(or Gulston) (1572–1632) was an English physician, scholar, and founder of the Goulstonian Lectures.
He entered Merton College, Oxford, was elected a fellow in 1596, and graduated M.A.
[1] He had in his own time a reputation for general learning, and a considerable practice as a physician.
He died at his house in St. Martin's on Ludgate Hill 4 May 1632, and by his will, dated 26 April 1632, left £200 to the College of Physicians of London to found a lectureship, to be held in each year by one of the four youngest doctors of the college.
[1] In 1619 he published in London Versio Latina et Paraphrasis in Aristotelis Rhetoricam, with a dedication to Prince Charles in Latin prose, and his notes and Latin version were reprinted in the edition of the Greek text published at Cambridge in 1696.