Castle, Herman Boerhaave's home in
Oegstgeest, near
Leiden. This was the site of his outdoor botanical garden that was renowned during his lifetime and rivalled
Hortus Cliffortianus, the garden of his friend and sponsor to
Linnaeus. He travelled back and forth to his friend's garden and to the Leiden University by
trekschuit (horse-drawn boat). Boerhaave was born at
Voorhout near
Leiden. The son of a
Protestant pastor, in his youth Boerhaave studied for a
divinity degree and wanted to become a preacher. After the death of his father, however, he was offered a scholarship and he entered the
University of Leiden, where he took his
master's degree in
philosophy in 1690, with a dissertation titled
De distinctione mentis a corpore (
On the Difference of the Mind from the Body). There he attacked the doctrines of
Epicurus,
Thomas Hobbes and
Baruch Spinoza. He then turned to the study of medicine. He earned his
medical doctorate from the
University of Harderwijk (present-day
Gelderland) in 1693, with a dissertation titled
De utilitate explorandorum in aegris excrementorum ut signorum (
The Utility of Examining Signs of Disease in the Excrement of the Sick). In 1701 he was appointed lecturer on the institutes of medicine at Leiden; in his inaugural discourse,
De commendando Hippocratis studio, he recommended to his pupils that great physician as their model. In 1709 he became professor of
botany and medicine, and in that capacity he did good service, not only to his own university, but also to botanical science, by his improvements and additions to the
botanic garden of Leiden, and by the publication of numerous works descriptive of new species of plants. On 14 September 1710, Boerhaave married Maria Drolenvaux (1686–1746), the daughter of the rich merchant,
Alderman Abraham Drolenvaux. They had four children, of whom one daughter, Maria Johanna (1712–1791) – wife of German art collector with various influential political ties
Frederic Count de Thoms (1696–1746), lived to adulthood. In 1722, he began to suffer from an extreme case of
gout, recovering the next year. In 1714, when he was appointed rector of the university, he succeeded
Govert Bidloo in the chair of practical medicine, and in this capacity he introduced the modern system of clinical instruction. Whether he was the first to do so is contested; in the words of one medical historian, Boerhaave "was neither an innovator of this practice, nor an especially energetic practitioner of it", though he did help to popularize the method. Four years later he was appointed to the chair of chemistry as well. In 1728 he was elected into the
French Academy of Sciences, and two years later into the
Royal Society of London. In 1729 declining health obliged him to resign the chairs of chemistry and botany; and he died, after a lingering and painful illness, at Leiden. ==Legacy==