145 results filtered with: Digital Images, Pictures
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Situations in which a Tabloid medicine chest made by Burroughs Wellcome would be useful. Colour process print, ca. 1909.
Date: 1909-1910Reference: 16398i- Digital Images
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A Burroughs Wellcome Co medicine chest used on the British Antarctic Expedition
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'Tabloid' Medical Chest
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Chinese woodcut: Chest Centre abscess
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Travelling medicine chest of Egyptian Queen 2000BC. Possably belonging to Queen Mentu-Hotep. Postcard from Adolf Fonahn to Walter Pagel (front)
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Medical Chest of Queen Mentu-Hotep
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A physician dispensing medicine through a window, a large group of patients are waiting their turn, a female assistant has a medicine chest suspended from her neck, Italy 17--. Coloured wood engraving by M. Klinkicht after H. Wallis.
Wallis, Henry, 1830-1916.Reference: 21875i- Pictures
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Surgical apparatus: includes an army medicine chest, demonstrations of a splint for excision of the elbow and an orthopaedic instrument to correct curvature of the spine. Wood engraving, 1850/1880?.
Date: [1850/1880?]Reference: 568378i- Digital Images
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Primula veris L. Primulaceae. Cowslip, Herba paralysis Distribution: W. Asia, Europe. Fuchs ((1542) quotes Dioscorides Pliny and Galen, with numerous uses, from bruises, toothache, as a hair dye, for oedema, inflamed eye, and mixed with honey, wine or vinegar for ulcer and wounds, for scorpion bites, and pain in the sides and chest, and more. Lobel (1576) calls them Primula veriflorae, Phlomides, Primula veris, Verbascula. Like other herbals of the 16th and 17th century, the woodcuts leave one in no doubt that Primula veris was being written about. However, other translators of Dioscorides (Gunther, 1959 with Goodyear's 1655 translation
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
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Back of postcard from Adolf Fonahn to Walter Pagel. Front depicts travelling medicine chest of Egyptian Queen, possibly Queen Mentu-Hotep c. 2200BC. Postcard from Adolf Fonahn to Walter Pagel
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Saint Cosmas and Saint Damian dressing a chest wound. Oil painting by Antoine de Favray, 1748.
Favray, Antoine de, 1706-1798.Date: 1748Reference: 44856i- Pictures
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A white liver bird, and messages to people in Liverpool advocating chest x-rays for diagnosis of tuberculosis. Colour lithograph, 1959.
Date: [1959]Reference: 576256i- Pictures
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A travelling tooth-drawer and medicine vendor in a town near Rome. Engraving by A.L. Richter, ca. 1834, after D.W. Lindau.
Lindau, Dietrich Wilhelm, 1799-1862.Date: [1834?]Reference: 659102i- Digital Images
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Primula veris L. Primulaceae Cowslip, Herba paralysis Distribution: W. Asia, Europe. Fuchs ((1542) quotes Dioscorides Pliny and Galen, with numerous uses, from bruises, toothache, as a hair dye, for oedema, inflamed eye, and mixed with honey, wine or vinegar for ulcer and wounds, for scorpion bites, and pain in the sides and chest, and more. Lobel (1576) calls them Primula veriflorae, Phlomides, Primula veris, Verbascula. Lyte (1578) calls them Cowslippe, Petie mulleyn, Verbasculum odoratum, Primula veris, Herbae paralysis and Artheticae. Along with cowslips and oxeslips, he says they are 'used dayly among other pot herbes, but in Physicke there is no great account of them. They are good for the head and synewes ...'. Like other herbals of the 16th and 17th century, the woodcuts leave one in no doubt that Primula veris was being written about. However, other translators of Dioscorides (Gunther, 1959 with Goodyear's 1655 translation
Dr Henry Oakeley- Digital Images
- Online
Leprosy: treatment, traditional medicine
The Leprosy Mission International- Digital Images
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9 "Tabloid" medicine Cases used in Africa
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A medicine vendor kneeling and praying. Coloured etching by
G. M. Woodward- Pictures
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Personifications of medicine, pharmacy and surgery. Oil painting after (?) Nicolas de Larmessin.
Larmessin, Nicolas de.Reference: 44562i- Pictures
A travelling tooth-drawer extracting a tooth from an anxious patient. Engraving by G. Volpato after F. Maggiotto.
Maggiotto, Francesco, 1750-1805.Date: [between 1700 and 1799]Reference: 16480i- Pictures
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Tibetan medicine and its divine origins. Distemper painting by Chundu, 1970.
Chundu.Date: [1970]Reference: 47108i- Pictures
The medicine Buddha (Bhaiṣajyaguru) and Tsongkhapa (1357-1419). Distemper painting by a Tibetan painter.
Reference: 47100i- Pictures
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The healer.
Copping, Harold, 1863-1932Date: [1916]Reference: 535948i- Pictures
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The tax on medicine represented as a tax on illness and, ultimately, even on the 'abnormality' of healthiness: ten vignettes. Photomechanical reproduction of a wood engraving by H. Maigrot, 1907.
Henriot, 1857-1933.Date: 1907Reference: 17268i- Pictures
Staff of the Royal Postgraduate Medical School (RPMS), Hammersmith Hospital, on the day of Sir John McMichael's retirement as Director of the Department of Medicine, 1966. Photograph.
Date: [1966]Reference: 12218i- Pictures
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The prophecy of Masuka: an African medicine man or shaman of the Nkose watching the future in a bowl. Painting by Stanley Wood, 1894.
Wood, Stanley L., active 1900.Date: 1894Reference: 528620i