Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1191881> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 89 of
89
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1191881 description "French psychiatrist".
- Q1191881 description "French psychiatrist".
- Q1191881 subject Q14516255.
- Q1191881 subject Q6583083.
- Q1191881 subject Q6645820.
- Q1191881 subject Q8474330.
- Q1191881 subject Q8964470.
- Q1191881 abstract "Charles Lasègue (full name: Ernest-Charles Lasègue; 5 September 1816 – 20 March 1883) was a French physician born in Paris.In 1847 he received his medical doctorate from the University of Paris, and during the following year was sent by the French government to southern Russia in order to conduct research of an epidemic of cholera. Afterwards, he worked as a physician at the Salpêtrière, Pitié and Necker hospitals in Paris. In 1869 he was appointed professor of clinical medicine at Hôpital Necker, a position he maintained until his death in 1883.Lasègue originally studied to become a philosopher, but changed to medicine when he was inspired by a lecture given by internist Armand Trousseau (1801–1867). He later became an assistant and collaborator of Trousseau's, also serving as his chief clinician for a period of time during the 1850s. Lasègue published well over 100 works, with eighteen of them being co-written with Dr. Trousseau.Lasègue was versatile in many facets of medicine. In the 1860s he taught classes on nervous and mental illnesses. He considered the disciplines of physiology and psychiatry to be complementary to each other, and was particularly interested in psychosomatic disorders. He described one of the earliest accounts of anorexia nervosa, and also conducted research involving delusions of persecution.As a psychiatrist, he believed that by knowing a patient's history, the cause that created his or her mental imbalance could be discovered. He emphasized the role of parental attitudes and family interactions to be of supreme importance. With Jean-Pierre Falret (1794–1870), he introduced the concept "folie à deux" to describe the coincidental appearance of psychotic symptoms in family members or closely associated persons who share the same living space. This concept is sometimes referred to as the "Lasègue-Falret syndrome".In 1871 he was made a knight of the Legion of Honour; in 1876 he was elected as a member of the Académie Nationale de Médecine.".
- Q1191881 award Q163700.
- Q1191881 award Q337555.
- Q1191881 birthDate "1816-09-05".
- Q1191881 birthYear "1816".
- Q1191881 deathDate "1883-03-20".
- Q1191881 deathDate "1883-04-20".
- Q1191881 deathYear "1883".
- Q1191881 field Q7867.
- Q1191881 influencedBy Q208230.
- Q1191881 influencedBy Q677885.
- Q1191881 knownFor Q1435409.
- Q1191881 knownFor Q1729978.
- Q1191881 nationality Q142.
- Q1191881 notableStudent Q501.
- Q1191881 thumbnail Charles_Lasegue.jpg?width=300.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q11180.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q11190.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q1132536.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q12090.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q12135.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q1293405.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q131749.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q142.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q1435409.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q14516255.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q163700.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q1729978.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q208230.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q209647.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q209842.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q3145188.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q3169279.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q337555.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q43405.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q473867.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q501.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q521.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q544006.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q565276.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q6583083.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q6645820.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q677885.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q7867.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q8474330.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q8964470.
- Q1191881 wikiPageWikiLink Q939883.
- Q1191881 awards Q163700.
- Q1191881 awards "Member of the Académie Nationale de Médecine".
- Q1191881 birthDate "1816-09-05".
- Q1191881 dateOfBirth "1816-09-05".
- Q1191881 dateOfDeath "1883-03-20".
- Q1191881 deathDate "1883-04-20".
- Q1191881 fields "Philosophy, Medicine, Psychiatry".
- Q1191881 influences Q208230.
- Q1191881 influences "Armand Trousseau".
- Q1191881 knownFor Q1729978.
- Q1191881 knownFor "Lasègue-Falret Syndrome".
- Q1191881 name "Charles Lasègue".
- Q1191881 name "Lasegue, Charles".
- Q1191881 nationality Q142.
- Q1191881 notableStudents Q501.
- Q1191881 shortDescription "French psychiatrist".
- Q1191881 type Person.
- Q1191881 type Agent.
- Q1191881 type Person.
- Q1191881 type Scientist.
- Q1191881 type Agent.
- Q1191881 type NaturalPerson.
- Q1191881 type Thing.
- Q1191881 type Q215627.
- Q1191881 type Q5.
- Q1191881 type Q901.
- Q1191881 type Person.
- Q1191881 comment "Charles Lasègue (full name: Ernest-Charles Lasègue; 5 September 1816 – 20 March 1883) was a French physician born in Paris.In 1847 he received his medical doctorate from the University of Paris, and during the following year was sent by the French government to southern Russia in order to conduct research of an epidemic of cholera. Afterwards, he worked as a physician at the Salpêtrière, Pitié and Necker hospitals in Paris.".
- Q1191881 label "Charles Lasègue".
- Q1191881 depiction Charles_Lasegue.jpg.
- Q1191881 givenName "Charles".
- Q1191881 name "Charles Lasegue".
- Q1191881 name "Charles Lasègue".
- Q1191881 name "Lasegue, Charles".
- Q1191881 surname "Lasegue".