Obsessed with her health, she traveled with a retinue of surgeons, physicians, oculists, and apothecaries. |
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Apothecary planes were used by pharmacists or apothecaries to cut botanical materials into medically usable sizes. |
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The growing presence of everyday medical practitioners, like apothecaries and druggists, made magic obsolete. |
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The mountain pass is a difficult road to travel and it appears as though you are not apothecaries or wandering salesmen. |
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Over time, the practice of uroscopy spread into the hands of quacks and apothecaries, who prescribed and sold their potions by merely looking at the urine. |
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But the bulk of the population had little access to physicians, seeking instead barber-surgeons, apothecaries, empirics such as bonesetters and tooth-drawers, or wise women. |
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Doctors, surgeons, and also apothecaries played a large role in the care brought to the patients. |
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During the XVIIth and XVIIIth centuries, these peddlers settled in many towns of the region as hardware merchants or apothecaries. |
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This color reproduction of a woodcut shows medieval apothecaries preparing the compound. |
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It is available at Chinese apothecaries and some natural food stores. |
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The former Hospital converted into a museum traces the life of previous centuries diseases and apothecaries remedies. |
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That was the name apothecaries gave to the activity of collecting plants that time and tradition had shown possessed useful medical properties. |
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In the 15th Century these ingredients were brought from the Orient and used by apothecaries in their preparation of various medicines. |
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With the assistance of one of the king's apothecaries, Sainte-Croix obtained poisons, which she tested on patients in hospitals. |
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A medical corps consisting of a small group of doctors, surgeons and apothecaries looked after the health of Canadians. |
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Liebig succeeded in institutionalizing the independent teaching of chemistry, which hitherto in German universities had been taught as an adjunct to pharmacy for apothecaries and physicians. |
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Hahnemann has used the Law of similars to cure acute diseases and obtained sensational results, which has made the medical profession of that period extremely jealous, and apothecaries resentful as they felt cheated. |
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Long before the government took it upon itself to ban opium from general sale, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, a Romantic poet and drug addict, used to hire porters to bar his entry to apothecaries. |
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Ricciarelli di Siena' used to be produced in convents and apothecaries, the only places where the spices and flavourings needed to flavour and preserve food could be found. |
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Let us not forget that it is the time of empirical medication which made rich the apothecaries and the reputation of many a Diafoirus and worse caused misery to the patients often reduced to the state of guinea-pigs. |
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In the Navy, physicians, surgeons and apothecaries were first hired individually. However, in 1689 they formed a permanent corps, with all aspects of their duties, on land and sea, laid down in detail. |
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Spices and aromas are sold by herbalists, apothecaries and ironmongers. |
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The charlatans, like the fake apothecaries, often counted on the naivety of their entourage and misused it whereas they had neither diploma, nor often, experience. |
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Sage, which was considered by certain civilisations as a sacred plant for its purifying effects, was widely used by the apothecaries of the Middle Ages in the preparation of their remedies. |
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Majorca and Eivissa's most traditional liqueurs have their origin in the medicinal concoctions which the apothecaries used to prepare in the 16th Century to fight against epidemics. |
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Peter's herb or Petrella and was sought after by Florentine apothecaries. |
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John was an examiner for the MRCGP and the Society of Apothecaries, where he was a liveryman. |
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She played an active part in many medical societies, including the Chelsea Clinical Society of which she was president, and she was a liveryman of the Society of Apothecaries. |
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Its secretary and treasurer was John Meres, clerk to the Society of Apothecaries in London. |
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Savery also worked for the Sick and Hurt Commissioners, contracting the supply of medicines to the Navy Stock Company, which was connected with the Society of Apothecaries. |
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