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42 results filtered with: Rymsdyk, Jan van, active 1750-1788
  • Anatomical tables with explanations, and an abridgement of the practice of midwifery : with a view to illustrate a treatise on that subject, and collection of cases.
  • Dissection of a pregnant uterus, showing the foetus at nine months, with its head facing upwards. Copperplate engraving by Mechel after I.V. Rymsdyk, 1774, reprinted 1851.
  • Dissections of abortions of around eight and nine weeks: six figures, each with an accompanying line diagram. Copperplate engraving by T. Worlidge after J.V. Rymsdyk, 1774, reprinted 1851.
  • Dissections showing parts of the pregnant uterus, decidua and ovum at nine months: five figures. Copperplate engraving by P.C. Canot after J.V. Rymsdyk, 1774, reprinted 1851.
  • Dissection of the pregnant female abdomen, showing the skin peeled away to reveal the swollen uterus, the diaphragm and the intestines, side view. Copperplate engraving by T. Major after I.V. Rymsdyk, 1774, reprinted 1851.
  • Anatomical tables with explanations, and an abridgement of the practice of midwifery : with a view to illustrate a treatise on that subject, and collection of cases.
  • Dissection of the male abdomen: two figures. Lithograph by G. Scharf, after J. Van Rymsdyk, 1820/1840?.
  • Dissection of the pregnant uterus and eight months, showing the uterine vessels. Copperplate engraving by Michell after I.V. Rymsdyk, 1774, reprinted 1851.
  • Dissections of a retroverted pregnant uterus, shown with the bladder, at five months: two figures. Copperplate engraving by Aliamet after J.V. Rymsdyk, 1774, reprinted 1851.
  • Dissections of chorions during the early stages of pregnancy: nine figures. Copperplate engraving by G. Powle after J.V. Rymsdyk, 1774, reprinted 1851.
  • Dissection of the pregnant uterus at five months, showing the foetus removed and the umbilical cord still attached, with a detail showing the cervix. Copperplate engraving by Manil after J.V. Rymsdyk, 1774, reprinted 1851.
  • Skull of 'a human idiot' seen from below. Lithograph by G. Scharf, after J. Van Rymsdyk, 1820/1840?.