334 results filtered with: Digital Images
- Digital Images
- Online
Indic Manuscript 278, 25b and 26a
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 5b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 17b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 8b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 16b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 4b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 332, folio 36a
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 22, folio 11a
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 189, folio 5a
- Digital Images
- Online
Celebrity victims of AIDS
Jistota vernosti prevence AIDS.- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 323, folio 13b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio10b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 9b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 11a
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 15a
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 9a
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 14b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 297, folio 304b
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 330, folio 10a
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 298, side b
- Digital Images
- Online
Indic Manuscript 349, folio1b
- Digital Images
- Online
Bronze figure of Shen Nung, Japanese god of medicine.
- Digital Images
- Online
Hindi Manuscript 683, folio 66b
- Digital Images
- Online
Bilvamangala's Balagopalastuti: folio 9 recto
Krsnalilasukamuni- Digital Images
- Online
Echinacea purpurea (L.) Moench Asteraceae. Coneflower. Distribution: North America. Austin (2004) records that the roots were chewed, or used as a tincture for coughs by the Choctaw. Combined with Rhus typhina to treat venereal disease by the Delaware. Very little record of this being used by Native Americans, who used E. angustifolia very widely - Regarded as a panacea and magical herb. This and E. pallida were used to treat snakebite, spider bite, cancer, toothache, burns, sores, wounds, flu and colds. E. purpurea in modern times has been used as an ‘immunostimulant’, but is known to cause a fall in white cell count, and to be purely a placebo. Licensed for use as a Traditional Herbal Medicine, which does not require proof of efficacy, in the UK. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley