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Maria Josefina Matilde Durocher

Other names/titles:
Gender: F
Ethnic origin: White

Biographical details

Madame Durocher, as she is generally known, was born in Paris in January 1808/09? (Mott (1994), 109). Her mother, Ana Colette Durocher, was from Nancy, her father is unknown (Mott (1994), 102). In 1816 mother and daughter emigrated to Brazil for reasons which are not clear. Her mother established a fabric shop in Rio de Janeiro and sent her daughter to school to learn Portuguese, English and German. Madame Durocher had two children with a Frenchman Pierre David, although they did not marry and he died when the children were still young (Mott (1992), 39).

In order to support her family she enrolled on the midwifery course at the newly opened Faculty of Medicine in Rio de Janeiro, from where she gained her diploma in 1834. She was the first female student of the Faculty and one of very few women to study there throughout the nineteenth century (Mott (1994), 115). She worked as a midwife in the capital for more than fifty years, and occupied the position of Imperial midwife, delivering the children of the Princess Leopoldina, daughter of Pedro II. She was the first, and for many years the only female member of the Imperial Academy of Medicine (Mott (1992), 40). She was considered to be an excellent midwife and the centenary of her arrival in Brazil was celebrated by the National Academy of Medicine in 1916. However she was also thought to be “bizarra” (Mott (1992), 40) for her masculine clothes and mannerisms. She published a large number of medical tracts, many of them in the Annaes da Academia Imperial de Medicina, a history of midwifery and a discussion of abolition. She died in Rio on 25 December 1893.

Life Events

Born 1809
Other 1816Moved to Brazil with her mother.
Other 1834She gained her diploma in midwifery from the Faculty of Medicine in Rio.
Died 1893

References

Blake, A V A Sacramento, (1900), Diccionario Bibliographico Brazileiro

Bernardes, Maria Thereza Caiuby Crescenti, (1989), Mulheres de Ontem?: Rio de Janeiro, século XIX

Costa, Albertina de Oliveira & Bruschini, Cristina, (1992), Parteiras no Século XIX: Mme. Durocher e sua Época

Mott, Maria Lucia de Barros, (1994), Madame Durocher, modista e parteira


Publications

There is no writing by this subject in the database.


Links

Resource id #33 (33)

Resource id #37 (38)

Resource id #41 (15)




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