George Baker (surgeon)

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The new Iewell of Health, 1576, The fourth Booke of Dystillations, p. 211, Science History Institute

George Baker (1540 – 1600) was an English surgeon notable for writing and translating a number of early medical texts.

Baker was a member of the [[Company of Barbers and Surgeons of London]] and was elected master in 1597. In 1574, when he published his first book, Baker was attached to the household of the Earl of Oxford, and the writings of his contemporaries show that he had already attained to considerable practice in London. Banester of Nottingham speaks of his eminence in Latin verse:— Ergo Bakere tuum superabit sidera nomen, Atque aliqua semper parte superstes eris. And Clowes, another contemporary, prophesies the lasting fame of his works in English verse of the same quality. The apex of his career was serving as the personal surgeon to Queen Elizabeth I.

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