History revisited She got off to a promising, pioneering start. And then, like countless other women in 19th and early 20th century, left it all after getting married.
Filipa Lowndes Vicente filipa.vice...@ics.ulisboa.pt Dec 05, 2021 · 11:30 am Emmeline da Cunha and her family. Emmeline da Cunha is considered to be Goa's first female doctor. She completed her medical degree in Bombay in 1896, as the bubonic plague broke out, and began her career in the port of this major city of British colonial India. She continued her studies in Florence, Newcastle and London, specialising in Bacteriology and Tropical Medicine, during her brief, but intense, medical career. Her cosmopolitan and contradictory life journey allows us to reflect on the complex connections between gender, science and colonialism. Inaugurated in 1845, Grant Medical College was the first Western medical college to be created in British India. It began accepting female students almost four decades later, in 1884, a few years before several European universities did so (for example, Edinburgh University in 1889). Its first female graduate was Freny Cama, a member of Bombay's prosperous and progressive Parsi community who passed from the college in 1892. Four years later, six women concluded their medical degree: Manak Turkhad, another woman from the Parsi community; four Britons; and Emmeline da Cunha, an Indian woman of Portuguese nationality, who was born in Panjim and raised in Bombay by Goan Catholic parents. During her studies, Emmeline da Cunha won several university prizes -- the Sir James Fergusson Scholarship (1890), the Lady Reay Medal, Bai Hirabai Petit Medal, Scholarship of Medical Women in India Fund and, in competition with male and female candidates, the Balkrishna Sudamji Prize in Obstetrics and Gynaecology (1893). Several historical records identify her as Goa's first female doctor. This is probably true, even though statements about pioneers always run the risk of being imprecise or inaccurate. In 1896, the same year that Da Cunha and her colleagues graduated, there was an outbreak in one of Bombay's slums that was identified by physician Acácio Gabriel Viegas (also of Goan descent) as the bubonic plague. There had been a prior outbreak in China, and, by the turn of the century, the plague had spread to many parts of the world, in what was considered to be the third plague pandemic in history. The massive development of the shipping industry throughout the 19th century -- from the invention of steamships to the opening of Suez Canal in 1869 -- and increased international movement of people and goods meant that port cities became especially vulnerable to the spread of disease: from Porto to Rio de Janeiro to Bombay (the gateway to India and the point of passage between Europe and Asia). At the start of the plague, Da Cunha was appointed the physician-inspector of the Port of Bombay, before she moved to Italy and then England to pursue her studies in bacteriology and tropical medicine. PHOTO: An image from the album "The Bombay plague epidemic of 1896-1897: work of the Bombay Plague Committee", 1897. Credit: Capt. C Moss/Wellcome Trust/Wikimedia Commons [Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence]. Diversity And Mobility Several Indian historians have studied the entry of women into healthcare professions in different regions of India. For example, Sujata Mukherjee and Ambalika Guha have focused on Calcutta or Madras, while Mridula Ramanna has primarily studied Bombay. Their work is relatively recent. It was only in the 1970s -- when female academics globally entered universities, libraries, archives and museums in force -- that women began to be studied historically in a committed and in-depth manner. Women had been identified in the archives and documents, but they became part of recorded history only when present-day researchers sought them out and transformed them into a historiographical object. In her article Women Physicians as Vital Intermediaries in Colonial Bombay, Ramanna identified the origins of all the women who graduated from Grant Medical College between 1892 and 1915. Thirty-one of them were Parsis; 17 were Indian Christians; eight were Hindus, and two were Jews. That most of them came from the Parsi community was no accident. During this period, Parsis -- of Iranian origin and practitioners of Zoroastrianism -- were one of the most influential communities in Bombay. Straddling the worlds of trade, philanthropy and public intervention, Parsis assumed a hybrid identity in Bombay that was shaped by British colonists and the colonised population, which was primarily Hindu. Inspired by this cosmopolitan culture, several Parsi women decided to pursue academic careers. The second biggest group of women physicians were Indian Christians -- communities that at different times in history had been under Portuguese rule and converted to Christianity. Many other female graduates studied outside India. Britain, a colonial homeland, was one of the places they went. Another was Philadelphia, where several foreign women studied medicine in the 1880s, including Anandabai Joshee. PHOTO: Anandabai Joshee (left), Kei Okami and Tabat M. Islambooly, students at the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania. Joshee was born in 1865 to a Hindu Brahmin family, near Bombay. Before leaving for the USA, she made a public presentation where she stated: "There is a growing need for Hindu female doctors in India, and I am willing to train as one". Credit: Wikimedia Commons [Public Domain]. Who was Emmeline da Cunha? Emelina Maria Antonieta da Cunha, as often occurred when people moved between Portuguese and British Indias, was born into the most privileged Goan community in Bombay, the Catholic Brahmins, who combined Catholicism with the Brahmin caste. To her community were available the privileges of belonging to the religion of the Portuguese governors as well as the highest echelon of the Indian caste system that perpetuated social and religious inequalities. By this time, Bombay had a vast Christian community, including those who lived been living there before it passed from Portuguese to British rule. It was also home to a community of Goans, most of whom were Catholics, but some were Hindus from diverse social and caste backgrounds who moved to Bombay in the 19th century in search of study and work. Emelina's anglicised name was Emmeline da Cunha. She was the daughter of Ana Rita da Gama and physician-historian José Gerson da Cunha. She was born in Panjim in 1873 during one of her parents' long stays in Goa. The couple was equally invested in the education of the son as of the two daughters. Emmeline da Cunha's sister, Olívia, studied art in Florence after graduating from the University of Bombay. Historical analysis has identified several patterns in the relationship between women in the fields of knowledge and creativity since the 16th century. One is the way in which the encouragement provided by their fathers -- men -- was decisive in enabling the daughters to pursue higher education or dedicate themselves to writing, to the arts, to science, as well as to the various professions that implied presence in the public area and remuneration. This seems to be the case with Emmeline da Cunha. Her proud father, Gerson da Cunha wrote a letter to the Italian orientalist, Angelo de Gubernatis, in 1897, in which he remarked: "[My children] are all studying successfully and, thank God, have given me great pleasure and satisfaction. My oldest daughter is about to complete her medical course." Several years before, in 1883, he had sent another letter from Bombay to Florence, in which he referred to how Emmeline, then nine years old, had taken exams and been proposed for the "first prize in her class". A few months later, he wrote again to the Italian specialist and told him that his daughter was also "a natural pianist", like her mother. The correspondence between Gerson da Cunha and the scholar De Gubernatis, stored in the manuscript section of the National Library of Florence, was the starting point for my book Other Orientalisms: India between Florence and Bombay (2009). It was in this manuscript and the collection of personal correspondence between the two men, available in a public institution, that I first discovered this woman's name. I found the daughter after researching her father. In my ongoing research into Gerson da Cunha and the production of knowledge about India by Indians in the second half of the 1800s, Emmeline da Cunha's medical journey became a separate chapter, rather than a mere footnote -- the place to which so many female names have been relegated. She is an exemplary case. To be able to discern historical traces of women, we must scrutinise the archives of men in a creative and committed way. First Stop In Europe Da Cunha continued her studies in three European cities. First in Florence, then Newcastle and finally in London. University archives are crucially important for this type of research, even more so in the cases of women who, after completing their studies, left few or no records in public documentation. While it was common for Indians to move to England to study -- influenced by imperial itineraries -- Emmeline da Cunha's choice of Florence can only be explained by a very specific set of circumstances that are inseparable from the intellectual and friendly relations that her father maintained with the Italian city. Gerson da Cunha spent a long time in Italy in 1878 to present a conference at the International Congress of Orientalists in Florence and to pursue research in the Vatican's historical archives in Rome. When did Emmeline da Cunha leave for Europe? In 1896, Gerson da Cunha wrote a letter to the wife of Florence's mayor, saying that the family would pass through the Tuscan city on its way to London. But this is also the year in which Emmeline da Cunha was due to be appointed as a medical inspector in the Port of Bombay. Did the outbreak of the bubonic plague change the family's plans? The Times of India newspaper stated in 1898 that Da Cunha was still a "lady plague inspection doctor". It was only in 1899 that it was possible to confirm that the family's three women were all living in Florence. Da Cunha's final thesis, written in Italian and entitled Sulla esistenza di microrganismi pathogeni nella bocca and nel naso d'individui sani, is available online as part of a recent inventory of all theses written by women at the University of Florence from 1875, when women were allowed to attend Italian universities, until World War II, when their numbers significantly multiplied. PHOTO: First page of Emmeline da Cunha's final thesis in Bacteriology, University of Florence, Italy, 1899. Courtesy: Filipa Lowndes Vicente. The letterheads from this period indicate two addresses: Via dei Banchi, n.4 and Pensione Pendini, on Via Strozzi. Her father had been working in Bombay and he returned to Florence to present a conference at the International Congress of Orientalists in Rome in 1899. The three women of the family were all registered in the minutes as participants in the congress. They were not the only ones. The periodical I'llustrazione Italiana described Angelo de Gubernatis, the congress organiser and friend of the Da Cunha family, as the "feminist of the Event" because he invited so many members of the "gentler sex". After the congress, the family remained in Italy and Gerson da Cunha returned to India, promising to return soon after. But in 1900, while still in Bombay, he died of bubonic plague, aged 56. The newly widowed, Ana Rita, in a letter to Gubernatis, said: "Had my husband fulfilled the promise he made to us both to return to Rome after six months, he certainly would not have died, and we would all be happy here, living in beautiful Italy, this divine land, surrounded by good and kind friends such as you, my dear Count, and your excellent family." Medicine In Colonial Metropolis What did Emmeline da Cunha do between completing her special studies in bacteriology in Florence and her enrolment in Newcastle University in Northern England in 1901? Did she return to India or stay in Europe? It is known that, in the first quarter of the 1901 academic year, she was enrolled in the College of Medicine in Newcastle. A year later, she took the final exams for her BSc degree in hygiene, and, on September 27, 1902, she obtained her degree. One of her written works earned her the Luke Armstrong Scholar Prize in Comparative Pathology. British India offered yet another advantage to Goans that affected both genders -- the possibility of introducing greater ambiguity to their status as "colonised" persons, a category that was inevitably assigned to them, whether in Portuguese India, or in Portugal. In British India, but especially in the cosmopolitan city of Bombay in the late 19th century, the hybrid identity of Goans offered an element of emancipation. They were Indians of Portuguese nationality and for that reason they were not subject to the British government in the same way as the Indians of British India. The relationship between Goans and the world of medicine also invalidates any easy opposition between Western European medicine on the one hand and Ayurvedic Indian medicine on the other. In the context of the Portuguese empire, from the 16th century, so-called "Western" medicine formed an intrinsic part of Goan culture, especially for those who converted to the Catholic religion and the Portuguese language. When Da Cunha's father wrote a historical essay on the life and work of the Portuguese Jew Garcia de Orta, in Bombay, he also stated that the genealogy of 16th-century medicine and botany was inseparable from the history of India (and from his own training as a Goan). But the potential advantages of this Goan community living in Bombay -- in terms of its colonial identity in general as well as its greater openness to the female gender -- also came at a price. In the interstices and borders between imperial contexts, the Goans of Bombay tended to remain outside the lens of observation of historians, both British and Portuguese, who were primarily focused on the axes between the colonies and the homelands. But it is in these hybrid places, involving multiple geographies, languages and cultures, that we find people such as Emmeline da Cunha, a cosmopolitan woman both in terms of her transnational itineraries in the field of medicine and her own identity -- which is also contradictory, especially in the way that she renounced her promising scientific career and disappeared from the historical records. -- Filipa Lowndes Vicente is a historian at the Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon. Support our journalism by contributing to Scroll Ground Reporting Fund. 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