A nievve herball, or historie of plantes wherin is contayned the vvhole discourse and perfect description of all sortes of herbes and plantes: their diuers [and] sundry kindes: their straunge figures, fashions, and shapes: their names, natures, operations, and vertues: and that not onely of those whiche are here growyng in this our countrie of Englande, but of all others also of forrayne realmes, commonly vsed in physicke. First set foorth in the Doutche or Almaigne tongue, by that learned D. Rembert Dodoens, physition to the Emperour: and nowe first translated out of French into English, by Henry Lyte Esquyer.

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Title
A nievve herball, or historie of plantes wherin is contayned the vvhole discourse and perfect description of all sortes of herbes and plantes: their diuers [and] sundry kindes: their straunge figures, fashions, and shapes: their names, natures, operations, and vertues: and that not onely of those whiche are here growyng in this our countrie of Englande, but of all others also of forrayne realmes, commonly vsed in physicke. First set foorth in the Doutche or Almaigne tongue, by that learned D. Rembert Dodoens, physition to the Emperour: and nowe first translated out of French into English, by Henry Lyte Esquyer.
Author
Dodoens, Rembert, 1517-1585.
Publication
At London [i.e. Antwerp :: Printed by Henry Loë, sold] by my Gerard Dewes, dwelling in Pawles Churchyarde at the signe of the Swanne,
1578.
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Subject terms
Herbals.
Medicinal plants -- Early works to 1800.
Botany -- Pre-Linnean works.
Cite this Item
"A nievve herball, or historie of plantes wherin is contayned the vvhole discourse and perfect description of all sortes of herbes and plantes: their diuers [and] sundry kindes: their straunge figures, fashions, and shapes: their names, natures, operations, and vertues: and that not onely of those whiche are here growyng in this our countrie of Englande, but of all others also of forrayne realmes, commonly vsed in physicke. First set foorth in the Doutche or Almaigne tongue, by that learned D. Rembert Dodoens, physition to the Emperour: and nowe first translated out of French into English, by Henry Lyte Esquyer." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A20579.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 8, 2024.

Pages

❀ The Vertues.

[ A] The roote of Peonie dried, and the quantitie of a Beane of the same dron∣ken with Meade called Hydromel, bringeth downe womēs flowers, scoureth the mother of women brought a bed, and appeaseth the griping paynes, and tormentes of the belly.

[ B] The same openeth the stopping of the liuer, and the kidneyes, and sod with red wine stoppeth the belly.

[ C] The roote of the male Peonie hanged about the necke healeth, the falling sicknesse (as Galen and many other haue proued) especially in young children.

[ D] Ten or twelue of the red seedes, dronken with thicke and rough red wine, doth stop the red issues of women.

[ E] Fiftene or sixtene of the blacke cornes or seedes dronkē in wine or Meade, helpeth the strangling and paynes of the Matrix or mother, and is a speciall good remedie for them that are troubled with the night Mare (which is a dis∣ease wherin men seeme to be oppressed in the night as with some great burthē and sometimes to be ouercome with their enimies) and it is good against me∣lancholique dreames.

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