351 results
- Pictures
- Online
A young woman being visited by a member of the clergy while another woman cries beside her. Line engraving, 1813.
Date: 1813Reference: 17869i- Digital Images
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Egyptian mortar of blue faience, New Kingdom
- Digital Images
- Online
Illuminated "I": man using pestle and mortar, 13th C
- Digital Images
- Online
Illuminated "P": man using pestle and mortar, 13th Century.
- Books
The mortar of Charles Angibaud / by J. Burnby.
Burnby, Juanita (Juanita G. L.)Date: 1979- Pictures
A man composed of pharmaceutical equipment wandering the countryside; representing an apothecary as if he were an itinerant. Coloured lithograph.
Reference: 15913i- Books
Charles Angibaud and his mortar / by Agnes Lothian Short.
Lothian Short, Agnes (Agnes Edith), 1903-1983.Date: 1966- Pictures
An apothecary making up a prescription using scales, his wife holds a recipe for him and two assistants are working with the bellows and pestle and mortar. Line engraving by F. Baretta after P. Mainoto.
Mainoto, Pietro.Reference: 16371i- Books
- Online
The grand essay: or, a vindication of reason, and religion, against impostures of philosophy Proving according to those Ideas and Conceptions of Things Human Understanding is capable of forming to it self. 1. That the Existence of any Immaterial Substance is a Philosophic Imposture, and impossible to be conceived. 2. That all Matter has Originally created in it, a principle of Internal, or Self-Motion. 3. That Matter and Motion must be the Foundation of Thought in Men and Brutes. To which is added, A brief answer to Mr. Broughton's Physcholo. &c. By W.C. M.D. C.M. L.C.
Coward, William, 1657?-1725.Date: 1704- Pictures
A sour faced apothecary putting together a prescription. Coloured engraving.
Reference: 16106i- Digital Images
- Online
Statue of Saint of Damian represented with pestle and mortar.
- Pictures
- Online
A Chinese man standing, holding a pestle and mortar. Watercolour.
Date: [between 1800 and 1899?]Reference: 727346iPart of: Single Chinese figures in different poses. Album of watercolours.- Books
Inventaire des mortiers d'apothicaire et autres mortiers, conservés en Aquitaine dans les Musées, hôpitaux et monuments ouverts au public / par Elisabeth Graciet.
Graciet, Elisabeth, 1964-Date: [1991?]- Pictures
- Online
An apothecary is making up a prescription for waiting customers, another takes a jar down from a shelf. Engraving by J.C. Weigel.
Weigel, Johann Christoph, 1661-1726.Date: 1695Reference: 16005i- Books
- Online
A practical essay on a cement and artificial stone, justly supposed to be that of the Greeks and Romans, lately re-discovered by Monsieur Loriot, Master of Mechanics to His Most Christian Majesty, For The Cheap, easy, expeditious and durable Construction of all Manner of Buildings; And The Formation of all Kinds of Ornaments of Architecture, even with the commonest and coarsest Materials. Translated from the French original, lately published, by the express Orders of the Above-Mentioned Monarch.
Loriot, Antoine-Joseph, 1716-1782.Date: M.DCC.LXXVI. [1776]- Pictures
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.
Date: [c. 1840]Reference: 16121iPart of: Notions of the agreeable- Pictures
- Online
A design for a pharmacy label containing paraphernalia associated with that discipline. Engraving.
Reference: 16273i- Books
- Online
A practical essay on a cement and artificial stone, justly supposed to be that of the Greeks and Romans, lately re-discovered by Monsieur Loriot, Master of Mechanics to His Most Christian Majesty, for the Cheap, easy, expeditious and durable construction of all manner of buildings; and the formation of all kinds of ornaments of architecture, even with the commonest and coarsest Materials. Translated from the French original, lately published, by the express Orders of the above Monarch.
Loriot, Antoine-Joseph, 1716-1782.Date: M.DCC.LXXVII. [1777]- Archives and manuscripts
- Online
M0001669: Reproduction of an oil painting of an apothecary (a man using pestle and mortar)
Date: 03 March 1931Reference: WT/D/1/20/1/15/64Part of: Wellcome Trust Corporate Archive- Pictures
- Online
An apothecary mixing a concoction in his working room surrounded by the paraphernalia of his profession. Wood engraving by A. Bellenger after H.S. Marks.
Marks, Henry Stacy, 1829-1898.Reference: 15919i- Pictures
- Online
A tooth-drawer is extracting a tooth from a tense seated patient, the room is scattered with objects pertaining to academia. Line engraving by A. Kesler after F. Giani after G. Dou.
Dou, Gerard, 1613-1675.Reference: 16456i- Pictures
- Online
A man composed of pharmaceutical equipment, surrounded by medicinal plants. Engraving by N. de Larmessin, 1695.
Date: 1695Reference: 16386i- Pictures
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A design for a pharmacy label with snakes, an alligator, symbols and urns. Pen drawing.
Reference: 16218i- Pictures
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A small boy at an apothecary's shop. Reproduction of a lithograph by A. Holswilder, c. 1890.
Holswilder, Jan Pieter, 1850-1890.Date: 20 December 1890Reference: 17765i- Pictures
- Online
The Dutch maid (De Nederlandse Maagd), personifying the Netherlands asks an apothecary whether a medicine might not be poisonous; symbolising doubts over a new Dutch tax law; he replies no, a babe-in-arms could take it. Process print after J. Braakensiek, 1890.
Braakensiek, Joh. (Johan Coenraad), 1858-1940.Date: 5 October 1890Reference: 17683i