Théophile Bonet (March 6, 1620 – March 29, 1689) was a 16th Century Genevan Physician and Anatomist who is considered one of the founders of Anatomical Pathology. Biography. His Family of physicians were Italian protestant religious refugees who immigrated to Geneva in 16th century during the Counter-Reformation. He attended various educational institutions, graduated in 1643 from the University of Bologna, becoming a doctor at the age of twenty-three. He returned to Geneva, and built a practice through family connections. In 1652 he was admitted to the Geneva's Council of Two Hundred governing body. He later immigrated to Neuchatel in 1657 because of the city’s doctor shortage, and was welcomed there with high honors. A year later he was appointed personal court physician to the reigning Neuchatel Prince Henry II was and granted a considerable salary. Bonet left Neuchâtel in 1666, and returned to Geneva due to hostility from local elite, being assaulted by a local doctor and apothecary because of his attempt to introduce new medical regulations in the region. At the age of fifty he developed serious health problems, including hearing loss that turned into complete deafness, and dropsy caused by heart disease. Because of his mounting health issues, he abandoned his medical practice and devoted all of his physical energy into his medical research. His Principal Work, the "Sepulchretum" is considered the first complete work on pathological anatomy. The "Sepulchretum" is 1,700 pages long and complies the details of three thousand autopsies carried about by himself and other authors like William Harvey, along with medical histories, dissection findings and commentaries, including the 1635 autopsy carried out by Harvey on the body of Thomas Parr who controversially claimed to be at 152 years at his death."Sepulchretum" had a significant impact on creating the field of pathological anatomy and paved the groundwork for Giovanni Battista Morgagni a century later. He also wrote the popular "Guide to the Practical Physician" which was a widely translated practical guide to doctors, giving known treatments to common maladies like hernia, fevers, tumors, fractures, and gout. He died suddenly of dropsy on March 29, 1689.