Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893) is considered the father of modern neurology and one
of the most important physicians and medical researchers of the 19th century[1],[2]. His tremendous contributions to science extended beyond neurology, a field in which
he described countless diseases, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, multiple sclerosis,
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease and hysteria, to include internal medicine and its various
subspecialties, such as rheumatology, pulmonology and geriatrics, as well as the specialties
of orthopedics, pathology, psychiatry and psychology[1],[2],[3],[4]. Between 1872 and 1893, Charcot was the most renowned neurologist in the world,
and the La Salpêtrière Hospital the mecca of international neurology[1],[2],[3],[4],[5],[6],[7]. At the height of his career, internationally famous and 67 years old, Charcot died
suddenly on August 16, 1893, of acute pulmonary edema secondary to myocardial infarction
while on a trip to the French countryside with some of his assistants[1],[3],[4],[8]. He had previously suffered various angina attacks due to atherosclerosis of the
coronary arteries[1],[3],[4],[5]. The aim of this article is to review the death of Professor Charcot, in Morvan,
in the French countryside, his funeral and his burial in Montmartre cemetery in Paris.
Charcot's Death
Jean-Martin Charcot ([Figure 1]) had an unhealthy life. Short and obese, predominantly around the waist, with a
short neck, he had poor personal hygiene, a voracious appetite and disturbed sleep
cycles caused by intense intellectual activity stretching late into the night. He
was a chronic heavy smoker, exhibited taciturn behavior and led a sedentary life[1],[3],[4],[5],[6],[7]. He developed progressive intermittent episodes of precordial discomfort and anxiety
suggestive of coronary insufficiency and, in 1890, during a dinner party at his house
in Boulevard Saint Germain, Professor Potain, a famous Parisian clinician, confirmed
a diagnosis of angina pectoris. The clinical picture indicated a potentially fatal
outcome within two years[1],[3],[4]. Charcot also suffered from chronic lower back pain, and gait and posture disorders
(flexed posture of the trunk and shuffling gait with marche à petit pas) suggestive of vascular Parkinsonism[1],[3],[4],[9]. In August 1893, during a summer holiday, Charcot travelled with his disciples,
Professors Debove and Straus, to Morvan, a rural lake district in Burgundy, southeast
of Paris. On August 15, after quite an active day, Charcot and his two assistants,
ate a Pantagruelian meal and retired to their rooms at the countryside inn, L'Auberge
du Lac des Settons ([Figure 2]). Charcot then wrote a letter to his wife, giving her details of the trip. However,
at 3 am on August 16, the innkeeper's wife called Charcot's two assistants to the
renowned physician's room. Charcot had developed sudden dyspnea, with intense perspiration,
pallor, an anguished expression and coarse rales in his chest, and a diagnosis of
acute pulmonary edema was made. His condition worsened, and he died that morning,
at the age of 67, confirming the diagnosis of coronary artery insufficiency made by
Professor Potain two years previously [1],[3],[4],[9].
Figure 1 Professor Jean-Martin Charcot (1825-1893).(From the private collection of the author
– UW).
Figure 2 The house where Charcot died at the Lac des Settons.(From the private collection
of the author – OW).
Charcot's Funeral
Charcot's coffin was taken to Paris and placed in the chapel of the Salpêtrière Hospital[1],[3]. The following day, the visitation was attended by countless patients, medical students,
nurses, physicians, disciples, professors, artists, writers, members of the Parisian
intelligentsia and leaders of Parisian, French and foreign medical societies, as well
as prominent members of the government and Parisian, French, European and international
society[1],[3]. A simple funeral service was held at the Saint-Louis church of La Salpêtrière Hospital
itself, without any speakers or religious manifestations, as the deceased had requested,
but with military honors ([Figure 3]). Beethoven's Funeral March and St. Saens's Pie Jesu were played. After the ceremony, the coffin was taken to Montmartre cemetery for
burial[1],[3].
Figure 3 Charcot's funeral at the Saint-Louis church of La Salpêtrière hospital (in Le Monde
Illustré, 06 aoüt, 1893).(From the private collection of the author – OW).
Charcot's Grave at Montmartre
Charcot was buried in the family tomb in Montmartre cemetery (division 29, Chemin
Troyon) in the south of Paris[1],[3] ([Figure 4]). His son, Jean-Baptiste Charcot, the world-famous Commander Charcot, was buried
in the same place in 1936[1],[3] Charcot's death was felt around the world, with mentions in medical journals and
newspapers and more than 70 eulogies published between 1893 and 1894 in France, various
European countries and the USA. Important professors from many different countries,
including Osler (USA), Freud (Austria), Jendrassik (Polonia), and Leyden, Erb, Strümpel
and Mobius (Germany), published articles on Charcot[1],[3], and in France, Féré, Joffroy, Gilles de la Tourette and Bourneville wrote obituaries
for him. However, undoubtedly one of the most moving tributes was paid by Pierre Marie
and Brissaud, who wrote an obituary in Revue Neurologique
[10] in September 1893 under the title “Nécrologie J.-M. Charcot”. Following are some
excerpts from this obituary:
“Professor Charcot is dead. The day after such a sudden catastrophe, we are stunned
and are unable to pay appropriate tribute to such a master”
[10].
“But we must speak about the neurologist, or rather, the creator of neurology. Before
him was darkness and chaos. With him, clarity and order”
[10].
“But how can we simply list Charcot's works? That would be to describe the history
of neurology in its entirety”
[10].
“His chair was the glory of our faculty and the jewel in his crown”[10].
“Who among his pupils could forget him? Recognition is the sweetest sentiment”
[10].
Figure 4 Charcot's grave at Montmartre cemetery.(Extracted from Google Images: HimetopWikidot,
July, 02nd, 2017).
After his death, Charcot's closest friends arranged for a statue of the famous master
to be erected at the front of the Salpêtrière Hospital ([Figure 5]). However, this was destroyed during the invasion of Paris by German troops in 1939[1].
Figure 5 Charcot's statue in front of La Salpêtrière hospital, Paris, France.(From the private
collection of the author – OW).
CONCLUSION
Professor Jean-Martin Charcot, a leading figure of international neurology in the
19th century, whose teachings and discoveries are still of great importance, died on August
16, 1893, in the province of Morvan in the French countryside. His funeral took place
in Paris at the Salpêtrière Hospital, and he was buried in Montmartre cemetery in
Paris.