Video: Sensational rejuvenation operations, or who was hiding behind the image of Bulgakov's professor Preobrazhensky
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
Fantastic M. Bulgakov's story "Heart of a Dog" about a professor conducting an experiment to transplant a human pituitary gland into a dog was not really completely fictional. The main character - Professor Preobrazhensky - there was a real prototype, or rather, even several prototypes … In those days, Russian and foreign scientists really carried out experiments on human rejuvenation, and even on the interbreeding of humans with animals! There are at least four applicants for the role of the Preobrazhensky prototype.
Researchers looking for prototypes for this literary hero usually start with portrait likeness and geographic coordinates. The fact is that the story describes the apartment of Professor Preobrazhensky, and this description coincides in detail with the furnishings of the apartment of Bulgakov's uncle, gynecologist Nikolai Mikhailovich Pokrovsky. In addition, one cannot fail to notice the external similarity between the professor and Pokrovsky described in the story.
This version is also supported by the memoirs of the first wife of the writer Tatyana Lappa: “As I started reading“Heart of a Dog”, I immediately guessed that it was him. The same angry, he always hummed something, his nostrils flared, his mustache was just as lush. Then he was very offended by Mikhail for this. Nikolai Mikhailovich was distinguished by his uncompromising, hot-tempered character. However, the similarities are limited to these details. Pokrovsky did not conduct any scandalous experiments. Unlike the next contender for the role of the prototype of Professor Preobrazhensky.
Professor Preobrazhensky is engaged not only in treating patients, but also in their rejuvenation - for example, in one episode he announces to a 51-year-old woman that he intends to transplant her monkey ovaries. It sounds anecdotal, but, nevertheless, very close to reality. At the age of 70, the eminent French physician Charles Brown-Séquard began experimenting with rejuvenation - he gave himself 6 injections of an extract from the testes of rabbits and dogs. According to him, he felt a surge of strength and vigor and felt rejuvenated.
To demonstrate the veracity of his feelings, Brown-Sekar ran up the stairs, which he used to climb with difficulty. His lecture, read to the Paris Scientific Society in 1889, made a lot of noise. Several scientists followed suit and repeated his experiment. But soon the scientist recognized the short duration of the rejuvenating effect: he began to quickly grow decrepit and after 5 years he died - nature took its toll.
The experiments of Brown-Séquard were continued by the French surgeon of Russian origin Samuil Abramovich Voronov. He developed a technique for grafting monkey testicular tissue into human testicles. His experiments were so popular that soon a line of wealthy patients lined up for him, dreaming of rejuvenation and sexual activity. Thousands of people underwent treatment according to the Voronov system, and soon he even opened a monkey nursery for the convenience of carrying out procedures. But soon Voronov lost confidence and was proclaimed a charlatan.
And in the USSR, no less sensational experiments were carried out at the same time by Professor Ilya Ivanovich Ivanov, who discovered the method of artificial insemination to the world. He was engaged in the creation of interspecific hybrids and dreamed of crossing a man with a monkey. He presented this idea in 1910 at the World Congress of Zoologists. His dream was not destined to come true, but similar ideas were heard in the scientific world at the beginning of the twentieth century.
It is difficult to say which of these outstanding doctors really was the prototype of Professor Preobrazhensky, and whether he actually had prototypes - perhaps this is a collective image that embodied the features of the best minds of that era. This issue remains controversial, just like 6 little-known facts about the works of Mikhail Bulgakov
Recommended:
9 popular book characters behind which real people were hiding: From Baron Munchausen to Lolita
Often, writers find ideas for their books in real life, and then the heroes of the books literally "copied" from the people the writer met. However, an idea for inspiration can be an accidentally read newspaper article or news, after which it gets its continuation on the pages of a book. Today our review presents the heroes of famous literary works, each of which hid a very real person
Who was hiding behind the image of the heroine of the song "Murka": The real prototypes of Marusya Klimova
Probably everyone has heard the song "Murka" at least once in his life. There are many variants of it, but the most famous is the one in which Marusya Klimova is mentioned. Attempts to establish a real prototype of the heroine of this song have been made more than once, and the most probable version is the version of a Chekist girl with the same name and surname introduced into the Odessa criminal world. However, in other versions of the song, the heroines appear under different names, which forces researchers to put forward new assumptions. Cn
The secret of the "iron mask": who really could be hiding behind a terrible mask
In 1698, a prisoner was brought to the Bastille, whose face was hidden by a terrible iron mask. His name was unknown, and in prison he was listed under the number 64489001. The created aura of mystery gave rise to many versions of who this masked man could be
Hitchcock's muse and the wife of the Prince of Monaco Grace Kelly: what was hidden behind the image of the ideal blonde
American actress Grace Kelly aroused the envy of half of the female population of the United States - the appearance of the famous blonde was just perfect, and her movie roles have always been a success. But when she married the Prince of Monaco, half of the female population of Europe also began to envy her - the role of the princess became the best and most organic in her repertoire. Frank Sinatra said that she was a real princess from birth. Why didn't Grace Kelly feel happy and how tragic
Who from the imperial family was hiding behind drawings on a popular deck of playing cards
Check which deck of cards you have in your drawer at home. It is quite possible that this one! Probably, each of us has seen such a deck of cards ("Russian style") - in the days of the USSR, these cards were one of the most common. At first glance, there is nothing unusual in them - we are so accustomed to these drawings that we probably did not even pay attention to the clothes of the card heroes. This is where the strangeness lies: the prototypes for kings and queens in this deck were not proletarians and collective farmers, but participants after