A History of Magic and Experimental Science, Volume 1 (of 2) by Lynn Thorndike
31. ANGLO-SAXON, SALERNITAN AND OTHER LATIN MEDICINE
10 words | Chapter 15
IN MANUSCRIPTS FROM THE NINTH TO THE TWELFTH CENTURY 719
Chapters
1. Chapter 1
2. BOOK I. THE ROMAN EMPIRE
3. 2. PLINY’S NATURAL HISTORY 41
4. 4. GALEN 117
5. 5. ANCIENT APPLIED SCIENCE AND MAGIC: VITRUVIUS,
6. 9. LITERARY AND PHILOSOPHICAL ATTACKS UPON SUPERSTITION:
7. 10. SPURIOUS MYSTIC WRITINGS OF HERMES, ORPHEUS, AND
8. 11. NEO-PLATONISM AND ITS RELATIONS TO ASTROLOGY AND
9. BOOK II. EARLY CHRISTIAN THOUGHT
10. 21. CHRISTIANITY AND NATURAL SCIENCE: BASIL, EPIPHANIUS,
11. 23. THE FUSION OF PAGAN AND CHRISTIAN THOUGHT IN
12. 24. THE STORY OF NECTANEBUS, OR THE ALEXANDER LEGEND
13. 27. OTHER EARLY MEDIEVAL LEARNING: BOETHIUS, ISIDORE,
14. 29. LATIN ASTROLOGY AND DIVINATION, ESPECIALLY IN THE
15. 31. ANGLO-SAXON, SALERNITAN AND OTHER LATIN MEDICINE
16. 33. TREATISES ON THE ARTS BEFORE THE INTRODUCTION OF
17. 34. MARBOD 775
18. 35. THE EARLY SCHOLASTICS: PETER ABELARD AND HUGH
19. 38. SOME TWELFTH CENTURY TRANSLATORS, CHIEFLY OF
20. BOOK V. THE THIRTEENTH CENTURY
21. 57. EARLY THIRTEENTH CENTURY MEDICINE: GILBERT OF
22. 59. ALBERTUS MAGNUS 517
23. 61. ROGER BACON 616
24. 72. CONCLUSION 969
25. Introduction à l’étude de la chimie des anciens et du moyen âge, 1889.
26. 1911. Popular.
27. INTRODUCTION
28. BOOK I. THE ROMAN EMPIRE
29. Chapter 2. Pliny’s Natural History.
30. BOOK I. THE ROMAN EMPIRE
31. CHAPTER II
32. CHAPTER III
33. CHAPTER IV
34. CHAPTER V
35. CHAPTER VI
36. CHAPTER VII
37. CHAPTER VIII
38. CHAPTER IX
39. CHAPTER X
40. introduction, which may be regarded as a piquant appetizer to whet the
41. CHAPTER XI
42. CHAPTER XII
43. BOOK II. EARLY CHRISTIAN THOUGHT
44. Chapter 13. The Book of Enoch.
45. BOOK II. EARLY CHRISTIAN THOUGHT
46. CHAPTER XIII
47. CHAPTER XIV
48. CHAPTER XV
49. CHAPTER XVI
50. CHAPTER XVII
51. CHAPTER XVIII
52. CHAPTER XIX
53. CHAPTER XX
54. CHAPTER XXI
55. 329. When or where the nine homilies which compose his _Hexaemeron_
56. CHAPTER XXII
57. CHAPTER XXIII
58. Chapter 24. The Story of Nectanebus.
59. CHAPTER XXIV
60. prologue which is found only in the oldest extant manuscript, a Bamberg
61. CHAPTER XXV
62. CHAPTER XXVI
63. CHAPTER XXVII
64. CHAPTER XXVIII
65. CHAPTER XXIX
66. CHAPTER XXX
67. introduction?
68. introduction, it would be a more valuable bit of evidence as to his
69. CHAPTER XXXI
70. introduction of Arabic medicine to the western world.
71. CHAPTER XXXII
72. introduction of translations from the Arabic is comparatively free from
73. CHAPTER XXXIII
74. CHAPTER XXXIV
75. introduction of Arabic alchemy, 773;
76. 106. M. A. Ruffer, _Palaeopathology of Egypt_, 1921.
77. 8. Daimon and Hero, with Excursus on Ritual Forms preserved in Greek
78. 1921. See also Thompson (1913), p. 14.
79. 99. “Phyteuma quale sit describere supervacuum habeo cum sit usus eius
80. 4838. Arsenal 981, in an Italian hand, is presumably incorrectly dated
81. 1507. See Justin Winsor, _A Bibliography of Ptolemy’s Geography_, 1884,
82. 1895. Since then I believe that the only work of Galen to be translated
83. 66. Also II, 216; XIX, 19 and 41.
84. 330. Pliny, too (XXI, 88), states that trefoil is poisonous itself and
85. 1867. In English we have _The Pneumatics of Hero of Alexandria_,
86. 1890. I have found that Riess, while including some of the passages
87. 53. See below, II, 220-21.
88. 1860. Greek text in PG, vol. XVI, part 3; English translation in AN,
89. 3836. Other MSS are: BN 11624, 11th century; BN 12135, 9th century; BN
90. 1888. Schanz (1905) 138, mentions only continental MSS, although there
91. introduction by A. von Premerstein, C. Wessely, and J. Mantuani
92. 177. This is not, however, to be regarded as the invention of lead
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