113 results filtered with: Pestles
- Pictures
A medical practitioner examining a urine flask and referring to a book Engraving by J.B. Tardieu after D. Teniers.
Teniers, David, 1610-1690.Reference: 20508i- Pictures
Dr. Bradbury, a pharmacist, in his shop with his son. Etching.
Reference: 15953i- Pictures
- Online
A young man visiting a surgeon-apothecary in his workroom, where the proprietor shows him one of his prize natural history specimens. Etching by J. Leech.
Leech, John, 1817-1864.Date: 1848Reference: 16015i- Pictures
- Online
A rural surgeon treating a male patient's foot, in the background an assistant is mixing a concoction with a pestle and mortar in a surgery. Engraving by T. Major, 1747, after D. Teniers, the younger.
Teniers, David, 1610-1690.Date: 1747Reference: 22583i- Pictures
Sir John Simon (?) in his role as the first Medical Officer of Health for the City of London putting pressure on the Corporation of London to act upon the pestilential conditions of the graveyards in the City. Lithograph by Bolus, 1851.
Bolus, active 1851.Date: 1851Reference: 16130i- Pictures
- Online
John Bull as a patient, in disarray, reclines on a sofa and receives medical treatment from politicians. Coloured etching by G. Cruikshank, 1813.
Cruikshank, George, 1792-1878.Date: 1 December 1813Reference: 38418i- Pictures
A surgeon removing a plaster from the leg of a screaming patient, another bandaged patient waits his turn. Mezzotint by I. Beckett (?) after J. Lingelbach (?).
Lingelbach, Johannes, 1622-1674.Reference: 23009i- Pictures
A mortar and pestle; the American eagle; and the joined flags of the United Kingdom and the United States; advertising Burroughs Wellcome & Co., London. Relief photoengraving on metal.
Date: [between 1890 and 1899?]Reference: 2897053i- Pictures
- Online
A young woman being visited by a member of the clergy while another woman cries beside her. Line engraving, 1813.
Date: 1813Reference: 17869i- Pictures
- Online
Panacea, daughter of Æsculapius, examining a urine flask and surrounded by medical paraphernalia. Engraving by P. Galle (?).
Reference: 17831i- Pictures
An interior of sixteenth century monastic pharmacy. Watercolour, 19--.
Reference: 16009i- Pictures
- Online
A medical practitioner examining a urine flask and referring to a book, while the patient waits for the diagnosis;, two assistants are preparing ingredients in the background. Mezzotint by R. Purcell, 1766, after D. Teniers, the younger.
Teniers, David, 1610-1690.Date: 1766Reference: 21791i- Pictures
- Online
A small boy at an apothecary's shop. Reproduction of a lithograph by A. Holswilder, c. 1890.
Holswilder, Jan Pieter, 1850-1890.Date: 20 December 1890Reference: 17765i- Pictures
- Online
Pills, medication, drugs, a pestle and mortar and a syringe representing a warning about the dangers of intravenous drug abuse and AIDS. Colour lithograph by Adprint, ca. 1997.
Date: [1997?]Reference: 677344i- Pictures
- Online
Trephination, preparation of medicines from raw materials, a skeleton, a muscleman and a portrait of A. Paré. Line engraving.
Date: 1649Reference: 22242i- Pictures
- Online
The Dutch maid (De Nederlandse Maagd), personifying the Netherlands asks an apothecary whether a medicine might not be poisonous; symbolising doubts over a new Dutch tax law; he replies no, a babe-in-arms could take it. Process print after J. Braakensiek, 1890.
Braakensiek, Joh. (Johan Coenraad), 1858-1940.Date: 5 October 1890Reference: 17683i- Pictures
- Online
An itinerant medicine vendor performing on stage with two assistants and a monkey, selling his wares to an excitable crowd. Coloured wood engraving by J. Oortman.
Reference: 20933i- Pictures
- Online
A monkey holding a clyster in an apothecary's shop. Engraving after D. Teniers the younger.
Teniers, David, 1610-1690.Reference: 17780i- Pictures
- Online
The interior of a shop of a family of apothecaries - d' Ailly. Photoprint by V.A Bruckmann, 1904, after an oil painting by J. Jelgerhuis Rienksz, 1818.
Jelgerhuis, J. (Johannes), 1770-1836.Date: 1818-1904Reference: 15961i- Pictures
- Online
A "man-midwife" (male obstetrician) represented by a figure divided in half, one half representing a man and the other a woman. Coloured etching by I. Cruikshank, 1793.
Cruikshank, Isaac, 1764-1811Date: 15 June 1793Reference: 16968i- Pictures
- Online
Death as an apothecary's assistant making up medicines with a mortar and pestle for the apothecary attending a female patient who sits by the fireside. Watercolour by T. Rowlandson or one of his followers.
Rowlandson, Thomas, 1756-1827.Reference: 20131i- Pictures
An apothecary using a pestle and mortar to make up a prescription. Coloured etching.
Reference: 16151i- Pictures
- Online
The interior of a busy pharmacy. Line engraving by C. Le Roy.
Reference: 15967i- Pictures
- Online
A nun with two children in a convent pharmacy, surrounded attributes of the trade. Lithograph by André after E. Pingret.
Pingret, Edouard, 1788-1875.Date: [1853?]Reference: 16373i- Pictures
- Online
An itinerant doctor, by a subterfuge, cures an undergraduate hoaxer of his supposed maladies of lying and bad memory. Coloured etching by T. Rowlandson, 1807, after G.M. Woodward.
Woodward, G. M. (George Moutard), approximately 1760-1809.Date: July 9 1807Reference: 460130i