Rivière |
Lazare |
The practice of physick, wherein is plainly set forth, the nature, cause, differences, and several… |
1661 |
Lovell |
Robert |
Panzōoryktologia. Sive Panzoologicomineralogia. Or a compleat history of animals and minerals, containing the summe of… |
1661 |
Sennert |
Daniel |
T]hirteen books of natural philosophy: viz. I. Of the principles, and common adjuncts of… |
1661 |
Sennert |
Daniel |
Practical physick; the third book, in fourteen parts[.] Part I. Of diseases of the stomach… |
1662 |
Sennert |
Daniel |
Practical physick; the first book, in three parts. Part I. Of diseases of the head… |
1662 |
Cooke |
James |
Mellificium chirurgiæ, or the marrovv of many good authors enlarged |
1662 |
Sennert |
Daniel |
Practical physick; the second book, in four parts. Part I. Of the diseases of the… |
1662 |
Platter |
Felix |
A golden practice of physick. In five books, and three tomes. After a new, easie… |
1662 |
Sennert |
Daniel |
The sixth book of Practical physick. Of occult or hidden diseases; in nine parts Part… |
1662 |
Rivière |
Lazare |
The practice of physick, wherein is plainly set forth the nature, cause, differences, and several… |
1663 |
Bayfield |
Robert |
Tes iatrikes kartos: or A treatise de morborum capitis essentiis & pronosticis |
1663 |
[author not specified] |
|
The physitian’s library, containing all the works of the most famous physitians following, viz. Dan… |
1663 |
Rivière |
Lazare |
The practice of physick, wherein is plainly set forth the nature, cause, differences, and several… |
1664 |
Platter |
Felix |
Platerus golden practice of physick: fully and plainly discovering, I. All the kinds. II. The… |
1664 |
Sennert |
Daniel |
Practical physick; the fourth book in three parts. Part I. Of the diseases of the… |
1664 |
Drage |
William |
Daimonomageia. A small treatise of sicknesses and diseases from witchcraft, and supernatural causes. Never before… |
1665 |
Gadbury |
John |
London’s deliverance predicted: in a short discourse shewing the cause of plagues in general; and… |
1665 |
Rivière |
Lazare |
The practice of physick, wherein is plainly set forth the nature, the nature, cause, differences… |
1665 |
[author not specified] |
|
The mourning-cross... Containing the certain causes of pestilential diseases… |
1665 |
[author not specified] |
|
The mourning-cross... Containing the certain causes of pestilential diseases… |
1665 |
Drage |
William |
Daimonomageia. A small treatise of sicknesses and diseases from witchcraft, and supernatural causes. Never before… |
1665 |
Lovell |
Robert |
Pambotanologia. Sive, Enchiridion botanicum. Or, A compleat herball, containing the summe of ancient and moderne… |
1665 |
Rivière |
Lazare |
The practice of physick, wherein is plainly set forth the nature, cause, differences, and several… |
1666 |
Twysden |
John |
Medicina veterum vindicata: or An ansvver to a book, entitled Medela medicinæ; in which the… |
1666 |
Rivière |
Lazare |
The practice of physick in seventeen several books wherein is plainly set forth the nature… |
1668 |
Drage |
William |
Physical experiments being a plain description of the causes, signes, and cures of most diseases… |
1668 |
[author not specified] |
|
An account of the causes of some particular rebellious distempers, viz. the scurvy, cancers in… |
1670 |
Galen |
|
Galen’s Art of physick: wherein is laid down, 1. A description of bodies, healthful, unhealthful… |
1671 |
Archer |
John |
Every man his own doctor. In two parts |
1671 |
Archer |
John |
Every man his own doctor[.] Compleated with an herbal |
1671 |