669 results filtered with: Digital Images
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Woodcuts: anatomy of the eye, circa 1503.
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Woodcuts from a history of witches, 1739.
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Woodcuts from a history of witches, 1739.
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Woodcuts from a history of witches, 1739.
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Two Woodcuts showing Miss A before and after treatment
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Two Woodcuts showing Miss B before and after treatment
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Two Woodcuts showing Miss A before and after treatment
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Two Woodcuts showing Miss C before and after treatment
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Special bath for bathing a leg, heating devices, ect. (Remedial baths). Woodcuts from Arzneispiegel, 1547.
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Three woodcuts, 1536. Folio 39 recto.
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Chinese woodcuts: Locations for applying ointments
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Two woodcuts showing Miss B before and after treatment
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Syphilis: Woodcut: 1496
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A shogunal procession from Edo Castle to Ueno hill. Colour woodcut by Chikanobu, ca. 1900.
Chikanobu Hashimoto- Digital Images
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A sumo contest in the precinct of EkÅin temple in Edo. Colour woodcut by Hiroshige, 1849/1850.
Hiroshige AndÅ- Digital Images
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Artzneybuch. 1546. Surgical Instruments
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Chinese woodcut:
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Fuchsia magellanica Lam. Onagraceae. Hardy fuchsia. Semi-hardy shrub. Distribution: Mountainous regions of Chile and Argentina where they are called 'Chilco' by the indigenous people, the Mapuche. The genus was discovered by Charles Plumier in Hispaniola in 1696/7, and named by him for Leonhart Fuchs (1501-1566), German Professor of Medicine, whose illustrated herbal, De Historia Stirpium (1542) attempted the identification of the plants in the Classical herbals. It also contained the first accounts of maize, Zea mays, and chilli peppers, Capsicum annuum, then recently introduced from Latin America. He was also the first person to publish an account and woodcuts of foxgloves, Digitalis purpurea and D. lutea. The book contains 500 descriptions and woodcuts of medicinal plants, arranged in alphabetical order, and relied heavily on the De Materia Medica (c. AD 70) of Dioscorides. He was a powerful influence on the herbals of Dodoens, and thence to Gerard, L’Escluse and Henry Lyte. A small quarto edition appeared in 1551, and a two volume facsimile of the 1542 edition with commentary and selected translations from the Latin was published by Stanford Press in 1999. The original woodcuts were passed from printer to printer and continued in use for 232 years (Schinz, 1774). Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
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Woodcut, Anatomical Fugitive Sheet.
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