A compendious enchiridion touching most distempers incident to the body of man, with the best and easiest cures thereof : Wherein the author desires the reader seriously to consider the particulars before censure be passed. [I]n all my travels with Salvator Winter, and many years after with that famous phisitian and chirurgeon John Ponteus; I never exacted on, or denied the poor my skill and medicines gratis, but still my house to them was as free as an hospital; the like never hath been performed but by your friend and neighbor John Church. [Ge]ntlemen take notice, that besides the old tract I gave you; I have now added for the good and benefit of my countrymen, a true way of making some cheap and necessary medicines; as balsomes, plaisters. Oyntments, diascordium and mithridate. [Wi]th the number of all the bones, veins,, [sic] muscles and arteries in the body of man.
- Church, John, active 1682
- Date:
- In the year 1682
- Books
- Online
Online resources
About this work
Publication/Creation
[London] : Printed for the author, In the year 1682.
Physical description
2 unnumbered pages, 6, 16 pages
Contributors
Notes
Includes a list, with separate pagination and register, of 151 herbs and their uses for medicinal purposes.
Place of publication from Wing (CD-ROM edition).
Reproduction of original in the Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, London.
References note
Wing (CD-ROM, 1996) C3986A
Reproduction note
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 2527:17) s1999 miun s