The treasurie of health contayning many profitable medicines, gathered out of Hipocrates, Galen and Auicen / by one Petrus Hyspanus, and translated into English by Humfry Lloyd, who hath added thereunto the causes and signes of euery disease, with the Aphorismes of Hipocrates, and Iacobus de Partibus, redacted to a certaine order according to the members of mans bodie, and a compendious table containing the purging and confortative medicines, with the exposition of certaine names and weights in this booke contained, with an epistle of Diocles unto Kyng Antigonus..
- Title
- The treasurie of health contayning many profitable medicines, gathered out of Hipocrates, Galen and Auicen / by one Petrus Hyspanus, and translated into English by Humfry Lloyd, who hath added thereunto the causes and signes of euery disease, with the Aphorismes of Hipocrates, and Iacobus de Partibus, redacted to a certaine order according to the members of mans bodie, and a compendious table containing the purging and confortative medicines, with the exposition of certaine names and weights in this booke contained, with an epistle of Diocles unto Kyng Antigonus..
- Author
- John XXI, Pope, d. 1277.
- Publication
- [London,: William Copland,
- ca. 1560].
- Rights/Permissions
-
To the extent possible under law, the Text Creation Partnership has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to this keyboarded and encoded edition of the work described above, according to the terms of the CC0 1.0 Public Domain Dedication (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/). This waiver does not extend to any page images or other supplementary files associated with this work, which may be protected by copyright or other license restrictions. Please go to http://www.textcreationpartnership.org/ for more information.
- Subject terms
- Medicine, Medieval.
- Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
- Link to this Item
-
https://name.umdl.umich.edu/B00226.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"The treasurie of health contayning many profitable medicines, gathered out of Hipocrates, Galen and Auicen / by one Petrus Hyspanus, and translated into English by Humfry Lloyd, who hath added thereunto the causes and signes of euery disease, with the Aphorismes of Hipocrates, and Iacobus de Partibus, redacted to a certaine order according to the members of mans bodie, and a compendious table containing the purging and confortative medicines, with the exposition of certaine names and weights in this booke contained, with an epistle of Diocles unto Kyng Antigonus.." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/B00226.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 19, 2024.
Contents
- title page
- ¶ To the Gentle harted Reader Hum∣frey Lloyde.
- ¶ Places of scripture which seeme to make for the praise of Phisicke.
-
text
- ¶ For the fallinge of the Heare
- ¶ To take away Heare.
- ¶ Of the pustules or wheles in the head.
- Against forgetfulnes and drow∣sines.
- For the frensye.
- For the head ache.
- ¶ Agaynst the Rewme.
- ¶ Agaynst the turne or daselynge in the heade.
- Agaynst to much watching.
- ¶ For the falling euell.
- ¶ Agaynst madnesse called mania.
- ¶ Agaynst al deseases in the eyes.
- ¶ Of the payne the Eare.
- For the Morphew.
- ¶ For the Tooth ake.
- ¶ For bledynge at the Nose.
- For the Palsey.
- ¶ Against all grefes in the flap be∣ing in the mouth which coue∣teth the wind pipe.
- ¶ Of the Squinancy.
- Against horlenesse and cough.
- ¶ Agaynst spyttynge of bloud.
-
¶ Of y
e sodain to syng of strength a debillitte of the vytall spirites. - ¶ Of yesking and lothing.
- ¶ Of the paynes in the lightes
- ¶ Agaynst the Pleurysy.
- ¶ To be laxatiue, or agaynst cost it nenesse.
- ¶ Agaynst the Fluxe.
- ¶ Of the Lolycke and the paine called yliaca.
- ¶ For the wormes in the bely.
- For the Hemorrhoydes.
- ¶ Against desire to the stool without any sege.
- ¶ Agaynst chynes and ruptions in the fundament.
- ¶ Of the comynge furth of the foundamente.
- ¶ Of the oppilatyon of the lyuer.
- ¶ Of the Hydropsye.
- ¶ for them that be splenetike.
- ¶ For the yelow Iaundes.
- Of the stone in the raynes or bladder.
- ❀ Of the Strangury.
- ¶ Of the vlcers or pustules in the yarde.
- Of them that cannot holde there water.
- ¶ Of inflatyon and swellyng of the Coddes.
- ¶ Of the inflatyon of the yarde.
- Agaynst great desyre to fleshly lust. ¶
- ¶ Agaynst an apostem or hard swellyng in the matrix.
- ¶ To prouoke the floures.
- ¶ To stope the flowers.
- ¶ for the Moder.
- ¶ To helpe conceptyon.
- ¶ Of the swellyng in the Pappes.
- ¶ Agaynst the paynes in chylde byrth.
- The paines after child-birth.
- ¶ for the Gout.
- ¶ Against the chopping or ruptures.
- ¶ Of the Agew called ephimera which endureth but one daye.
- ¶ Of a contynuall Agew.
- ¶ Of the tertian Feuer.
- ¶ Of the quotidian feuer.
- ¶ Of a quartayne feuer,
- For a Carbuncle, and a ve∣nemous bytyng.
- Of the Measels.
- Agaynst a hollow vlcer or Fistula.
- Of the scabbe, pockes, and Leprosie.
- Of Glandules or kernels.
- ¶ Of Wartes.
- Of the brenning with fyre.
- For the wylde fyre or créeping vlcers.
- To drawe out any thing fixed in the body.
- A drinke for them that be hurte and brused. Remedies. Cap. lxix.
- Agaynst drunkennesse. Cap. lxxj.
- Of them that take wéerinesse by Iorneying. Capi. lxxij.
- A good drinke for wounded men. Capi. lxxiij.
- A drinke agaynst the Fistule. Capi. lxxiiij.
- To purge the cholerike humour downward. Capi. lxxv.
- Of melancholie naturall, Capi. lxxvj.
- Of purging burnt coller. Cap. lxxvij.
- Of the Quotidian feuer. Capi. lxxviij.
- To purge flegme in Quo∣tidian Feuers. Capi. ixxix.
- Of a Quotidian Feuer through sweete flegme. Cap. lxxx.
- Of a Quotidian, of sharpe flegme.
- Of purging of choler in tertian Feuers. Capi. lxxxij.
- Of Tertian of yellow choler. Capi. lxxxiij.
- Of a symple or double Iertian. Capi. lxxxiiij.
- Of the Iertian feuer of red choler. Capi. lxxxv.
- Of the Quartayne Feuer that commeth of burnt choler. Cap. lxxxvj.
- Of a Quartayne in haruest.
- Of a Quartayne bred of naturall melancholie. Cap. lxxxviij.
- A potion for a quartaine. Chap. lxxxix.
- ¶ A confection of pilles to purge all corrupt humores. Chap. lxxxx.
- ¶ Of heuynesse or drousinesse of the head. Chap. lxxxxj.
-
The Aphorismes of Hippocrates, redacted
vnto a certaine order, according vnto the membres of a mannesbodie, and the diseases that may fal in any of them.- Of the disposition of the head. Chapter .j.
- Of the Lethargie or forgetfulnes. Chap. ij.
- Of the paynes in the head called Subeth. Cap. iij.
- Of to much watchyng. Cap. iiij.
- Of the Palsey. Chap. v.
- Of the madnesse called Melail∣colie. Chap. vj.
-
¶
Of raging madnesse. Chap. vij. - Of the Falling Euil. Chap. viij.
- Of the diseases of the sinews. Cha. ix.
- Of the drousynesse in the head. Chap x.
- Of the members being set awrye. Chap. xj.
- Of the disposition of the eyes. Chap. xij.
- Of the disposition of the eares. Chap. xiij.
- Of the disposition of the nose. Chap. xiiij.
- Of bléeding at the nose Chap. xxv.
- Of Néesing Chap. xvj.
- Of the disposition of the mouth and toung. Chap. xvij.
- Of the diseases in the téeth. Capi. xviij.
- Of the gréefe in the throte. Cap. xix.
- Of the brest and lightes. Cap. xx.
- Of bloud spitting. Cap. xxi.
- Of the plurisie. Cap. xxij.
- Of the consumption or ptisick. cap. xxiij.
- Of the dispositions of the hert. Ca. xxiiij.
- Of the pappes. Cap. xxv.
- Of the stomake. Cap. xxvj.
- Of the diseases in the liuer. Cap. xxvij.
- Of the gall and splene. Cap. xxxviij.
- Of al kind of flurions. Cap. xxix.
- Of the fundament. Cap. xxx.
- Of the disposition of the raynes. Cap. xxxj.
- Of the diseases in the bladder. Ca. 32.
- Of the members of generation in men. Chap. xxxiij.
- Of the members of generation in women Chap. xxxiiij.
- Of the disposition of the outward mem∣bers. Cap. xxxv.
- Of feuers and Agues. Chap. xxxvj.
- Of the diet to be obserued in Agewes. Chap. xxxvij.
-
Booke conteining the names of the compound A medicines which be good for all kinde of disea∣ses that may chaunce in any member of mans body, in reading of which booke I would the gen∣tle Reader shoulde bee admonished of one thing, which is, that I doe commonly through all thys booke vse the Latin names, and haue not transla∣ted the same to the Englishe tongue, beeing mo∣ned ther vnto, bicause that many of them bee suche that they can not be well Englished, and also that the Apothecaries which haue such medicines to fell do commonly vse the Latin, or rather Arabike and barbarous termes, and not the En∣glish names thereof, vpon which con∣siderations I thought it best to vse the same through all this present booke.
- For all diseases in the head. Capi. j.
- For the payns & diseases in the eares, Ca. 2.
- For all diseases in the eyes. Cap. 3.
- For al diseases in the nose & face. Cap. 4.
- For al diseases in the mouth & throte. Ca. v.
- For the morphew, yellow iaundis, and all other deformities of the skinne. Ca. vj.
- For all diseases in the stomake. Cap. vij.
- For all diseases in or about the heart. Capi. vij.
- For all diseases in the Lyuer. Chap. jx.
- For all diseases in the lungs. Capi. x.
- For all diseases in the splene. Cap. xi.
- For all diseases and paynes in the backe and sides. Cap. xij.
- For all diseases in the belly, guttes and intrayles. Chap. xiij.
- For all paynes in the raynes and bladder. Cap. xiiij.
- For all diseases in the matrix and priuy members. Chap. xv.
- For the hemorhoydes and all diseases of the foundament. Cap. xvi.
- For the goute, the sciatica, & all other vl∣cers & ach in the outward members Ca. 17.
- For wounds and all diseases in the lynewes. Capi. xviij.
- For all agues. Cap xix.
-
For all corruption and diseases in the foure humors, bloud, choler, flegme, and melancholie. Cap. xx.
- A Table conteyning the weightes whiche Phi∣sitians do commonly vse, and the interpreration of the names of the compounde medicines heerem conteyned, with the quantitie and time that they ought to be receyued in.
- All compounde medicines bee eyther receyued within the body, or layde to the same without, and they which be receyued into the body be these.
- Heere followe the compound medicines which be applied to the outwarde partes of the body.
- A Table of comfortatines.
- The colde medicines that comfort the raynes, do also comfort the matrix.
- The Epistle of Diocles vnto king Antigonus, vvhich teacheth a man to preserue himselfe in health.
- The Table of this booke.
- table
- The table of the compound medicines.