Disputatio medica de dyspepsia : quam annuente summo numine ex auctoritate reverendi admodum viri, D. Georgii Baird SS. T.P. academiae Edinburgenae praefecti; nencon amplissimi senatus academici consensu, et nobilissimæ facultatis medicæ decreto; pro gradu doctoris, summisque in medicina honoribus ac privilegiis, rite et legitime consequendis; eruditorum examini subjicit / Franciscus Cobham, Barbadensis... ; kalendis Augusti, horâ locuque solitis.

  • Cobham, Francis, active 1820.
Date:
1820
  • Books
  • Online

Available online

view Disputatio medica de dyspepsia : quam annuente summo numine ex auctoritate reverendi admodum viri, D. Georgii Baird SS. T.P. academiae Edinburgenae praefecti; nencon amplissimi senatus academici consensu, et nobilissimæ facultatis medicæ decreto; pro gradu doctoris, summisque in medicina honoribus ac privilegiis, rite et legitime consequendis; eruditorum examini subjicit / Franciscus Cobham, Barbadensis... ; kalendis Augusti, horâ locuque solitis.

Public Domain Mark

You can use this work for any purpose without restriction under copyright law. Read more about this licence.

Credit

Disputatio medica de dyspepsia : quam annuente summo numine ex auctoritate reverendi admodum viri, D. Georgii Baird SS. T.P. academiae Edinburgenae praefecti; nencon amplissimi senatus academici consensu, et nobilissimæ facultatis medicæ decreto; pro gradu doctoris, summisque in medicina honoribus ac privilegiis, rite et legitime consequendis; eruditorum examini subjicit / Franciscus Cobham, Barbadensis... ; kalendis Augusti, horâ locuque solitis. Public Domain Mark. Source: Wellcome Collection.

Provider

This material has been provided by King’s College London. The original may be consulted at King’s College London.

About this work

Publication/Creation

Edinburgi [Edinburgh] : Excudebat Joannes Moir, 1820.

Physical description

6 unnumbered pages, 21 pages ; 21 cm

Notes

Thesis: University of Edinburgh, 1820
With half-title page

Type/Technique

Languages

Where to find it

Location of original

This material has been provided by King’s College London. The original may be consulted at King’s College London.

Permanent link