet Borumborad as a well qualified individual for carrying such a scheme into existence.
He died of apoplexy at his home on South Frederick Street and was buried at St. Ann's Churchyard, Dawson Street.
He had at least two children, including William, who was chaplain of the Rotunda Hospital. Later descendants included the painter Sir Fielding Fielding-Ould, and the noted architect William Vitruvius Morrison.
Bibliography
References
- Notes
- "Ould, Fielding" . Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
- Clendening, Logan (1960). "Fielding Ould (p. 181)". Source Book of Medical History. Dover Publications. ISBN 9780486206219; orig. pub. in 1942 by P. B. Hoeber, Inc.
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: CS1 maint: postscript (link) - "The Approbation of the Physicians...". Freeman's Journal. 4 May 1771. p. 3.
- Dunn, Peter M. (1999). "Bartholomew Mosse (1712–59), Sir Fielding Ould (1710–89), and the Rotunda Hospital, Dublin". Archives of Disease in Childhood: Fetal and Neonatal Edition. 81 (1): F74–F76. doi:10.1136/fn.81.1.f74. PMC 1720960. PMID 10375370.
- Sources
- Maher, Helen (1976). Galway authors: a contribution towards a biographical and bibliographical index, with an essay on the history and literature in Galway. Galway County Libraries. ISBN 0950559504; 116 pages
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: CS1 maint: postscript (link)