Isala Van Diest

Isala Van Diest

Black and white photograph

Photograph portrait of Isala Van Diest
Born (1842-05-07)7 May 1842
Louvain, Belgium
Died 6 February 1916(1916-02-06) (aged 73)
Knokke, Belgium
Nationality  Belgium
Occupation medical doctor

Anne Catherine Albertine Isala Van Diest (Louvain, Belgium 7 May 1842Ixelles, Belgium 6 February 1916), better known by the name Isala Van Diest, was the first female medical doctor and the first female university graduate in Belgium.[1][2]

Biography

Education and medical career

The daughter of an open-minded surgeon and obstetrician, Isala Van Diest and her sisters received the same education as their brother. Their mother also took them on a trip to England, where they came into contact with the progressive environment.

Secondary high schools were not yet at that time available to girls in Belgium, so Isala travelled to Berne, Switzerland to prepare for university. She returned to Belgium in 1873 and attempted to register with the Medical Faculty of the Catholic University of Louvain, but was hampered by the refusal of the Roman Catholic religious hierarchy, who suggested to her that she instead become a midwife. She refused this proposal and returned to Bern, since the Swiss universities were the first of Europe to open up to women and she could pursue medical studies there.

She graduated in 1879, and practised her profession for two years in England, where women doctors were free to practise since 1866. She was attached to the New Hospital for Women, and during the time she met many British feminists.

She once again returned to Belgium, however, to be able to have her medical qualifications recognized, she was forced to complete additional courses at the Free University of Brussels, open to women since 1880. It then took a Royal Decree in 1884, in order to be allowed to open her own medical practice in Brussels.

Campaiging and political activities

Many of her patients came from the upper classes of Brussels society, but she also treated pensioners at a nursing home for elderly prostitutes and fought for better treatment for prostitutes. A feminist, she founded the Belgian Women's Rights League (Ligue belge du droit des femmes) with Marie Popelin, the first Belgian woman to receive a degree in Law.

In 1902, progressively losing her eyesight, she ended her professional activities and moved to Knokke, where she passed her final years. [3]

Commemoration

Isala Van Diest and Marie Popelin were together depicted on the 2 euro commemorative coin, 5 million of which were minted in 2011 by the National Bank of Belgium on the occasion of the centenary of International Women's Day.[4]

In Belgium, this was the first time that women who were not part of the royal family appeared on a piece of Belgian money.

See also

References


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