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 10, 2024.

Pages

The 169. Chapter doth shew of Gurgulaciōs in a mās body

GVrgulacio or Gurgulaciones* 1.1 be ye latin words. In Eng∣lish it is named Gurgulacion or croking in ones belly.

The cause of this impediment.

This impediment doth come of winde and cold, and emp∣tines of the guttes, & it may come by nature, and to vse lōg fasting in youth.

A remedy.

Page [unnumbered]

First be not long fasting, beware of cold, desolue winde by dragges & easy purgacions, & beware of eating of potage, & other sew, & of fruites, & of cold herbes, & colde meates, & any thing that hony is in, & kepe the belly laxatiue and warme. For Gutta taken for the gout, looke in the Chapter named Gutta in the Extrauagantes.

Notes

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