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  1. James Manby Gully (14 March 1808 – 27 March 1883) [1] was a Victorian medical doctor, well known for practising hydrotherapy, or the "water cure". Along with his partner James Wilson, he founded a very successful "hydropathy" (as it was then called) clinic in Malvern, Worcestershire, which had many notable Victorians, including ...

  2. James Manby Gully (14 de março de 1808 – 1883) foi um médico vitoriano, conhecido por praticar hidroterapia, ou a "cura da água". Junto com seu parceiro James Wilson , ele fundou uma clínica de "hidropatia" muito bem-sucedida (como era então chamada) em Malvern, Worcestershire , que tinha muitos vitorianos notáveis, incluindo ...

  3. 18 de jul. de 2008 · James Manby Gully (MD Edin. 1829 LRCS) 1808 – 1883 Fellow of the Royal Physical Society, Fellow of the Royal Medico Chirurgical Society was an orthodox physician who converted to homeopathy, and he was well known for practising hydrotherapy, or the “water cure”.

  4. Biography. Celebrated Victorian hydrotherapist, awarded one-third of the compensation for the Middleton estate in St George Jamaica, and party to the Chancery suit of Gully v Gully together with John Gully (q.v.), into which the compensation for the Sheffield estate in St David Jamaica was paid.

  5. James Manby Gully foi um médico vitoriano, conhecido por praticar hidroterapia, ou a "cura da água". Junto com seu parceiro James Wilson, ele fundou uma clínica de "hidropatia" muito bem-sucedida em Malvern, Worcestershire, que tinha muitos vitorianos notáveis, incluindo figuras como Charles Darwin e Alfred, Lord Tennyson, como clientes.

  6. James Manby Gully. (1808-1883), Physician. Sitter in 3 portraits. James Manby Gully was a celebrated Victorian hydrotherapist. Gully trained in medicine in Paris and then Edinburgh. His family fortune was tied up in the ownership of two plantations and many enslaved Africans in Jamaica.

  7. 14 de mar. de 2023 · James Manby Gully, an English physician, was born On This Day 14 March 1808 in Jamaica. A former resident in Leigham Court Road and he died at "Orwell Lodge", Bedford Hill. In 1842, Dr. Gully, with a partner, set up a hydropathy (hydrotherapy) establishment in Great Malvern, in Worcestershire.