The workes of that famous chirurgion Ambrose Parey translated out of Latin and compared with the French. by Tho: Johnson. Whereunto are added three tractates our of Adrianus Spigelius of the veines, arteries, & nerves, with large figures. Also a table of the bookes and chapters.

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Title
The workes of that famous chirurgion Ambrose Parey translated out of Latin and compared with the French. by Tho: Johnson. Whereunto are added three tractates our of Adrianus Spigelius of the veines, arteries, & nerves, with large figures. Also a table of the bookes and chapters.
Author
Paré, Ambroise, 1510?-1590.
Publication
London :: printed by E: C: and are to be sold by John Clarke at Mercers Chappell in Cheapeside neare ye great Conduit,
1665.
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Subject terms
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
Surgery -- Early works to 1800.
Anatomy -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"The workes of that famous chirurgion Ambrose Parey translated out of Latin and compared with the French. by Tho: Johnson. Whereunto are added three tractates our of Adrianus Spigelius of the veines, arteries, & nerves, with large figures. Also a table of the bookes and chapters." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A55895.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 15, 2024.

Pages

CHAP. LXVI. Of the relaxation of the navel in children.

OFten-times in children newly born, the navel swelleth as big an egg, because it hath not been well cut or bound, or because the whayish humors are flowed thither, or because that part hath exended it self too much by crying, by reason of the pains of the fret∣ting of the childes guts, many times the childe bringeth that tumor joined with an abscess with him from his mothers womb: but let not the Chirurgian assay to open that abscess, for if it be opened, the guts come out through the incision, as I have seen in many, and especially in a childe of my Lord Martigues; for when Peter of the Rock, the Chirurgian, opened an abscess that was in it, the bowels ran out at the incision, and the infant died; and it wanted but little that the Gentleman of my Lords retinue that were there, had strangled the Chirurgian. Therefore when Iohn Gromontius the Carver desired me, and requested me o late that I would do the like in his son, I refused to do it, because it was in danger of its life by it alreadie, and in three daies after the ab∣scess broke, and the bowels gushed out, and the childe died.

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