80 results filtered with: Pictures, Digital Images
- Digital Images
Combycomata, female perineum.
- Pictures
- Online
Caution against sexually transmitted disease. Colour lithograph after A. Games, 1941.
Games, Abram, 1914-1996.Date: [1941]Reference: 20273i- Pictures
- Online
An American soldier sweating with fear about contracting a sexually transmitted disease; warning American servicemen to use condoms. Colour lithograph, 194-.
Date: [between 1940 and 1949?]Reference: 980000iPart of: VD graphic- Pictures
- Online
The letters VD (venereal diseases) being broken through by an invisible hand, representing early management and cure of the diseases. Colour lithograph by A. Games, ca. 1951.
Games, Abram, 1914-1996.Date: [1951?]Reference: 576140i- Pictures
- Online
An American man in despair at the thought of infecting his wife and child with a sexually transmitted disease. Colour lithograph, ca. 1944.
Date: [1944?]Reference: 728722iPart of: VD graphic- Digital Images
- Online
J. Astruc, De morbis veneris libri sex
- Digital Images
- Online
Gumma in the Glands of the Neck.
- Pictures
A man and a woman turning towards each other in the street, with a warning against the danger of sexually transmitted disease due to opportunistic sex. Colour lithograph by P. Rosié, ca. 1947.
Rosié, Paul, 1910-1984.Date: [1947?]Reference: 2000564i- Digital Images
- Online
Authorization of payment of medical bills; Dymock workhouse.
- Digital Images
- Online
Illustration of navel diseased with Syphilis
- Digital Images
- Online
Illustration of the neck diseased with Syphilis
- Digital Images
- Online
(Left) Representing Gonnorrheal Ophthalmia & eruptions on the face. (Right) Representing Veneral eruptions & ulcerations on the face & throat
- Digital Images
- Online
Coloured illustration of scrotum diseased with Syphilis.
- Digital Images
- Online
(Left) Representing the leg swollen and ulcerated from the effects of Secondary symptoms. (Right) Representing the face covered with Tubercles & veneral excrescences
- Digital Images
- Online
Illustration of male pubis and penis diseased with Syphilis
- Digital Images
- Online
Illustration of labia diseased with Syphilis
- Digital Images
- Online
Illustration of hands diseased with Syphilis
- Pictures
- Online
Prevention of venereal diseases: the feet of a man standing on the letters VD on a blue ground are approached by the feet of a woman who places the toes of one foot on the letters VD. Colour lithograph, ca. 1964.
Date: [1964?]Reference: 576150i- Digital Images
- Online
Illustration of baby diseased with hereditary Syphilis
- Pictures
Symptoms of venereal diseases, including syphilis: seven figures, showing sores on the arm of a man, four diseased penises, with secretions as seen through a microscope. Colour lithograph, ca 1890.
Date: [1890?]Reference: 576067i- Pictures
- Online
Sexually transmitted diseases are rife after plague, tuberculosis and yellow fever have been overcome. Colour lithograph after H. Devitt Welsh.
Welsh, H. Devitt, 1888-1942.Date: [1960?]Reference: 748751i- Digital Images
- Online
(Left) Representing the face of a child where it has inherited consitutional disease from the mother. (Right) Representing ulcerations of the body during the earlier stage of syphilis
- Pictures
Symptoms of venereal diseases, including syphilis: five figures, showing a sore on a penis, chancre on a breast and inoculations on the thigh and hand of a man. Colour lithograph, ca 1890.
Date: [1890?]Reference: 576075i- Pictures
- Online
A promiscuous woman dressed in red with a map of the Americas behind her; warning American servicemen against sexually transmitted diseases. Colour lithograph after F. Williams, 194-.
Williams, F., poster designer, active approximately 1945.Date: Between 1940 and 1949?Reference: 979993iPart of: VD graphic- 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