Obverse
Obverse legend : LUD. XV. REX CHRISTIANISS.
Obverse description : Buste à droite de Louis XV non signé.
Obverse translation : Louis XV, roi très chrétien.
Reverse
Reverse legend : APOLLO SALUTARIS ; À L'EXERGUE : SOCIETAS. ACADEMICA. CHIRURG. PARISIENS. M. D. CC. XXXXI.
Reverse description : Apollon tenant sa lyre, debout à gauche, s'appuyant sur Hygiè également debout, et tenant un bâton entouré du serpent. A terre, des plantes et des instruments de chimie.
Reverse translation : Apollon qui apporte la santé ; à l'exergue : Académie de Chirurgie de Paris 1741.
Historical background
FRENCH SURGERY ACADEMY / ACADÉMIE DE CHIRURGIE
Under the Ancien Régime, surgery was an artisanal practice that dealt with treating the external manifestations of disease, hence the contempt associated with it, based on its manual nature and on the Church's horror of seeing the blood shed. Yet it is a driver of medical progress insofar as it favors experimentation. In 1691, an edict recognized the specificity of surgeons over barbers-wig makers by prohibiting them from keeping a shop! However, in 1731, Georges Mareschal, the king's surgeon, and La Peyronie created an Academic Society of Surgeons of Paris which, in 1748, became the Royal Academy of Surgery, placed under the patronage of Louis XV.. Practitioners thus gain scientific and social recognition. At the end of the Ancien Régime, there were about fifteen schools of surgery (Bordeaux, Lyon, Nantes, Orléans, Rouen, Toulouse, etc.. ). Reading tips: DESAIVE J. -P. , GOUBERT J. -P. , LE ROY LADURIE E. , MEYER J. , MULLER O. and PETER J.. -P. , "Doctors, climates and epidemics at the end of the 18th century", Paris/The Hague, 1972; LEBRUN F. , "Take care of yourself in the past. Doctors, saints and sorcerers in the 17th and 18th centuries", Paris, 1983.