Pharmacopoeia Londinensis: Or, The London dispensatory further adorned by the studies and collections of the fellows now living, of the said college. In this impression you may find, 1. Three hundred useful additions. 2. All the notes that were in the margent are brought into the book between two such crotchets as these() 3. The virtues, qualities, and properties of every simple. 4. The virtues and use of the compounds. 5. All the medicines that were in the old Latin dispensatory and are left out in the new Latin one, are printed in this impression in English, with their virtues. 6. A key to Galen and Hippocrates, their method of physick, containing thirty three chapters. 7. In this impression, the Latin name of every one of the compounds is printed, and in what page of the new folio Latin book they are to be found
- People / Organizations
-
- Imprint
-
London : Printed for A. and J. Churchil, at the Black Swan in Pater-Noster-Row, 1702.
- Publication year
- 1702
- ESTC No.
- N11254
- Grub Street ID
- 1251
- Description
- [26],482[i.e.382],[24]p. ; 12°.
- Note
- Running title: 'The physicians library'
With an index
P.382 misnumbered 482
Numerous editions of this unauthorized translation of the Royal College of Physicians' 'Pharmacop.ia' were published during the seventeenth century, first as 'A physicall directory', 1649, and later, and more commonly, as 'Pharmacopoeia Londinensis'
Parenthesis in title indicate the presence of brackets on the original title page.