9 results
- Digital Images
- Online
Aralia spinosa L. Araliaceae. Devil's walking stick, Prickly ash, Hercules' club. Tree. Distribution: Eastern North America. Contact with sap causes skin irritation, raw berries mildly toxic to humans, causing diarrhoea and vomiting. Eaten by bears. Used medicinally by Native Americans for a variety of conditions. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Pictures
- Online
Witchcraft: a bewitched woman vomiting. Woodcut, 1720.
Date: 1720Reference: 44121i- Pictures
- Online
'Philijpÿn' helps a donkey to vomit while a 'Doctor Financier' examines a urine sample;; representing the state of Spain under the monarchy of King Philip V. Etching attributed to A. Allard, 1711.
Date: 1711Reference: 17533iPart of: Lust-hof van Momus.- Pictures
- Online
The Virgin miraculously heals a man possessed by a devil by making him vomit nails. Etching by Luigi Nuti after Giovanni da san Giovanni.
Giovanni, da San Giovanni, 1592-1636.Reference: 31328i- Pictures
- Online
The levels of hell depicted as circular stone tiers; purgatory lies outside its walls. Engraving.
Reference: 25063i- Pictures
- Online
A woman beleaguered by four enemies; representing Faith resisting Death, Schism, the World and the Devil. Engraving by Hieronymus Wierix after Maarten de Vos, 156-.
Vos, Maarten de, 1532-1603.Date: [between 1560 and 1569?]Reference: 26754i- Books
Demons, nausea, and resistance in the autobiography of Isabel de Jesús (1611-1682) / Sherry M. Velasco.
Velasco, Sherry M. (Sherry Marie), 1962-Date: [1996], ©1996- Pictures
A car from which shares are sold in the Netherlands during the share price boom of 1720. Etching, ca. 1720.
Date: [1720?]Reference: 811628iPart of: Groote tafereel der dwaasheid.- Books
Satan's rhetoric : a study of Renaissance demonology / Armando Maggi.
Maggi, Armando.Date: 2001