Difference between revisions of "Test"

From Theatrum Paracelsicum
Line 1: Line 1:
{{FontStyleEdition}}
Conditur hîc {{MarkupSmallcaps|Philippus|u=v}} Theophrastus,{{Index|Name|Paracelsus}} insignis medicinæ Doctor, qui dira illa vulnera, Lepram, podagram, Hydropisim, aliaq́ue insanabilia corporis contagia, mirifica arte sustulit, ac bona sua in pauperes distribuenda collocanda´que honorauit, Anno 1541. Die 24. {{Pagemark|sig|a5v}} Septembris vitam cum morte mutauit, &c̈.
</div>


{{Citation2|Type=Book
{{Citation2|Type=Book

Revision as of 17:08, 26 December 2022

Conditur hîc Philippvs Theophrastus, insignis medicinæ Doctor, qui dira illa vulnera, Lepram, podagram, Hydropisim, aliaq́ue insanabilia corporis contagia, mirifica arte sustulit, ac bona sua in pauperes distribuenda collocanda´que honorauit, Anno 1541. Die 24. [sig. a5v] Septembris vitam cum morte mutauit, &c̈.


Nummedal, Tara, Anna Zieglerin and the Lion’s Blood: Alchemy and End Times in Reformation Germany Book
Philadelphia: PENN, 2019. – x, 288 pp.
ISBN: 978-0-8122-5089-3




Bachour, Natalia, ‘Die Rezeption der Waffensalbe und des sympathetischen Pulvers im Osmanischen Reich des 17. Jahrhunderts’ Article
[The Reception of Weapon Salve and Sympathetic Powder in the 17th-Century Ottoman Empire.]
in: Mediterranea: International journal for the transfer of knowledge, 4 (2019), p. 107–140
DOI: 10.21071/mijtk.v4i0.11493 (Open Access)