235 results
- Digital Images
- Online
Xenopus, stitching up skin after egg removal
James King-Holmes- Digital Images
- Online
Xenopus, stitching up skin after egg removal
James King-Holmes- Digital Images
- Online
Xenopus, stitching up skin after egg removal
James King-Holmes- Digital Images
- Online
Xenopus, stitching up skin after egg removal
James King-Holmes- Digital Images
- Online
Xenopus, stitching body wall after eggs take
James King-Holmes- Digital Images
- Online
Xenopus, stitching up skin after egg removal
James King-Holmes- Digital Images
- Online
Xenopus, stitching body wall after eggs take
James King-Holmes- Pictures
- Online
Four diagrams illustrating heads with severe wounds, demonstrating how to stitch the skin back together properly. Stipple engraving by J. Bell.
Bell, John, 1763-1820.Reference: 23317i- Pictures
Friern Hospital, London: an old man's face with his eyes closed; stitch marks run down from under his chin. Photograph, 1890/1910.
Date: 1890Reference: 34199i- Pictures
- Online
Friern Hospital, London: an emaciated old man, naked, with deformed limbs and stitch marks running from beneath his chin to his penis; three views from different angles. Photograph, 1890/1910.
Date: 1890Reference: 34201i- Books
- Online
A list of one unanimous club of voters, In the Long Parliament Dissolv'd in 1678. Fit to be stitch'd to the Collection of the White and Black Lists, lately publish'd.
Date: 1715- Books
- Online
A reply to A defence of the Divine right of infant-baptism, by Peter Clark, A.M. Minister at Salem, in a letter to a friend, at Boston in New-England. To which are added, some strictures on a late treatise, called, A fair and rational vindication of the right of infants to the ordinance of baptism. Written by David Bostwick, A.M. late Minister of the Presbyterian Church in the city of New-York. By John Gill, D.D.
Gill, John, 1697-1771.Date: MDCCLXVI. [1766]- Books
- Online
A collection of the several protests in the House of Lords, in the session of Parliament in the years 1722 and 1723. Fit to be stitch'd and bound up with the speech of Mr. George Kelly, spoke at the Bar of the House of Lords;
Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords.Date: 1723- Books
- Online
An account of the obligations the states of Holland have to Great-Britain, and the return they have made both in Europe and the Indies. With selections upon the peace. ... exactly in the same size with the conduct of the allies, to be bound or stitch'd together.
Ferguson, Robert, -1714.Date: Printed in the year, 1712- Pictures
- Online
A shoemender and a tailor sitting on benches repairing old shoes and clothes. Etching by R. Dagley.
Dagley, Richard, -1841.Date: [1821]Reference: 29998i- Books
- Online
A hymn to confinement. Written by the Author of the Case of the Church of England's Memorial fairly stated; &c. while in Durance. Fit to be stitch'd up with the said Pamphlet. To which is added, a poem on the same Subject by the Famous Sir Roger L'Estrange, when in Newgate, in the Days of Oliver's Usurpation.
Pittis, William, 1674-1724.Date: Printed in the Year 1705- Archives and manuscripts
M0007802: Stitched wound, from Cheyne: Antiseptic Surgery (1882)
Date: 1941Reference: WT/D/1/20/1/67/33Part of: Wellcome Trust Corporate Archive- Ephemera
Georgie Meadows : stitched drawings ... touring exhibitions / Wellcome Collection.
Wellcome Collection.Date: [2012?]- Books
Georgie Meadows : stitched drawings : free exhibition / Wellcome Collection.
Meadows, Georgie.Date: 2012- Archives and manuscripts
"Diatribe on Enthusiasm: the speakers Argutus, Benevolus, Simplex", manuscript, stitched together
Date: 19th CenturyReference: PP/HO/K/D9Part of: Hodgkin family- Books
Lives not statistics : a stitched understanding of the COVID-19 pandemic / by Hattie Porter.
Porter, HattieDate: March 2021- Books
- Online
The true explanation of the humours of the cheating age, or, a brief account of the behaviour of the town misses, pluchimin landlords, quack-doctors, Intruding of petty fogging Lawyers, Cheats of Bom-Baliffs, the Gin-Shop chat, the Tea-Table chat. A Serious and Diverting Dialogue between Tom stitch the Taylor's Wife, and Sir John crack Finger the halfpenny Larber's Wife. With many other Comical and Pleasant Passages worthy of Note. (no. 112).
Date: [1800?]- Digital Images
- Online
A Shuar shrunken head (tsantsa) from Ecuador with a stitched mouth and feather headdress.
- Digital Images
- Online
A Shuar shrunken head (tsantsa) from Ecuador with a stitched mouth and feather headdress.
- Digital Images
- Online
A Shuar shrunken head (tsantsa) from Ecuador with a stitched mouth and feather headdress.