152 results
- Books
Egyptian medicine / Carole Reeves.
Reeves, Carole (Carole Anne)Date: 1992- Archives and manuscripts
"The Wellcome Trust" by Carole Reeves
Date: April 2007Reference: WT/B/8/4/6Part of: Wellcome Trust Corporate Archive- Books
Medical book illustration : a short history / John L. Thornton and Carole Reeves.
Thornton, John Leonard.Date: 1983- Books
Der Mensch : seine Anatomie, seine Sinne, seine Entwicklung in 3 Dimensionen / text: Carole Reeves.
Reeves, Carole.Date: 1988- Archives and manuscripts
History of Dialysis in the UK Related Documents: Professor Robin Eady and Carole Reeves Papers
The Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCLDate: 1960-2008Reference: GC/253/A/37/10Part of: Wellcome Witnesses to Twentieth Century Medicine Seminars- Books
A cultural history of the human body : in the age of enlightenment / edited by Carole Reeves.
Date: 2010- Books
Insanity and nervous diseases amongst Jewish immigrants to the East End of London, 1880-1920 / Carole Anne Reeves.
Reeves, Carol Anne.Date: 2001- Books
- Online
The children of Craig-Y-Nos : life in a Welsh tuberculosis sanatorium, 1922-1959 / [Ann Shaw, Carole Reeves].
Shaw, Ann.Date: 2009- Books
Re-framing disability : portraits from the Royal College of Physicians / edited by Bridget Telfer, Emma Shepley and Carole Reeves.
Date: [2011], ©2011- Books
Professor Roy Porter : bibliography / [Carol Reeves].
Reeves, Carole.Date: 2003- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; wooden suspension bridge over a canyon
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Temple offering of ducks, geese and wild fowl. From a wall relief at the temple at Kom Ombo in Southern Upper Egypt. This temple mostly dates from the Ptolemaic period although New Kingdom (1570-1070 BCE) remains have been found on the site.
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal, Sherpa children of the Khumbu, 1986
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; agriculture and subsistence in the Khumbu, 1986. Area as N0022565. Farmland on the lower slopes of the Himalayas (altitude 2900 metres). Sherpas are Buddhists and their houses are surrounded with prayer sticks flying cloth flags. A sherpa group with yaks travel along
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Thebes, Egypt; felucca on the Nile, 1990
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Mortuary temple of Queen Hatshepsut (reigned 1498-1483 BCE, dynasty XVIII), Deir el-Bahri, Thebes. The temple is a partly rock-cut and partly free-standing terraced structure. during the Graeco-Roman Period (332 BCE - CE 395) the temple became a centre for healing and the upper terrace was consecrated to Imhotep. Numerous graffiti are evidence of the large number of invalids who visited it until the second century CE.
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; yak transport in the Khumbu, 1986. Sherpas drive a pair of heavily laden yaks along a narrow path on the long climb from Lukla (altitude 2827 metres) to Namche Bazar (3446 metres), the main town in the Khumbu region. The yak is the beast of burden in the Khumbu as well as providing wool, milk, cheese and butter. Yak butter is burned in votive lamps and drunk in tea. The animals command a high price and are carefully nurtured by their owners.
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Helwan, Egypt; women carrying sweet clover
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Egyptian carving, dwarf demon Bes, taken 1989
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; tenements, old and new, Kathmandu, 1986. Builders erecting new apartments on the site of an old tenement block. Once erected, the residents of the existing four-storey tenement block will have their daylight extinguished. A woman picks her way across the building site from her home to the street.
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; deforestation in the Khumbu, 1986. Stacked firewood outside a Sherpa house at Phakding (altitude 3200 metres). Also shown are carrying baskets (bottom right) and prayer flags attached to thin sticks stuck into the ground. In common with many smallholdings, the ground floor of the house is reserved for animals while the family lives upstairs. By the early 1980s, it was estimated that massive deforestation was contributing to the loss of 240 million cubic metres of topsoil in Nepal each year. Sherpas rely on wood for fuel but lack of chimneys in most homes contribute to the coughs and bronchial congestion common to most. Poor hygiene is prevalent because precious wood must be destroyed to create hot water.
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Helwan, Egypt; farm cultivation
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; Kathmandu Valley, Bhaktapur, 1986
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; Sherpa porters in the Khumbu, 1986. Well-dressed Sherpa porters prepare for a trekking expedition organised for a party of western vacationists. They will guide, bring up the rear, cook and strike camp. Such expeditions pay cash wages far in excess of anything Sherpas could hope to earn elsewhere and such income is invested in loans, cattle, land, tradeable articles and jewellery. Until the influx of mountaineering expeditions following Hillary's Everest climb (1953), western medicine was unknown in the Khumbu. Distribution of mainly analgesic and antibiotic drugs has led to misuse.
Carole Reeves- Digital Images
- Online
Nepal; fruit seller in Kathmandu, 1986
Carole Reeves