The Lord Bacons relation of the sweating-sickness examined, in a reply to George Thomson, pretender to physick and chymistry. . Together with a defence of phlebotomy in general, and also particularly in the plague, small-pox, scurvey, and pleurisie. In opposition to the same author, and the author of Medela medicinæ, Doctor Whitaker, and Doctor Sydenham. Also a relation concerning the strange symptomes happening upon the bite of an adder. And a reply, by way of preface to the calumnies of Eccebolius Glanvile. By Henry Stubbe physician at Warwick.
Henry Stubbe (1632-1676)
Category
Books
Date
1671
Materials
Place of origin
England
Collection
Belton House, Lincolnshire
NT 3019447
Summary
Bibliographic description
[10],27,[1];[8],136,133-257,[1],258-259;[6],11,[1];32p. . 4to. Imperfect: lacks part-title for "An epistolatory discourse concerning phlebotomy" and final leaf (E4) of prelims. Calf. MS notes on contents (seventeenth-century) on end flyleaf.. Provenance: Signature on front flyleaf: [monogram JB:] August 19th. 1671 prec' - 6s. (= "Old" Sir John Brownlow). Bookplate: Belton House (earl's coronet & crests).
Makers and roles
Henry Stubbe (1632-1676) Thomas Sydenham George Thomson (fl.17th centur)y Tobias Whitaker (bap. c.1601 - d.1664) Sir Francis Bacon, 1st Viscount St Alban (1561 - 1626) Marchamont Nedham (1620-1678)