Lillias Hamilton

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Lillias_Hamilton an entity of type: Thing

Lillias Anna Hamilton (7 February 1858 – 6 January 1925) was a British doctor and author. She was born at Tomabil Station, New South Wales to Hugh Hamilton (1822– 1900) and his wife Margaret Clunes (née Innes). After attending school in Ayr and then Cheltenham Ladies' College, she trained first as a nurse, in Liverpool, before going on to study medicine in Scotland, qualifying as a Doctor of Medicine in 1890. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Lillias Hamilton
rdf:langString Lillias Hamilton
rdf:langString Lillias Hamilton
rdf:langString Lillias Hamilton
rdf:langString Nice, France
xsd:date 1925-01-06
rdf:langString New South Wales, Australia
xsd:date 1858-02-07
xsd:integer 4302235
xsd:integer 1121754772
xsd:date 1858-02-07
xsd:date 1925-01-06
rdf:langString British medical doctor, writer
rdf:langString Lillias Anna Hamilton (7 February 1858 – 6 January 1925) was a British doctor and author. She was born at Tomabil Station, New South Wales to Hugh Hamilton (1822– 1900) and his wife Margaret Clunes (née Innes). After attending school in Ayr and then Cheltenham Ladies' College, she trained first as a nurse, in Liverpool, before going on to study medicine in Scotland, qualifying as a Doctor of Medicine in 1890. She was a to Amir Abdur Rahman Khan in Afghanistan in the 1890s, and wrote a fictionalized account of her experiences in her book A Vizier's Daughter: A Tale of the Hazara War, published in 1900. After a spell in private practice in London, she became Warden of Studley Horticultural College in the years before World War I, taking leave from the College in 1915 to serve in a typhoid hospital in Montenegro under the auspices of the Wounded Allies Relief Committee. Her published works include A Nurse's Bequest, 1907.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 11415
xsd:gYear 1858
xsd:gYear 1925

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