45 results filtered with: Digital Images
- Digital Images
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A verger's dream; Saints Cosmas and Damian, 1495
Masterof Los Balbases,- Digital Images
- Online
Jagannath as a monstrous beast, with a human worshipper and
- Digital Images
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Yellow fever in Buenos Aires, 1871.
Juan Manuel Blanes- Digital Images
- Online
Sologne
Ernest Board- Digital Images
- Online
St Anthony - His temptation. From the painting in oils, in Prado, Madrid. From the photograph by ANderson, Rome.
- Digital Images
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John Coakley Lettsom (1733-1810), physician, with his family, in the garden of Grove Hill, Camberwell, ca. 1786. Oil painting by an English painter, ca. 1786.
- Digital Images
- Online
Ming herbal (painting): Horse
- Digital Images
- Online
Martyrdom of Saint Bartholomew, 17th century
Jusepe de Ribera- Digital Images
- Online
The first use of ether in dental surgery, 1846. Ernest Board.
Ernest Board- Digital Images
- Online
Portrait of Sir Charles Bell (1774-1842).
- Digital Images
- Online
Richard Wiseman.
- Digital Images
- Online
A pregnant female dissected figure, lateral view,
- Digital Images
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A tooth-drawer extracting tooth from the mouth of a man
- Digital Images
- Online
Alzheimer's disease, artwork
Florence Winterflood- Digital Images
- Online
Carthamus tinctorius (Safflower)
Rowan McOnegal- Digital Images
- Online
Oenothera biennis (Evening primrose)
Sue Snell- Digital Images
- Online
Ivan Petrovich Pavlov
Ting Low- Digital Images
- Online
Ovulation, artwork
Mary Rouncefield- Digital Images
- Online
Carthamus tinctorius L. Asteraceae. Safe Flower, False Saffron - Distribution: W. Asia. Dioscorides (in Beck, 2003) notes the seeds as a purgative, but also advises it made up with 30 figs, which must have helped. Gerard (1640) calls it Atractylis flore luteo the yellow distaffe thistle. and follows Dioscorides in its uses, but does get the reader confused with Cnicus benedictus, calling both plants 'wild bastard saffron'. Culpeper makes no mention of it in his early works, but later (1826) have the following: ‘Wild Saffon, or Saf-flower ... accounted a pretty strong cathartic [causing diarrhoea and vomiting], evacuating tough viscid phlegm, both upwards and downwards, and by that means is said to clear the lungs, and help the phthisic [now equated with tuberculosis]. It is likewise serviceable against the jaundice
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Laurus nobilis (Bay laurel)
Rowan McOnegal