-
English botanist, herbalist,
physician and astrologer. His book The
English Physitian (1652,
later Complete Herbal, 1653 ff.) is a
source of pharmaceutical...
-
appropriated to
their several PLANETS" in the 1652
medical text The
English Physitian: or an Astrologo-physical
Discourse of the
Vulgar Herbs of This Nation...
-
breakage of
kidney stones,
among many others. In his 1652 work The
English physitian,
Nicholas Culpeper called it Wood-Betony to
contrast it from Water-Betony...
- that
wormwood was the key to
understanding his 1651 book The
English Physitian.
Richard Mabey describes Culpeper's
entry on this bitter-tasting plant...
-
various editions of Culpeper, for
example Culpeper, Nicholas, The
English physitian: or an astrologo-physical
discourse of the
vulgar herbs of this nation...
- Oxford,
Clarendon Press, 1923; Vol. 3, pp. 208-9. Cadman, Daniel. "'"A fit
Physitian for an
aguish State": Sovereignty, Republicanism, and
Stoicism in William...
-
Directory (1649),
which was a
pseudoscientific pharmacopoeia. The
English Physitian (1652) and the
Complete Herbal (1653),
contain a rich
store of pharmaceutical...
- Bibliomania, The
Complete Herbal (1652,
originally titled The
English Physitian). "Introduction: Chickpeas".
International Center for
Agricultural Research...
-
Valentinus Molimbrochius of Lipswick.
Englished by Tho. Sherley, M.D. and
physitian in
ordinary to His
present Majesty. London:
Printed by S. and B. Griffin...
-
Vervain is
usually as a
herbal tea;
Nicholas Culpeper's 1652 The
English Physitian discusses folk uses. "Vervain",
presumably this species, is one of the...