Skip to main content
281 results
  • Japanese Scroll, bandages and bandaging techniques
  • Japanese Scroll, bandages and bandaging techniques
  • Japanese Scroll, bandages and bandaging techniques
  • Japanese Scroll, bandages and bandaging techniques
  • Japanese Scroll, bandages and bandaging techniques
  • Japanese Scroll, bandages and bandaging techniques
  • Japanese Scroll, bandages and bandaging techniques
  • Methods of bandaging a broken leg: eight figures, showing femur and tibia bones broken at various points and the appropriate methods of applying bandages and splints. Lithograph, 18--?.
  • Diagrams illustrating: bandaged legs in splints, bandaged upper bodies and bandaged heads and eyes. Engraving by W. Lowry, 1811, after J. Farey, the younger (?).
  • Diagrams illustrating: bandaged legs in splints, bandaged upper bodies and bandaged heads and eyes. Engraving by W. Lowry, 1811, after J. Farey, the younger (?).
  • Diagrams illustrating: bandaged legs in splints, bandaged upper bodies and bandaged heads and eyes. Engraving by W. Lowry, 1811, after J. Farey, the younger (?).
  • Surgical instruments and bandages. Engraving with etching.
  • An invalid with bandaged arm and head. Coloured aquatint.
  • C.G. Le Clerc, A description of bandages and
  • Abnormal heads and skulls, fractured and bandaged clavicle and a broken (?) leg bandaged in a splint. Engraving by W. Lowry, 1811, after J. Farey, the younger.
  • Abnormal heads and skulls, fractured and bandaged clavicle and a broken (?) leg bandaged in a splint. Engraving by W. Lowry, 1811, after J. Farey, the younger.
  • A man with a bandaged head. Pen and ink drawing.
  • Surgery: fractured legs, splints and bandages. Engraving by W. Lowry.
  • Diagram showing hernia bandages for a male and infant, Fig. 1. Bandage circulaire droit, garni de ses enveloppes. (Circular binding right, furnished with its envelopes). Fig. 2. Meme bandage place sur le sujet. (Meme binding place on the subject)
  • Diagrams illustrating: five bandaged legs (three with different sorts of splints), two heads showing veins, a bandaged head, a bandaged torso, a recepticle with body for curing shoulder dislocations and an eye operation. Line engraving by W.H. Lizars, 1830.
  • Surgical instruments and bandages, as well as a saw. Engraving by J. Brown.
  • The upper body and head and ways of bandaging them. Stipple engraving by J. Bell.
  • The upper body and head and ways of bandaging them. Stipple engraving by J. Bell.
  • The good samaritan bandaging a wounded man with oils and wine. Pen and ink drawing.
  • Diagrams illustrating how to bandage and set fractures in splints. Engraving by J. Johnstone.
  • World War One: a bandaged patient with a doctor and nurse. Photograph, ca. 1919.
  • Surgical instruments, including an artery bandage, an accoustic tube and a bedstead. Engraving by Campbell.
  • Sixteen diagrams illustrating different bandages and how to apply them to the human body. Line engraving.
  • Three heads illustrating different methods of bandaging them and the jaw. Stipple engraving by J. Bell.
  • Surgery: patients with fractured clavicles and bandaged clavicles. Engraving by Wilson Lowry after John Farey jun.