by Ciprian Plăieșu
Some historians say that Carlo
Antonio Francesco d’Avila (or in French Charles d’Avila) was born in 1828, in
Parma, as the illegitimate son of the great musician Franz Liszt and of
Contesse Marie d’Agout. The historians base their saying on the stories told by
Sabina Cantacuzino, the eldest daughter of Ion Brătianu and the sister of Ionel
and Vintilă Brătianu. She was connected to the medical elite of the time, being
the wife of Doctor Constantin Cantacuzino. Yet, there are rumors saying that
Davila was the child of some German noblemen who disappeared before their time
in a fire and the child was adopted by a doctor who helped him follow the
medical studies, first in Germany and afterwards at the University of Paris.
A three years invitation, transformed in a work of a lifetime
Not yet 25 years old and young
M.D. Carol Davila was back from Champagne and Cher where he participated for
the first time at the stopping of a cholera epidemic. He received an
invitation, a three years contract that was about to change his life forever.
Barbu Știrbei, the ruler of Walachia at that time, wanted to modernize the
local medical system. So, helped by some people he knew in Paris, the ruler
wanted to select some young graduates of the Paris Medical University. On
the13th of March 1853 Barbu Știrbei and Carol Davila met for the first time in Bucharest.
He would soon win the ruler`s trust and support and, despite the political
tribulations of that time, Carol Davila had pursued his entire life the purpose
for which he came into Romania – the reformation of the medical system (both
military and civil) and the development of the medical educational institutions.
Sabina Cantacuzino described him in such a way that she captured precisely this
detail: “He was a pleasant man, intelligent, active, with good organizational
skills but also very ambition and, the rumors were saying, he was good at
flattering. He was brought by Știrbei, but he had good relationships not only
with all the rulers Cuza, Carol but also with each and every minister, and this
was considered a very bad thing during those times of passionate political
fighting; people were not taking into account that he was a foreigner and he
had a special purpose in his activity”.
Beyond the reorganization of the
medical system, in 1855 Carol Davila set up a surgeon`s assistant school and,
in the year 1856, a secondary surgery school with a theoretical and a sanitary
–military curriculum. He struggled not to have this school closed in the
troubled times before the Great Union and, later on in 1869, this school had
become the Faculty of Medicine.
Carol Davila setup the education
system for pharmaceutics and veterinary studies, he founded several societies
and specialized magazines (among which the Association of the Romanian Doctors,
the Medical Monitor, the Hospitals’ Gazette); he organized
medical conferences and taught experimental demonstrations at Saint Sava High
school; he founded together with the Austrian horticulture Ulrich Hoffman, the
Botanic Garden of Bucharest; he introduced medical contests and mandatory
stages in hospitals. He also founded two orphanages and a deaf-mute school; he also
tried to regulate the introduction of free consultations in hospitals for the
sick poor people. He also organized the ambulances system that was fully used
during the Independence War of 1877 -1878 and saved thousands of lives. Despite
the recognition granted for his special merits – in 1860 he was appointed
general -, only in the year 1868 he had received the Romanian citizenship.
Less known details about Carol Davila
Today the life of Carol Davila seems like one success after another, but things are far from being this way and only hard work and perseverance, sometimes a fantastic struggle, do provide such results. For example, shortly after his coming into Walachia, due to the insanitary conditions in which he lived in the house on the Dâmbovița`s pier, the young man got sick with rheumatism that had paralyzed one of his arms. Another difficult moment of his life was during his first marriage, only one year long, when his wife died giving birth. He later re-married Ana Racoviță.

As
he was always present where his expertise was needed, he often got sick, but in
1865, while trying to stop typhus epidemics, he became seriously ill and almost
died. Carol Davila was an energetic person, exigent and choleric and was
described as a difficult to bear individual: “When he got all crazy, he would
turn over the table with plates and everything on it, breaking glasses,
bottles, smashing the doors and making the entire house shake”. It even seems
that his uncompromising personality got him into a duel. After a fire, Davila, being
General Director of the Military Sanitary Service, ordered that all smoking on
the premises is forbidden – especially in the attics that were wooden-built.
Once, during an inspection he ran into a sub-lieutenant who was smoking. Davila
grabbed his cigarette, smacked him over the face and rubbed the cigarette on
his cheek. The incident was reported to the Minister of War, General I. Emanoil
Florescu. The officer was called in and ordered to provoke Davila at a duel.
The duel took place in Băneasa
and had two rounds. Davila fired in the air and the sub-lieutenant didn`t
succeed to shot at him. Then, the officer fell on his knees, burst into tears
and begged for Davila`s forgiveness. In 1874, his second wife died, by
accidental poisoning: she received strychnine instead of cinchona, so the
famous doctor was left a widow.
He participated at the
Independence Wae and fell ill with an infectious anthrax around his cervix; he
underwent an emergency operation, got a general furunculosis and the sciatic
crisis forced him to walk around with a cane. Despite all these medical
problems, Carol Davila continued his activity until his death in 1884 and he
became a model and a reference both for the medical staff but also for the
ordinary people. King Carol I himself, one of the most respected and powerful
personalities in our history, had much considerate words about him in his
letters and his journal, briefly and comprehensively saying: Davila is
everywhere there is need of him.


