The breuiarie of health vvherin doth folow, remedies, for all maner of sicknesses & diseases, the which may be in man or woman. Expressing the obscure termes of Greke, Araby, Latin, Barbary, and English, concerning phisick and chirurgerie. Compyled by Andrew Boord, Doctor of phisicke: an English-man.

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Title
The breuiarie of health vvherin doth folow, remedies, for all maner of sicknesses & diseases, the which may be in man or woman. Expressing the obscure termes of Greke, Araby, Latin, Barbary, and English, concerning phisick and chirurgerie. Compyled by Andrew Boord, Doctor of phisicke: an English-man.
Author
Boorde, Andrew, 1490?-1549.
Publication
Imprinted at London :: By Thomas East,
1587.
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Subject terms
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A16466.0001.001
Cite this Item
"The breuiarie of health vvherin doth folow, remedies, for all maner of sicknesses & diseases, the which may be in man or woman. Expressing the obscure termes of Greke, Araby, Latin, Barbary, and English, concerning phisick and chirurgerie. Compyled by Andrew Boord, Doctor of phisicke: an English-man." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A16466.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 2, 2024.

Pages

The 252 Chapter doth shew of a disease named Noli me tangere.

NOli me tangere be the latin words. In English it is named touch me not,* 1.1 and some doth name it an ale pocke, which is a whele about the nose, or the lips or chéekes or in some place in the face, & why it is named touch me not, for if one do nippe or broose him, or doe make him to bléed, he will rise & breake out in an other place, or els it will festure and bréed to a further displeasure.

Page [unnumbered]

The cause of this impediment.

This impediment doth come of late drinking or euil dyet.

A remedy.

The chiefe remedy is, not to touch nor meddle with it, but looke as it doth come, so let it go, & beware of eating of gar∣like and onyons and such like, and drinke not to much hot wines, and vse the medicines the which be in the Chapter named Salsum flegma.

For Nucha looke in the Extrauagantes in the end of this booke.

For Nuretitur loke in ye secōd booke in ye Extrauagāts.

Notes

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