30 résultats
172049572Prag, Conrad Mullem, 1720. Fol. Mit gest. Frontispiz. Titel in Rot u. Schwarz. 5 Bll., 732 S., 18 Bll. (das letzte weiß), Ldr. d. Zt. a. 5 Bünden m. goldgepr. Rückenschild.
176280904Frankfort: Officina Fleischeriana 1762. hardcover. near fine. Bound with: Pharmacopoeia Meadiana Celeberrimi Auctoris Monitis et Praeceptis Medicis Adaptata. Folding frontispiece. 2 vols. in one. 134 37pp. 18mo modern 1/2 tan letter; tiny dampstain on margins throughout. Francofurti: In Officina Fleischeriana 1762.<br/><br/> This is evidently the London Pharmacopeia of 1746 the most excellebt produced to that time and in most respects an improvement over previous ones. STC. See Monk vol III Appendix for a description. Cf. Osler 6089. Waller 7386. Blake p. 349.<br/><br/> Officina Fleischeriana unknown books
1751MNDarLON15<p>Frankfurt am Main: Heirs of Stockius & Schilling 1751. 1751. 8vo. pp. xiv 141. double-page engraved frontis. woodcut tailpiece & device on title. contemporary sprinkled calf gilt back. cfBlake p. 349. BOUND WITH: PHARMACOPOEIA. EDINBURGH. Pharmacopoeia Collegii Regii Medicorum Edinburgensis Secundum Editionis Edinburgensis Novissimae Exemplar Recusa. In Usum Praelectionum Academicarum. 8vo. pp. ix 5incl. errata 192 18index. engraved device on title. woodcut ornaments. Gottingen: Sumtu Regiae Officinae Librariae Academicae c1752. cfBlake p. 348. BOUND WITH: KERN DER GANZEN MEDICIN worinnen.Arzney-Mittel.so deutlich angegeban und erkläret werden das ein Jeder.sein eigener Arzt seyn könne. 8vo. pp. 71. woodcut tailpiece light foxing. Rudolstadt: 1752. Blake p. 242. Hardcover.</p> Frankfurt am Main: Heirs of Stockius & Schilling, 1751. hardcover
1766299105Neapoli, apud Josephum Raymundum, 1766. VIII,352 Seiten. Ganzpergamentband 19 cm
174321694Halle, Orphanotrophei, 1743. 7 Bll., 48, 476 S. 1 Kupfer-Frontsip. 8°. HLdr. der Zeit (Rücken mit Läsuren, beschabt und bestoßen). [5 Warenabbildungen]
174753024Wolfenbüttel, Joh. Christoph Meisner, 1747. Fol. Mit zahlr. Holzschn.-Vignetten. 15 Bll., 24, 479 (recte 471) S.; 10 Bll., 180 S.; 6 Bll., 380 S., Blindgepr. Schweinsldr.-Bd. d. Zt. über Holzdeckeln a. 5 Bünden.
1720AUB-5887LIPSIAE, sumptibus J.O. FRIDERICI GLEDITSCHII B. FILII. Anno MDCCXX. Bel exemplaire relié, reliure d'origine plein parchemin, 29x23, page de titre, portrait gravé en pleine page, hommage, préface, 64 pages + 1028 pages + 792 pages + index omnium titulorum .
1794AUB-2243Münschen, gedruckt und verlegt von Anton Franz 1794. Bel et fort in-12 relié, reliure demi cuir avec coins d'époque, 624 pages sur papier vergé avec page de titre, privilège et table.
175315196Lyon les Frères Bruyset Libraires 1753 -in-4- plein-veau 1 volume comprenant 3 parties en 1 vol. in-4° - reliés ensemble , reliure plein veau blond marbré et raçiné in-quarto (binding full calfskin in-quarto), dos 5 nerfs (spine with 5 raised bands), décorations "or" et à froid (gil and blind stamping decoration), titre frappé "or", pièce de titre sur fond bordeaux avec double filets "or" en encadrement, Tomaison frappée "or" avec une large roulette "or" de part et d'autre dans un encadrement de deux filets "or", entre-nerfs à fleuron "or" au fer évidé dans un encadrement d'un double filet "or" avec rinceaux "or" aux angles, roulette large "or"en tête et en pied, double filets "or" sur les coupes (double gilt line on the cuts)avec léger manque de dorure (blurred gilding), marque-page en tissu vert (bookmark in green tissue), toutes tranches lisses rouges (all red edges), pages de garde peignées à motif "coquille sur fond caillouté" (painting endpapers - model shell on paved bottom), étiquette Ex-Libris Gravée en noir au dos du 1er plat : EX-LIBRIS J. LAISSUS, titre imprimé en rouge et noir, illustrations : 1 frontispice gravé sur cuivre en noir + front de chapitres, lettrines et culs de lampes gravés sur bois en noir pour les deux volumes de la Pharmacopée et 6 planches dépliantes gravées sur cuivre en noir in fine pour les Eaux minérales [ 5 représentent les appareils nécessaires aux préparations pharmaceutiques et la dernière le tableau des symboles chimiques] (1 frontispiece for the two books of the Pharmacopée and 6 folding plates at rear for Eaux Minérales), sans rousseur ni piqûre ni mouillure (without redness mark - without small point of redness mark - without scar of waterstain), XVI+876 (pagination commune pour les deux premiers tomes) et 72 pages avec Approbation & Privilège du Roi, 1753 à Lyon Chez les Frères Bruyset Libraires - rue Mercière au Soleil et à la Croix d'Or,
175496181Breßlau [Breslau], Johann Jacob Korn, 1754. [8] Bl., 400 S.; [8] Bl., 558 S., [28] Bl. (Register). OHNE die 6 Kupfertafeln. 17,5 cm. Neues GanzLdr m.goldgeprägt. RTitel.
177264931St. Blasien, Klosterdruckerei, 1772. Fol. (43 x 29 cm). Mit gest. Frontispiz (v. Peter Mayr). Titel in Rot u. Schwarz m. gest. Vignette. Mit 4 gest. Vignetten u. 4 gest. figürl. Initialen. CLXXXIV, 254 S., 10 Bll., Ldr. d. Zt. a. 7 Bünden m. reicher Rückenverg., 2 goldgepr. Rückenschildern, marmor. Schnitt u. marmor. Vorsätzen.
1711I17ERD520PLVLisbon 1711. Small folio 29 x 21 cm. Monastery of São Vicente de Fóra Modern sheepskin gold-tooled spine red morocco title-label. With engraved arms as fronstipiece and a title-page printed in red and black. 28 494 29 1 blank pp. Rare second edition of the first Portuguese pharmacopoeia first published in 1704 by the friar D. Caetano de Santo António d. 1730 an apothecary of the Monastery of Santa Cruz of the city of Coimbra who upon publication of the second volume was working at Lisbon in the Monastery of São Vicente de Fora. "The Pharmacopeia Lusitana shows how important the convent pharmacy was at that time in Portugal. The Portuguese religious apothecaries were very knowledgeable on pharmaceutical matters" Pita. With a few manuscript annotations in the margins. Ca. 50 leaves with a waterstain at the head of the gutter margin an occasional smudge and two leaves with a small hole and small tears otherwise in very good condition.l J.R. Pita Brief history of Portuguese pharmacopoeias pp. 1-5; Porbase 1 copy; Wellcome IV p. 369 incomplete; WorldCat 5 copies. unknown
175015538Petit in-4 ; demi-veau havane marbré à petits coins, dos lisse à faux-nerfs décoratifs dorés, papier ocre à l'éponge, tranches non rognées, étiquette de titre vierge ; (346) pp. dont 4 blanches, soigneusement manuscrites (il y a deux mains) au XVIIIe siècle.
1800I14DVA32F2X0Leiden: Abraham and Jan Honkoop 1800. Contemporary mottled boards. 12mo. Rare second edition of "the first general as distinguished from hospital 'pharmacopoeia' compiled by an American" Cowen first published at Paris in 1798. The first part of the book is a classification of diseases and is taken word for word from the influential 1769 nosology by the Scottish physician William Cullen. The second part is a pharmacopoeia divided into materia medica and composite medicines. The introduction notes that it is based on the author's notes made at the University of Edinburgh the London pharmacopoeia and Joseph Townsend's The physicians' vade mecum 1794 p. x. Between the two parts can be found a list translating the Latin names of the chemical preparations "which not all readers will view as sufficiently legitimate" p. 77 into the modern English and French nomenclature.William Tazewell d. 1832 was an American physician who had studied in Edinburgh and in 1797-1800 was secretary to Elbridge Gerry in Paris. After returning to the United States Tazewell set up a medical practice in Williamsburg and later moved to Virginia. In 1803 he presented copies of his Vade-mecum to George Washington and Thomas Jefferson the latter writing that "it has really brought the whole science of diseases & remedies within the shortest compass possible and not meddling with the details of the science himself it presents exactly such a general view of every part of it as Jefferson often wishes to take" Cowen.With a small price in pen on the first flyleaf. Only some thumbing on the last 30 pages otherwise in very good condition and wholly untrimmed. Boards slightly worn and spine cracked but still structurally sound.l Cowen America's pre-pharmacopoeial literature pp. 21-22; STCN 1 copy; Founders online letters to Tazewell from Washington and Jefferson; Wellcome V p. 241; WorldCat 2 copies. Abraham and Jan Honkoop, hardcover
1755JC4CQCORXW8DMons: Henri Bottin 1755. Contemporary calf richly gold-tooled spine red edges. 4to. Rare first and only edition of the Mons pharmacopoeia. Although the Vienna pharmacopoeia had been officially designated as the standard for the Austrian Netherlands the city of Mons published its own pharmacopoeia in 1755 making it the last city in the Low Countries to create a new pharmacopoeia.With early owner's inscriptions. Title-page detached but otherwise in very good condition. Binding worn at the spine and extremities and spine-label lost.l Anet 1 copy; Daems & Vandewiele pp. 65-66 3 copies; Wellcome IV p. 368; WorldCat 2 copies; not in Blake. Henri Bottin, unknown
1787ABC_45785Ghent 1787. Half green morocco decorated green paper sides. 8vo. Manuscript edition of the French translation of the Ghent pharmacopoeia. This partial translation or abstract was derived from the edition of the Pharmacopoeia Gandavensis nobilissimi Senatus Jussu renovate printed in Ghent by Jhodocus Begyn in 1786 and approved on 5 March 1787.Binding slightly worn not regularly bound otherwise in good condition .l Cf. Daems & Vandewiele p. 107. unknown
1787ABC_45785Ghent 1787. 8vo. Half green morocco decorated green paper sides. 2 175 pp. Manuscript edition of the French translation of the Ghent pharmacopoeia. This partial translation or abstract was derived from the edition of the Pharmacopoeia Gandavensis nobilissimi Senatus Jussu renovate printed in Ghent by Jhodocus Begyn in 1786 and approved on 5 March 1787.Binding slightly worn not regularly bound otherwise in good condition .l Cf. Daems & Vandewiele p. 107. unknown
1756I17F1HIG4EOQGhent 1756. 4to. Joannis Meyer Contemporary calf richly gold-tooled spine with a tulip in 5 of the 7 compartments red edges. 2 works in 1 volume. 1 1 blank 14 274 30; 54 2 pp. Ad 1: Unrecorded first issue of the rare third edition of the Ghent pharmacopoeia the first to call itself a "pharmacopoea" instead of "antidotarium" in the title.This copy differs slightly from all others recorded in that it contains a somewhat different preface and approval which is signed only by A.C.J. van Rossum and dated 1755. It therefore lacks the more expanded approval from 1756 of the professors of the University of Louvain including that of Van Rossum as well as the subsequent dedication to Empress Maria Theresa. The present variant is therefore almost certainly an earlier issue.Ad 2: New edition of the taxa regulating the prices of pharmacists in Ghent. The previous version dates from 1690 and this new edition was published to reflect the changes made in the pharmacopoeia of 1756.With the binding worn at the spine and somewhat along the extremities. Slightly thumbed with a small tear in the fore-edge margin of pp. 239-248 and a water stain in the fore-edge margin of the final part of ad 1 starting at p. 265; a good copy.l Ad 1: Anet 2 copies; Daems & Vandewiele p. 106 3 copies; STCV 2 copies; WorldCat 1 copy; not in Blake; Wellcome; ad 2: Anet 1 copy; Daems & Vandewiele pp. 106-107; not in STCV; WorldCat. unknown
1774IAEEAKGVMQPTRotterdam 1774. 8vo. Reinier Arrenberg Contemporary red half sheepskin marbled paper sides. VI 5 1 blank 184=182 46 pp. Rare first edition of the Dutch translation of the standard pharmacopoeia of Edinburgh first published in 1699 as Pharmacopoea Collegii Regii Medicorum Edinburgensis. The present translation was based on the sixth edition of 1774. Its"materia medica" starts with the "simples": the non-compounded medicines and ingredients from vegetable animal and mineral sources. The compound medicines follow including oils syrups wines waters powders ointments plasters and more. The work closes with an index an appendix and a short list with the translations of some Latin words and terms.With a bookplate on paste-down. Only very slightly browned some occasional small spots and a few marginal water stains near the end of the book. Overall in good condition and virtually untrimmed. Binding rubbed along the extremities sides scratched.l Blake p. 348; STCN 3 copies; WorldCat 3 other copies. unknown
1791ABC_45530Edinburgh: for William Ceech 1791. Mottled calf red morocco spine label. Large 8vo. With 3 double-page engraved plates of furnaces and distilling equipment each in two parts numbered: Plate I1 I2 II fig. 1 II figs 2-3 III 1 III 2. Pp. 113-665 Part 2-3 printed in two columns. The third revised edition of William Lewis's authoritative The new dispensatory first published in 1753. Lewis 1708-1781 was a British chemist and physician who first published his Dispensary in London in 1753. In all later editions including the revisions his plan and arrangement has been adopted. The editor of the revised edition Andrew Duncan 1744-1828 dedicated his revision based on the Phamacopoea Londinensis of 1788 and other Pharmacopoeas to Sir George Baker president of the Royal College of Physicians. The dedication in our edition is dated Edinburgh 1 November 1788 for the second edition of the revision Edinburgh Charles Elliot 1789. The first edition had been published in 1786. Beginning with our 3rd edition of 1791 the Dispensatory was printed for William Creech as are the 4th edition of 1794 the 5th of 1797 and the 6th of 1801.In good condition.l Wellcome III p. 511. for William Ceech, unknown
1791ABC_45530Edinburgh 1791. Large 8vo. for William Ceech Mottled calf red morocco spine label. With 3 double-page engraved plates of furnaces and distilling equipment each in two parts numbered: Plate I1 I2 II fig. 1 II figs 2-3 III 1 III 2. Pp. 113-665 Part 2-3 printed in two columns. 665 = 656 pp. The third revised edition of William Lewis's authoritative The new dispensatory first published in 1753. Lewis 1708-1781 was a British chemist and physician who first published his Dispensary in London in 1753. In all later editions including the revisions his plan and arrangement has been adopted. The editor of the revised edition Andrew Duncan 1744-1828 dedicated his revision based on the Phamacopoea Londinensis of 1788 and other Pharmacopoeas to Sir George Baker president of the Royal College of Physicians. The dedication in our edition is dated Edinburgh 1 November 1788 for the second edition of the revision Edinburgh Charles Elliot 1789. The first edition had been published in 1786. Beginning with our 3rd edition of 1791 the Dispensatory was printed for William Creech as are the 4th edition of 1794 the 5th of 1797 and the 6th of 1801.In good condition.l Wellcome III p. 511. unknown
1732I14C5IX5BOPXDouai: Jacques-François Willerval 1732. Contemporary tanned sheepskin richly gold-tooled spine brown title-label. Small folio 25.5 x 17 cm. With a woodcut of the then current Douai coat-of-arms a shield with an arrow and eight drops of blood on the title-page. Very rare first and only edition of the pharmacopoeia of the city of Douai in French Flanders. Although the city housed the second oldest university in the Low Countries it had never before compiled its own pharmacopoeia whereas nearby Lille had been the first city in the Southern Low Countries to do so. Compared with other pharmacopoeias the Douai pharmacopoeia was rather conservative and even old fashioned both in its recipes as in its use of measurements and despite being titled as "galeno-chymica" the number of chemical formulas is quite low cf. Vandewiele. With a library stamp and a contemporary owner's inscription on the tile-page. Rebound and with some restorations at the spine and corners; edges and spine worn with two cracks in the latter. Browned throughout especially the last 10 pages due to a damp stain that gradually grows larger through the final 30 pages.l Anet 1 manuscript copy; Daems & Vandewiele p. 93 3 copies; Vandewiele "La Pharmacopée de Douai en manuscrit de Michel Brisseau" in: Revue d'histoire de la pharmacie LXI 216 1973 pp. 340-344; WorldCat 2 copies; not in: Blake; Wellcome. Jacques-François Willerval, unknown
177751944Wien (bzw. Leipzig), Voigt; Trattner bzw. Eisfeld, 1704-1777. Fol. Blindgepr. Schweinsldr.-Bd. d. Zt. a. 5 Bünden m. goldgepr. bischöflichem Wappensupralibros mit den Initialen ?E.P.P.C.?, goldgepr. Rückenschildern, dreiseitigem Farbschnitt u. einer (statt 2) Schließe (Bde. 1 u. 2 in einem Band) bzw. Pgmt.-Bde. d. Zt. m. goldgepr. Rückenschild (Bde. 3-6).
1775JBS8N69TDKIEAmsterdam: Johannes van Seggeren 1775. Contemporary wrappers rebacked. 8vo. With an engraved title page showing an apothecary shop the preparation of medicines and a botanical garden and 2 folding engravings identifying alchemical symbols and measurements. Rare second edition of the Dutch translation of the Brussels pharmacopoeia. Like the first Dutch edition of 1742 the translation was based on the second Latin edition originally published in 1671. Interestingly when this edition was published in 1775 the Viennese pharmacopoeia had been the official pharmacopoeia of Brussels since 1747.With the bookplate of the Gouda pharmacist Elize Grendel 1899-1986. Binding somewhat worn and crudely rebacked. Dog-eared and some spots; a good copy.l Anet 1 copy; Daems & Vandewiele pp. 82-83 1 copy; STCN 2 copies including 1 incomplete; WorldCat 3 copies; not in Wellcome; NLM. Johannes van Seggeren, unknown
1776I14AUD0VK13VVienna 1776. 8vo. Johan Thomas Edlen von Trattnern Contemporary calf light brown morocco spine label with title in gold red sprinkled edges. With a woodcut coat-of-arms on the title-page and typographical head- and tailpieces. 10 384 18 pp. First edition of the German version of the Pharmacopoeia Austriaco-Provincialis first published in 1774. Many editions of both the original Latin and German translation followed. Based on a thorough analysis it can be determined that pharmaceutical care was on a high level in the area of South-Eastern Europe and that it followed the scholarly pharmacy in the Habsburg monarchy.The necessity to publish the pharmacopoeia in German was because it was used by minor medical professions without knowledge of Latin such as surgeons. A Dutch translation of the pharmacopoeia entitled Apotheek der Oostenrijksche Staaten which was based on the edition of 1775 was published in Rotterdam in 1780. The content and the format of the new pharmacopoeia had changed dramatically compared to the former one. While the Viennese Dispensatory represented a Baroque pharmacopoeia in size and in its abundance of recipes the new Pharmacopoeia Austriaco-Provincialis was a rather small booklet with a drastically reduced number of formulations.Two sections built up the body of the pharmacopoeia. The first one cited the Materia Pharmaceutica minerals crude drugs of plant and animal origin in separate chapters mentioning the Latin name the scientific identification and the Austrian local name of all items. Another chapter listed the chemical characters some of them still representing alchemical signs. The second part consisted of formulated preparations in alphabetical order followed by an index. The pharmacopoeia had a new concept and for the first time specified the medicinal ingredients alphabetically and listed the formulations in alphabetical order according to the recipes names.Corners slightly bumped otherwise in very good condition.l Christa Kletter The civil Pharmacopoeias of Austria Paper Austrian International Society for the history of Pharmacy 2015 pp. 7-8. unknown