Gerard Blasius

Groenburgwal/Staalkade were Blasius lived [1] with Zuiderkerk at the end. Painting by Eduard Alexander Hilverdink

Gerard "Gerrit" Leendertszoon Blasius (1627–1682)[2] was a Dutch physician and anatomist. He was born in Amsterdam and was the eldest son of Leonard Blasius (died 1644), who had worked as an architect in Copenhagen. Gerard started his studies there, but the family moved to Leiden, after his father died. Around 1655, he became a physician in Amsterdam. In October 1659, Blasius was appointed at the Athenaeum Illustre but without being paid. In the next year, he became the first Amsterdam professor in medicine. At his home or in the hospital, corpses were dissected. In 1661, he claimed the discovery of Stensen's duct by his pupil Nicolas Stensen.

  • Blasius had married Cornelia van Ottinga in 1653.
  • His younger brother was the poet Joan Blasius

Blasius died in Amsterdam in 1682.[3]

  1. ^ Stadsarchief Amsterdam, 5044-283, f. 111
  2. ^ "Gerardus Blasius: Medicinae Doctor, et Professor - Digital Collections - National Library of Medicine". collections.nlm.nih.gov. Retrieved 2019-07-23.
  3. ^ Burial certificate [1] in the nearby Zuiderkerk.