Currus triumphalis, è terebinthô, or, An account of the many admirable vertues of oleum terebinthinæ more particularly, of the good effects produced by its application to recent wounds, especially with respect to the hemorrhagies of the veins, and arteries, and the no less pernicious weepings of the nerves, and lymphaducts : wherein also, the common methods, and medicaments, used to restrain hemorrhagies, are examined, and divers of them censured : and lastly, a new way of amputation, and a speedier convenient method of curing stumps, than that commonly practised, is with divers other useful matters recommended to the military chirurgeon, in two letters : the one to his most honoured, James Pearse, Esq, chirurgeon to His Royal Highness the Duke of York, and chirurgeon general to His Majestie's Navy Royal : the other, to Mr. Thomas Hobbs, chirurgeon in London / by James Yonge.

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Title
Currus triumphalis, è terebinthô, or, An account of the many admirable vertues of oleum terebinthinæ more particularly, of the good effects produced by its application to recent wounds, especially with respect to the hemorrhagies of the veins, and arteries, and the no less pernicious weepings of the nerves, and lymphaducts : wherein also, the common methods, and medicaments, used to restrain hemorrhagies, are examined, and divers of them censured : and lastly, a new way of amputation, and a speedier convenient method of curing stumps, than that commonly practised, is with divers other useful matters recommended to the military chirurgeon, in two letters : the one to his most honoured, James Pearse, Esq, chirurgeon to His Royal Highness the Duke of York, and chirurgeon general to His Majestie's Navy Royal : the other, to Mr. Thomas Hobbs, chirurgeon in London / by James Yonge.
Author
Yonge, James, 1647-1721.
Publication
London :: Printed for J. Martyn ...,
1679.
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Subject terms
Turpentine -- Therapeutic use -- Early works to 1800.
Amputation -- Early works to 1800.
Surgery -- Early works to 1800.
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
Cite this Item
"Currus triumphalis, è terebinthô, or, An account of the many admirable vertues of oleum terebinthinæ more particularly, of the good effects produced by its application to recent wounds, especially with respect to the hemorrhagies of the veins, and arteries, and the no less pernicious weepings of the nerves, and lymphaducts : wherein also, the common methods, and medicaments, used to restrain hemorrhagies, are examined, and divers of them censured : and lastly, a new way of amputation, and a speedier convenient method of curing stumps, than that commonly practised, is with divers other useful matters recommended to the military chirurgeon, in two letters : the one to his most honoured, James Pearse, Esq, chirurgeon to His Royal Highness the Duke of York, and chirurgeon general to His Majestie's Navy Royal : the other, to Mr. Thomas Hobbs, chirurgeon in London / by James Yonge." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A67811.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 4, 2024.

Pages

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The Reader will injure himself, and prejudice the Author, if he adventure to peruse this Discourse, till he have corrected with his Pen the following Errata; which by reason of the Author's absence from the Press, have occurred.

PAge 1. line 3. read Vertues, p. 5. l. 22. r. eight distinctions, p. 6. l. 4. put an asterisk over Hippocrates, and another in the opposite Margent over, in hypp. praed. p. 7. l. 14. r. injured, p. 9. in the Margent, r. anno 73: p. 11. l. 27. leave out of, p. 15. l. 16. r. these dissuading, p. 17. l. 13. r. mon∣struous, p. 20. l. 8. r. Styptick liquor, p. 26. l. 9. r. incarnative, p. 30. l. 8. r. to lay a wadd, l. 18. r. Vessels, p. 32. l. 1. r. used to, p. 35. put an asterisk on the quotation from Dr. Willis, l. 13. r. Phlegmon: in the margent r. dixit, p. 36. l. 30. r. digestives, p. 40. l. 22. r. for what, p. 41. l. 26. it adhereth, p. 43. l. 7. leave out, that, l. 13. r. it to be, p. 44. l. 23. leave out, yet, p. 52. l. 21. r. their discharge, p. 54. l. 2. r. insinuating, p. 57. l. 6. any others, l. 21. the first sentence in the last period, should be joined to the preceding, p. 58. l. 2. r. general, l. 24. r. nervous liquor, p. 63. l. 21. r. page 23. p. 64. l. 2. that I attribute, in the Margent, r. tract 1. p. 67. l. 4. r. Vessels, p. 78. l. 8. r. Car∣pus, p. 80. l. 16. r. two, p. 82. l. 2. r. Margarit, l. 20. r. temporal and frontal, p. 87. l. 21. r. Nervinum, p. 88. l. 18. r. Comphory, p. 93. l. 4. r. lib. 6. mels. p. 94. l. 1. r. Phlebotomy there, being such, p. 102. l. 2. r. Coag. p. 104. l. 15. leave out q. s. p. 105. l. 6. r. worse, p. 111. l. 9. r. the usual, p. 115. l. 6. r. Hy∣persarcosis, p. 118. l. 5. leave out, no. Some mis-pointings and such less ob∣vious Errata, are left to the Readers Ingenuity to correct as he finds them.

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