The compleat surgeon : or, the whole art of surgery explain'd in a most familiar method. Containing an exact account of its principles and several parts, viz. Of the bones, muscles, tumurs, ulcers, and wounds simple and complicated, or those by gun-shot; as also of venereal diseases, the scruvy, fractures, luxations, and all sorts of chirurgical operations; together with their proper bandages and dressings. To which is added, a chirurgical dispensatory; shewing the manner how to prepare all such medicines as are most necessary for a surgeon, and particularly the mercurial panacæa. Written in French by M. le Clerc, physician in ordinary, and privy-counsellor to the French King; and faithfully translated into English.

  • Le Clerc, M. (Charles Gabriel), 1644-1700
Date:
1696
  • Books
  • Online

Online resources

About this work

Also known as

Chirurgie complette. English

Publication/Creation

London : printed for M. Gillyflower, in Westminster-Hall; T. Goodwin, and M. Wotton, in Fleet-street; J. Walthoe, in the Middle-Temple Cloyster; and R. Parker, under the Royal-Exchange, in Cornhill, 1696.

Physical description

8 unnumbered pages, 341 pages, 19 unnumbered pages

References note

Wing (2nd ed.) L810A

Notes

Attributed by Wing, perhaps erroneously, to Daniel Le Clerc.
Title page is A2.
With 9 final contents leaves.
Reproduction of the original at the Royal College of Surgeons Library, London.
xxxtt2c. Preliminary pagination incomplete? P. [8] has catchword: Books.

Reproduction note

Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Early English books, 1641-1700 ; 1813:11) s1999 miun s

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