Of Medicine in Eight Books

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PREFACE.

CONTENTS.

BOOK I. PREFACE.

BOOK II. PREFACE.

BOOK III. CHAP. I. GENERAL DIVISION OF DISTEMPERS.

BOOK IV. CHAP. I. OF THE INTERNAL PARTS OF THE HUMAN BODY.

BOOK V. PREFACE.

BOOK VI. CHAP. I.

BOOK VII. PREFACE.

BOOK VIII. CHAP. I. OF THE SITUATION AND FIGURE OF THE BONES OF THE HUMAN BODY.

NOTES TO BOOK I.

NOTES TO BOOK II.

NOTES TO BOOK III.

NOTES TO BOOK IV.

NOTES TO BOOK V.

NOTES TO BOOK VI.

NOTES TO BOOK VII.

NOTES TO BOOK VIII.

Transcriber’s notes:

This e-book has an unusual structure, being a compilation of eight smaller books accompanied by eight related sets of numbered explanatory notes provided by the author. It also contains several hundred footnotes scattered throughout the text (many being Greek spellings of words in the text). These have been given alphabetic labels and are now grouped together as endnotes. All notes have been hyperlinked to facilitate access. Hyperlinks have also been added to index items and to the table of contents.

Numerous asterisks are present in parts of the text; these represent uncertain quantities, not footnotes, as explained in notes on p. xxxii. The text also contains archaic characters that may not display correctly with all viewing devices or fonts. For best viewing, the device’s character encoding should be set to Unicode (UTF-8), and one of the following fonts selected: Arial Unicode MS, DejaVu, Segoe UI Symbol or FreeSerif.

The text has been preserved as in the original, including inconsistent punctu­ation, capitalis­ation and hyphen­ation. Archaic and inconsistent spellings have been retained except where obviously misspelled in the original. A list of these and other corrections has been appended at the end.

The cover image of the book was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.

A. CORN. CELSUS OF MEDICINE IN EIGHT BOOKS.

TRANSLATED
WITH NOTES CRITICAL AND EXPLANATORY
BY
JAMES GREIVE, M.D.
A NEW EDITION.

EDINBURGH:
Printed at the University Press;
FOR DICKINSON AND COMPANY, INFIRMARY-STREET.

1814.

TO

MR SHARP,

SURGEON TO GUY’S HOSPITAL,

FELLOW OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY,

AND

MEMBER OF THE ROYAL ACADEMY OF SURGERY
AT PARIS.

SIR,

The favourable opinion you have been pleased to express of the following translation, and the trouble you have taken to revise the chirurgical part, are obligations, which I embrace this opportunity of acknowledging with the highest pleasure.

And though I had not received such marks of your friendship, yet there is no person, to whom a translation of Celsus can be more properly addressed; since no writer in this age appears to have a more just esteem for this excellent author, or to have imitated his conciseness and elegance, with so much success.

I am,

 with great esteem,

  Sir,

your most obedient,

 humble servant,

    James Greive.

London,
January 26th, 1756.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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