MPIWG

In the largely humoral model of medicine predominant in the early modern period, disease causation was very different to what it is today. There was no germ theory; the causes of ill-health were usually described in relation to an individual’s humoral balance, although a very small set of diseases, such as the so-called French pox and the plague were seen as contagious.

Platerus golden practice of physick: fully and plainly discovering, I. All the kinds. II. The…

Platter, Felix
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Mellificium chirurgiæ: Or, The marrow of chirurgery. With the anatomy of human bodies according to…

Cooke, James
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An essay of the pathology of the brain and nervous stock: in which convulsive diseases…

Willis, Thomas
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Practical physick; the second book, in four parts. Part I. Of the diseases of the…

Sennert, Daniel
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Practical physick; the first book, in three parts. Part I. Of diseases of the head…

Sennert, Daniel
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Practical physick; the third book, in fourteen parts[.] Part I. Of diseases of the stomach…

Sennert, Daniel
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Collections of acute diseases, in five parts. I. Of the small pox and measles. II…

Pechey, John
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Daimonomageia. A small treatise of sicknesses and diseases from witchcraft, and supernatural causes. Never before…

Drage, William
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Enchiridion medicum...

Bayfield, Robert
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Pharmaceutice rationalis: or, An exercitation of the operations of medicines in humane bodies. Shewing the…

Willis, Thomas
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