Francis Prujean


Sir Francis Prujean M.D. was an English physician.

Life

The son of Francis Prujean, rector of Boothby, Lincolnshire, he was born at Bury St Edmunds, and educated by his father. He entered Caius College, Cambridge as a sizar, on 23 March 1610, and graduated M.B. in 1617, and M.D. in 1625. He became a licentiate of the College of Physicians of London on 22 December 1621, and was elected a fellow in 1626.
Prujean practised in Lincolnshire till 1638, and then settled in London. In 1639 he was elected a censor at the College of Physicians, and again from 1642 to 1647. He was registrar from 1641 to 1647, and president from 1650 to 1654, in the last of which years he was chosen, on the recommendation of William Harvey who declined the post. He was treasurer from 1655 to 1663.
Prujean had a large practice, and was knighted by Charles II on 1 April 1661. When Queen Catherine of Braganza had typhus fever in October 1663, he attended her, and her recovery was attributed to a cordial he prescribed. John Evelyn described his laboratory and collection of pictures, and mentions that he played on the "polythore", a musical instrument combining features of the harp, lute and theorbo.
Prujean died on 23 June 1666, and was buried at Hornchurch in Essex. Baldwin Hamey the younger composed a Latin epitaph. Prujean lived near the Old Bailey, and the place was named Prujean Square after him. Samuel Pepys called him a man of great judgment but who sadly left no written works behind him.

Family

Prujean was married twice: first to Margaret Leggatt, and secondly, on 13 February 1664, to Margaret, the widow of Sir Thomas Fleming, and daughter of Edward Gorges, 1st Baron Gorges of Dundalk. Samuel Pepys records that his second wife brought him a great fortune. By his first wife he had an only son, Thomas Prujean, who graduated M.D. at Cambridge in 1649.