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258 results filtered with: Pharmacists
  • Elizabeth Chudleigh, Duchess of Kingston, attending her trial for bigamy. Etching by John Hamilton Mortimer, 1776.
  • Plough Court : the story of a notable pharmacy, 1715-1927 / compiled by Ernest C. Cripps.
  • A surgeon-apothecary pulling out a man's tooth. Oil painting.
  • A surgeon-apothecary pulling out a man's tooth. Oil painting.
  • An apothecary riding a horse that is out of control and knocking over everything in its way. Etching by W.E.G.
  • A medical pracitioner examining a flask of urine brought by one of his patients. Process print after P. van der Wielen, 1928, after A. Pisano after Giotto.
  • Death as an apothecary's assistant making up medicines with a mortar and pestle for the apothecary attending a female patient who sits by the fireside. Watercolour by T. Rowlandson or one of his followers.
  • Fowke & Aston's improved diuretic balls : for swelled legs, grease, cracked heels, gravel, and affections of the kidneys, for removing all obstructions in the urinary passages, and humours of the eyes, or any other part of the body ... / prepared only by Fowke & Aston.
  • Fowke & Aston's mange wash : for the cure of mange in horses, cattle and dogs ... / prepared only by Fowke & Aston.
  • A skeletal figure riding a horse past a church and the devil; representing an apothecary and his remedies. Etching after R. Easton.
  • A druggist, a pharmacy student, a pounder (of medicine), a chemist and a pharmacist. Lithograph by J. Platier, 1842.
  • Oversize ephemera : Medical songs 2.
  • Two trees being cultivated by doctors; symbolising the differences claimed by James Morison between the 'organic' and his 'hygeist' approached to health. Lithograph, c. 1835.
  • A pharmacist and his apprentice - the apprentice points out that a customer can't be taking his medicine because he is getting better quickly. Coloured lithograph, c. 1840.
  • A surgeon-apothecary pulling out a man's tooth. Oil painting.
  • The shop of a tooth-drawer, barber, apothecary and blood-letter called "Dickey Gossip", with a song about him. Process print, 1931, after an etching, 1795.
  • An apothecary, John Simmonds, and his boy apprentice, William, working in the laboratory of John Bell's pharmacy. Engraving by J.G. Murray, 1842, after W.H. Hunt.
  • Oversize ephemera : Medical songs 2.