157 results
- Digital Images
- Online
Dead Python with severe bruising of heart
Royal Veterinary College- Ephemera
- Online
Laverack's embrocation : for horses and cattle : one of the best applications for general use in the stable and farmyard : for splints, curbs, sprains, sprung sinews, lameness, bruises, sore throat, influenza, wedged ures, &c., &c. : may be used with great advantage by human beings / Laverack and Sons.
W.H. Laverack & Sons.Date: [between 1890 and 1899?]- Ephemera
We recommend Zam-Buk herbal ointment for cuts, bruises & sore, aching feet : we recommend Vitapointe the amazing new hair dressing and conditioning cream from Paris : we recommend new formula Peps with active ingredients for coughs, colds, sore throat, catarrh : we recommend Bile Beans Laxative Plus, the double purpose laxative.
Date: [between 1930 and 1939?]- Books
- Online
An exact list of all the persons who were kill'd, wounded, and bruis'd, by the falling of three scaffold [sic] in the Palace-Yard, Little-Sentry, and Westminster-Abby, on Wednesday the 20th of this instant October, 1714. being the day of His Majesty's royal coronation.
Date: [1714]- Books
- Online
All the prescriptions contained in the New practice of physic ... / translated ... by J.S. Dodd ... With an accurate description of the symptoms of the several diseases ... To which is added by the translator, directions and medicines for wounds, tumors, strains, bruises, and all such external disorders as do not require manual operation.
Marryat, Thomas, 1730-1792Date: 1774- Ephemera
- Online
Baker's Purified Driffield Oils : for preventing gangrene, or mortification after lambing or calving and for wounds in horses, cattle, calves, sheep and lambs, such as tumours, hard swellings, sprains, strains, broken knees, sore shoulders, saddle crushes, cracked heels, kicks, cuts, bruises, sore teats, fly galls and sore heads in sheep, and external inflammation of all kinds / Baker & Son (Geo. F. Bevis).
Baker & Son.Date: [between 1890 and 1899?]- Books
- Online
Accidents and emergencies : a guide : containing directions for treatment in bleeding, cuts, stabs, bruises, sprains, ruptures, broken bones, dislocations, railway and steamboat accidents, burns and scalds, explosions, bites of mad dogs, inflammations, cholera, diarrhea, injured eyes, choking, poisons, fits, sun stroke, lightning, drowning, etc., etc. / by Alfred Smee ; with alterations, corrections, and appendix by R.T. Trall.
Smee, Alfred, 1818-1877.Date: [1850], [©1850]- Books
- Online
A hint on duelling, in a letter to a friend. The second edition. To which is added, The bruiser, or an inquiry into the pretensions of modern manhood. In a letter to a young genttleman.
Date: [1752]- Books
- Online
The infamy of Justice Kelynge, Justice Pell, and John Broughton, bruiser: or, the transactions of Sir William Beauchamp Proctor's secret committee, from the twentieth of December last to this day, Tuesday, January 31, 1769. ...
Moore, William, publisher.Date: 1769]- Books
- Online
The infamy of Justice Kelynge, Justice ----, and John Broughton, bruiser: or, the transactions of Sir William Beauchamp Proctor's secret committee, from the twentieth of December last to this day, Tuesday, January 31, 1769. ...
Moore, William, publisher.Date: 1769]- Digital Images
- Online
Polygonum bistorta L. Polygonaceae Bistort, snakeweed, Easter Ledges. Distribution: Europe, N & W Asia. Culpeper: “... taken inwardly resist pestilence and poison, helps ruptures, and bruises, stays fluxes, vomiting and immoderate flowing of the terms in women, helps inflammations and soreness of the mouth, and fastens loose teeth, being bruised and boiled in white wine and the mouth washed with it.” In modern herbal medicine it is still used for a similar wide variety of internal conditions, but it can also be cooked and eaten as a vegetable. The use to relieve toothache, applied as a paste to the affected tooth, seems to have been widespread. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Bergenia ciliata (Haw.)Sternb. Saxifraginaceae. Elephant's ears. Named for Karl August von Bergen (1704-1759), physician and botanist, professor at Viadrina University, Frankfurt. Has hairy leaves, hence ciliata. Distribution: E. Afghanistan, Himalayas, Assam. Used for fevers, diarrhoea, bruises and boils, coughs, renal stones, diabetes, heart disease, haemorrhoids, stomach disorders (Harish et al www.ijabpt.com). It was described in the 1820s so there is no early literature. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Ephemera
Everyday lesbians, gay men and bisexual people are being bruised, beaten or killed, simply because of who they are / Lesbian & Gay Foundation.
Date: 2010- Pictures
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Christ trampling the head of the serpent; Moses lifting up the serpent on a cross-shaped pole (Num. 21.8-9). Etching by P. Rothwell.
Reference: 31118i- Digital Images
- Online
Primula veris L. Primulaceae. Cowslip, Herba paralysis Distribution: W. Asia, Europe. Fuchs ((1542) quotes Dioscorides Pliny and Galen, with numerous uses, from bruises, toothache, as a hair dye, for oedema, inflamed eye, and mixed with honey, wine or vinegar for ulcer and wounds, for scorpion bites, and pain in the sides and chest, and more. Lobel (1576) calls them Primula veriflorae, Phlomides, Primula veris, Verbascula. Like other herbals of the 16th and 17th century, the woodcuts leave one in no doubt that Primula veris was being written about. However, other translators of Dioscorides (Gunther, 1959 with Goodyear's 1655 translation
Dr Henry Oakeley- Books
- Online
The seed of the woman bruising the serpent's head. A discourse delivered at the Baptist Meeting House, in Philadelphia, Sunday April 22, 1781. By Elhanan Winchester. Published by request.
Winchester, Elhanan, 1751-1797.Date: in the year 1781- Pictures
Ecchymosis haematoma in a 62-year old man with painful cough: detail sketch to show bruising and large tender mass. Pen and ink drawing by Barbara E. Nicholson, 1950.
Nicholson, BarbaraDate: 1950Reference: 33776iPart of: Barbara Nicholson medical illustration collection.- Books
- Online
Nature's assistant to the restoration of health. Part I. Addressed to those afflicted with the scurvy Leprosy Disorders after the Small Pox Obstructions peculian to Females Piles and Fistulas with Safe Method of Curing Sore Breasts without Cutting. Part II. Recommends proper applications for sprains Bruises Rheumatic Pains Old Sores and Ulcers Burns Whitlows and for Extracting Thorns and Splinters. Part III. Contains a short treatise on the venereal disease, Shewing the Danger of Mercury. And Recommending a Safe, Easy, and Proper mode of Treatment. To which is added, an essay on gleets, seminal weaknesses, and the destructive habit of self-pollution. By J. Hodson, M.D.
Hodson, J. (James).Date: [1789?]- Archives and manuscripts
18th Century English Recipe Book
Date: 18th centuryReference: MS.8718- Books
The bruising apothecary : images of pharmacy and medicine in caricature prints and drawings in the collection of the Museum of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain / Kate Arnold-Forster, Nigel Tallis.
Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain. Museum.Date: 1989- Books
- Online
The efficacy of Dr. Church's cough drops, demonstrated in the cure of coughs, colds, asthmas & consumptions, invented and prepared by James Church, M.D. [Nine lines of quotations] Illustrated with many remarkable and authentic facts. To which is added, important information to the afflicted with rheumatism, lumbago, palsy, sprains, bruises, numbness, gout, rheumatic gout, itch, diseases of the eyes, nervous disorders, hysteric, epileptic, and other kinds of fits, inward weaknesses, head-ache, corns, worms, scurvy, &c. The medicines are sold genuine, (wholesale only) by the inventor and sole proprietor, Dr. James Church, at his dispensary, New-York; and by his appointment, at the places mentioned on the cover of this pamphlet.
Church, James, -1801.Date: 1799- Books
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The head of the serpent bruised by the seed of the woman. A sermon on Genesis iii. 15. Occasioned by the death of Mrs. Martha Gifford, late wife of the Reverend Mr. Andrew Gifford, preached January 14, 1732/33. By John Gill.
Gill, John, 1697-1771.Date: 1733- Digital Images
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Prunella vulgaris L. Lamiaceae Self Heal, Carpenter’s Herb, Sicklewort, Consolida minor. Distribution: Europe. Culpeper (1650): ‘See Bugle. So shall I not need to write the same thing twice, the vertues being the same.’ Under Bugle he writes: ‘Bugula. Bugle or middle Comfrey ... excellent for falls or inward bruises, for it dissolves congealed blood, profitable for inward wounds, helps the rickets and other stoppings of the Liver, outwardly it is of wonderful force in curing wounds and ulcers, though festered, as also gangrenes and fistulas, it helps broken bones and dislocations. To conclude, let my countrymen esteem it as a Jewel...’ Bugle is Ajuga reptans which has the same creeping habit, but is in another genus. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Books
- Online
The bruised reed, and smoking flax. Some sermons from Matt. xii. 20. Contracted for the good of weaker Christians. By Richard Sibbes, D.D. master of Catherine-Hall, Cambridge; preacher of Gray's Inn, London; and author of the soul's conflict with itself.
Sibbes, Richard, 1577-1635.Date: 1794- Digital Images
- Online
Primula veris L. Primulaceae Cowslip, Herba paralysis Distribution: W. Asia, Europe. Fuchs ((1542) quotes Dioscorides Pliny and Galen, with numerous uses, from bruises, toothache, as a hair dye, for oedema, inflamed eye, and mixed with honey, wine or vinegar for ulcer and wounds, for scorpion bites, and pain in the sides and chest, and more. Lobel (1576) calls them Primula veriflorae, Phlomides, Primula veris, Verbascula. Lyte (1578) calls them Cowslippe, Petie mulleyn, Verbasculum odoratum, Primula veris, Herbae paralysis and Artheticae. Along with cowslips and oxeslips, he says they are 'used dayly among other pot herbes, but in Physicke there is no great account of them. They are good for the head and synewes ...'. Like other herbals of the 16th and 17th century, the woodcuts leave one in no doubt that Primula veris was being written about. However, other translators of Dioscorides (Gunther, 1959 with Goodyear's 1655 translation
Dr Henry Oakeley