JOURNAL OF MEDICAL BIOGRAPHY, cilt.32, sa.5, ss.1-12, 2024 (AHCI)
Please cite as: Yesim Isil Ulman and Ceren Gulser Ilikan Rasimoglu, "Story of a Levantine family in late Ottoman Constantinople: Dr Julius van Millingen and Dr Edwin van Millingen", Journal of Medical Biography, 2024:1-12.
Story of a Levantine family in late Ottoman Constantinople: Dr Julius van Millingen and Dr Edwin van Millingen
Abstract
This paper examines Drs Julius and Edwin van Millingen, father and son physicians from a Constantinople-based Levantine
family. They thrived in late 19th-century Ottoman Constantinople, a period of modernization aimed at survival amid
decline. The profiles of Millingen family members set an exemplary case of the Levantine families who preferred to settle
and pursue their careers in the Ottoman capital, particularly for generations in the Pera (Beyoglu) bourgeoisie, associated
with the prominent industrial and literate centers in Europe. Dr Julius Michael van Millingen (1800–1878) was physician
and companion to Lord Byron (1788–1824), and served as the private physician of the Sultan Abdulmecid (1839–1861), and
the Queen Mother, Bezm-i Alem Valide Sultan (1807–1853) at the Imperial Ottoman Palace. He published considerable
writings on balneology, then. His son, Dr Edwin van Millingen (1850–1900), an Istanbul-born ophthalmologist, worked
at top hospitals, taught at the Imperial School of Medicine, and collaborated with the Société Impériale de Médecine. He
reported on common ophthalmological diseases, with detailed statistics and meticulously organized tabular data. The
multicultural lives of this Levantine family offer a unique glimpse into 19th-century Turkish medical history, reflecting
close ties with Western medical centers.
Keywords
Julius van Millingen, Edwin van Millingen, Constantinople, the late Ottoman era, Lord Byron, Levantines, ophthalmology