Robert Liveing


Robert Liveing was an English physician and pioneer of dermatology.

Biography

Robert Liveing matriculated in 1852 at Christ's College, Cambridge, graduating there BA in 1856, MA in 1860, MB in 1861, and MD in 1865. He received his medical education at King's College, London and at Paris, before receiving his MB in 1861 from Cambridge. He qualified MRCP in 1866. In 1861–1862 he held two house appointments at King's College Hospital before joining the staff of Middlesex Hospital, Fitzrovia, London. At Middlesex Hospital he was lecturer on anatomy and physiology from 1862 to 1866, assistant physician from 1866 to 1872, and physician from 1872 to 1876. In 1876 he resigned there as physician. At Middlesex Hospital he was physician to the skin department from 1879 to 1888, and retired in 1888 to become consulting physician to the skin department.
In 1872 Liveing was elected FRCP. In 1873 he delivered the Goulstonian Lectures on Elephantiasis Græcorum, or, True Leprosy. His Handbook on skin diseases was a standard text of dermatology in the 1880s and 1890s.
According to the dermatologist Henry Renwick Vickers, the first four appointments of dermatologists to teaching hospitals in the UK were: Sir William Jenner in 1859, Tilbury Fox in 1860, Robert Liveing in 1879, and Sir Malcolm Morris in 1882.
Liveing was a member of the Athenaeum Club and vice-president of the Alpine Club in 1869 and 1870.

Family

Robert Liveing had seven sisters and three brothers, two of whom were Edward Liveing and George Downing Liveing. On 15 August 1866 in Blendworth, Hampshire, Robert Liveing married Adelaide Mary Dorothea Hawker, a daughter of Admiral Edward Hawker and his first wife Joanna Naomi, née Poore. Robert and Adelaide Liveing had a son, Charles Hawker Liveing, and two daughters, Katherine Edith Liveing and Helen Adelaide Liveing.

Selected publications

Articles

Books