Guillaume de Baillou
Guillaume de Baillou (born 1538, Paris—died 1616, Paris) was a physician and the founder of modern epidemiology, who revived Hippocratic medical practice in Renaissance Europe. As the Dean of the University of Paris medical faculty (1580), he compiled a clear account of epidemics between 1570 and 1579, the first comprehensive work of its kind since Hippocrates. He was probably the first to describe whooping cough (1578) and to define the term rheumatism in its modern sense. His descriptions of plague, diphtheria, and measles and works on epidemiology, especially Epidemiorum, 2 vol. (1640; “Of Epidemics”), may have influenced the great 17th-century Hippocratic physician Thomas Sydenham.
Citation Information
Article Title:
Guillaume de Baillou
Website Name:
Encyclopaedia Britannica
Publisher:
Encyclopaedia Britannica, Inc.
Date Published:
14 February 2024
Access Date:
February 21, 2025