38 results
- Pictures
- Online
Bugle (Ajuga alpina): flowering stem and floral segments. Coloured engraving after J. Sowerby, 1798.
Sowerby, James, 1757-1822.Date: 1 July 1798Reference: 25155i- Digital Images
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Prunella vulgaris L. Lamiaceae Self Heal, Carpenter’s Herb, Sicklewort, Consolida minor. Distribution: Europe. Culpeper (1650): ‘See Bugle. So shall I not need to write the same thing twice, the vertues being the same.’ Under Bugle he writes: ‘Bugula. Bugle or middle Comfrey ... excellent for falls or inward bruises, for it dissolves congealed blood, profitable for inward wounds, helps the rickets and other stoppings of the Liver, outwardly it is of wonderful force in curing wounds and ulcers, though festered, as also gangrenes and fistulas, it helps broken bones and dislocations. To conclude, let my countrymen esteem it as a Jewel...’ Bugle is Ajuga reptans which has the same creeping habit, but is in another genus. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Watsonia pillansii L.Bolus Iridaceae Bugle lily, Distribution: South Africa. Named for Sir William Watson (1715-1787), British botanist and physician, sometime censor at the Royal College of Physicians, London. No medicinal uses. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Books
- Online
The hammersmith garland; Beautified with several merry new songs. 1. The jolly Painter of Hammersmith. 2. The Bugle of Horn. 3. The Merchant's youngest Son's Courtship to fair Susan. 4. The Country 'squire's Courtship to the Cutler's fair Daughter. Licensed and entered according to Order.
Date: 1770?]- Digital Images
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Watsonia pillansii L.Bolus Iridaceae Bugle lily, Distribution: South Africa. Named for Sir William Watson (1715-1787), British botanist and physician, sometime censor at the Royal College of Physicians, London. No medicinal uses. Photographed in the Medicinal Garden of the Royal College of Physicians, London.
Dr Henry Oakeley- Books
- Online
To be sold by auction, by Mr. W. Tucker, at the Bugle Inn, Newport, on Saturday, the 12th day of March, instant, either by the rick or by the ton, three ricks of meadow hay, standing at Gatcombe, in the Isle of Wight. A truss of each rick will be produced. The sale will begin at four o'clock in the afternoon.
Tucker, W., active 1796.Date: [1796?]- Archives and manuscripts
- Online
Trumpet and bugle sounds for the army, with words; also bugle marches, compiled and arranged by C.A. Atherley
Date: 1915Reference: RAMC/947Part of: Royal Army Medical Corps Muniments Collection- Pictures
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A youth with a bugle by a statue; representing genius. Etching by G.B. Castiglione, 1648, after himself.
Castiglione, Giovanni Benedetto, 1609-1664.Date: 1648 alla PaceReference: 26102i- Pictures
- Online
A bugle flower (Ajuga reptans) and fescue grass (Festuca elatior). Chromolithograph, c. 1877, after F. E. Hulme.
Hulme, F. Edward (Frederick Edward), 1841-1909.Date: [1877-1900]Reference: 24499i- Pictures
- Online
A musician playing an Indian bugle. Gouache painting by an Indian artist.
Date: [between 1800 and 1899?]Reference: 582720i- Archives and manuscripts
Trumpet and bugle sounds for the army, with instructions for the training of trumpeters and buglers
Date: 1903Reference: RAMC/2049/4/1Part of: Royal Army Medical Corps Muniments Collection- Pictures
Row of English soldiers led by the drummer and bugle player. Coloured transfer lithograph.
Reference: 26092i- Pictures
- Online
A guard carrying a rifle, a sword and a bugle horn (?). Gouache painting by an Indian artist.
Date: [between 1800 and 1899?]Reference: 582766iPart of: Customers, trades, menial employments and handicrafts of Hindustan- Pictures
- Online
White dead nettle (Lamium album) and common bugle (Ajuga reptans): entire flowering plants. Coloured etching by C. Pierre, c. 1865, after P. Naudin.
Naudin, Philibert, active 1870.Date: [1865]Reference: 24681i- Pictures
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Three soldiers on horseback: one with a bugle, one with a cutlass, and one with and as a standard. Colour wood block.
Reference: 35371i- Pictures
- Online
Eglinton Tournament: front of Eglinton castle, a herald on horseback blowing a bugle. Lithograph by H. Wilson after C.A. d'Hardiviller, 1839.
Hardiviller, Charles Achille d', 1795-approximately 1835.Date: [1839?]Reference: 664307i- Pictures
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Men have arrive at an encampment on horses, one is blowing a bugle and another is persuading a young woman to have a drink. Engraving by Beaumont after P. Wouwermens.
Wouwerman, Philips, 1619?-1668.Reference: 31668i- Books
- Online
Devout exercises of the heart, in meditation and soliloquy, prayer and praise. By the late pious and ingenious Mrs Rowe. Revised and published, at her request, by I. Watts, D.D.
Rowe, Elizabeth Singer, 1674-1737.Date: MDCCLXVI. [1766]- Ephemera
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Red Cross workers carrying wounded bugler into hospital / Underwood & Underwood, N.Y.
Date: [between 1910 and 1920?]- Books
The human environment : an alternative evolution of behaviour / Robert A. Bugler.
Bugler, Robert A., 1931-Date: 1990- Pictures
- Online
Two uniformed men from the Medical Service Corps: a bugler and private. Collotype after a photograph.
D.S. Gregory & Co.Reference: 24078i- Archives and manuscripts
Photograph of Lieutenant J.F. Ford and Bugler J.F. Ford at the Pyramids, Gizah, Egypt
Date: 1915Reference: RAMC/1224/2Part of: Royal Army Medical Corps Muniments Collection- Archives and manuscripts
Sales catalogue: Debenham, Storr, and Sons
Date: 30 January 1908Reference: WA/HMM/CM/Sal/24/117Part of: Wellcome Historical Medical Museum and Library- Pictures
- Online
Two buglers on horseback blowing a fanfare or signal. Etching by Ferdinand (Fernando), King of Portugal, 1841, after J.M. Foussereau.
Foussereau, Joseph-Marie, 1809-Date: 1841Reference: 2917473i- Pictures
- Online
Lazarus's sores are licked by dogs as Dives feasts. Process print, 1931, after J. Lamsveld.
Lamsveld, Jan, 1674-1743.Date: 1931Reference: 23941i