MPIWG

Surgery in the early modern period does not mean operative surgery, as it does today, but a wider range of practice focused on the exterior of the body. Surgeons dealt with wounds, swellings, discharges, broken bones, and dislocations. They were also the healers most often involved in the treatment of venereal diseases, in part due the the external’ nature of the signs.

Vade mecum: or, A companion for a chyrurgion. Fitted for sea, or land; peace, or…

Brugis, Thomas
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Novum lumen chirurgicum: or, A new light of chirugery· Wherein is discover’d a much more…

Colbatch, John
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Eight chirurgical treatises, on these following heads, viz. I. Of tumours. II. Of ulcers. III…

Wiseman, Richard
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A collection of tracts, chirurgical and medical, viz. I. A new light of chirurgery; or…

Colbatch, John
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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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Observations in chyrurgery and anatomy: with a refutation of divers mistakes and vulgar errors in…

Yonge, James
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Lithotomy: or, a treatise of the extracting of the stone out of the bladder. Wherein…

Tolet, Francois
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Chirurgorum comes: or, the whole practice of chirurgery. Begun by the learned Dr. Read; continu’d…

Read, Alexander
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Chirurgus methodicus; or, the young chirurgion’s conductor through the labyrinth of the most difficult cures…

Prat, Ellis
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Vade mecum: or, A companion for a chirurgion. Fitted for sea, or land; peace, or…

Brugis, Thomas
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