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Letter 2712

Arthur Charlett to Hans Sloane – August 31, 1700


Item info

Date: August 31, 1700
Author: Arthur Charlett
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: f. 57



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 57] Sr If your Servant will be willing to open your Doors to morrow Morning, I intend to be with you as soon as light, and hope in 2 or 3 hours to examine most of the Duplicates, especially if I can borrow another of Dr Hyde’s Bodleian Catalogues. Sal.m. Aug. 31. 1700. Ar. Cht.

Charlett was elected Master of University College at Oxford in 1692 and held that post until his death in 1722. Charlett used the mastership to gain influence, especially through persistent letter-writing to numerous correspondents, sharing the latest literary, political, and scholarly gossip (R. H. Darwall-Smith, Charlett, Arthur (16551722), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/5158, accessed 18 June 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 2439

John Purcell to Hans Sloane – November 28, 1720


Item info

Date: November 28, 1720
Author: John Purcell
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 45-46



Original Page



Transcription

Purcell had intended to write his examination at the College ‘in Sept: last’, but was ‘prevented by unforseen Accidents’. Dr Plumbtree told him that he should write the exam ‘before the new Censors who were soon to be chose’. Purcell studied medicine at the University of Montpellier where he was a student of Pierre Chirac, a correspondent of Sloane’s. He published a ‘A Treatise of the Cholick’ in 1714 and was admitted a member of the Royal College of Physicians, London in 1730 (Norman Moore, Purcell, John (c.16741730), rev. Patrick Wallis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/22895, accessed 17 June 2011]).




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A John Purcell
    Gender:
    Age:
  • Description

    The previous November, while on his way from Bath to London to write an exam, Purcell's 'chariot unfortunately' overturned and 'the Glass cut the inside of [his] left Rist to the very bone'. His hand became swollen 'and [had] been laid upon in 6 or 7 places'. He now experiences anxiety whenever he rides in his chariot.

  • Diagnosis

    Anxiety.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:
    Ongoing Treatment:
    Response:
  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Injuries (includes wounds, sores, bruises), Inflammations, Anxiety, Mental Illness

Letter 3452

George Louis Teissier to Hans Sloane – May 4, 1728


Item info

Date: May 4, 1728
Author: George Louis Teissier
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4049
Folio: ff. 158-159



Original Page



Transcription

Teissier was pleased to receive Sloane’s letter and apologizes for not writing sooner. He suggests that it must have pleased Sloane to have members of the Royal Family view his cabinet of curiosities. George Louis Teissier (d. 1742) was a German-born physician. He was physician to George I and George II as well as Westminster Hospital from 1728 to 1733. He also worked at St George’s Hospital and to Chelsea Hospital. Teissier was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1725 (https://collections.royalsociety.org/DServe.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=%28Surname%3D%27teissier%27%29).




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A Princess Amelia of Great Britain
    Gender:
    Age:
  • Description

    Princess Amelia sends her thanks. She is in a much better state of health. She is taking the waters every morning and 'her throat was open for ye first time at night and that she eat some small matter for her supper'. The weather is not having a great affect on her.

  • Diagnosis

    Throat.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    Taking the waters at Bath.


    Ongoing Treatment:

    Taking the waters at Bath.


    Response:

    The waters allow her to open her throat.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Throat

Making Sense of Hans Sloane’s Collections

When Sir Hans Sloane died in 1753, the British nation purchased his collection and established the British Museum. Over the next two centuries, the collection was dispersed as new institutions were formed. The Natural History Museum, which opened in 1881, acquired Sloane’s plant and animal collections. The British Library, established in 1973, laid claim to the manuscripts and printed books. If this sounds orderly, it wasn’t!

Box from the Herbarium at the Natural History Museum, with labels. Image copyright: Victoria Pickering, 2013.

Box from the Herbarium at the Natural History Museum, with labels. Image copyright: Victoria Pickering, 2013.

Just to give a hint of the complexity, it’s worth noting that bits of Sloane’s correspondence appear on the backs of natural history drawings that are held in the British Museum and some of his reading notes appear in printed catalogues at the Natural History Museum.

Considering the scope of Sloane’s collections, it is surprising that relatively little scholarly work has been done on them. But the three institutions are trying to bring Sloane’s collections back together virtually in a fascinating project, Reconstructing Sloane. The first step was The Sloane Printed Books Project, a catalogue that allows researchers to get a sense of what Sloane’s original library looked like and how it changed over time. The second step is a grant that has allowed the institutions to partner with Queen Mary University of London and King’s College London to fund three collaborative doctoral awards. Alice Marples, Felicity Roberts and Victoria Pickering have all taken on the challenge of reconstructing parts of Sloane’s vast collections. To my delight, they will be occasionally sharing the fruits of their research on The Sloane Letters Blog.

Alice (KCL ), who has a background in Enlightenment coffee-houses, is researching Sloane’s correspondence and manuscripts at the British Library. In particular, she is looking at Sloane’s network of colleagues, commercial traders and contributors to understand Sloane’s public persona. Through his correspondence, he was able to construct a space for material exchange, scientific endeavour and social interaction.

Felicity (KCL) has degrees in English and eighteenth-century studies. She is looking at Sloane’s natural history drawings, primarily held at the British Museum, to discover how Sloane interpreted and visualized the natural world. Her study is situated within London’s wider philosophical and literary culture, which disucssed concepts of nature, natural order, truth, beauty and authenticity.

Herbarium drawer filled with boxes of vegetable substances, Natural History Museum. Image copyright: Victoria Pickering, 2013.

Herbarium drawer filled with boxes of vegetable substances, Natural History Museum. Image copyright: Victoria Pickering, 2013.

Victoria (QMUL) previously studied the early modern transatlantic slave trade. Her project, “Putting Nature in a Box” examines Sloane’s collection of 12000 small boxes of vegetable substances, which included seeds, bark and curios. Using Sloane’s hand-written, three volume catalogue, she is tracing who sent what items, the origins of the substances, and Sloane’s intended uses for the objects.

What is, perhaps, most exciting about these projects is that they are not undertaken in isolation. The students and their supervisors at all six institutions (and occasionally, me!) have regular seminars. Along the way, seminars have included discussions about readings, visits to the collections or guest speakers. The interdisciplinary collaboration is providing us with an appreciation of the sheer size of Sloane’s collections and how each part fits together.  The students’ individual projects are enhanced by a wider understanding of curation, cataloguing and collecting: how Sloane’s collection has been constructed, deconstructed and reconstructed over time. With a collection so large and dispersed, collaboration is also the only way scholars will ever make sense of Sloane’s complete collections.

There are other advantages, too. “Working collaboratively”, writes Victoria, “provides a wonderful support network” and is “an interesting and exciting opportunity”—and besides, there is “nothing quite like being able to talk to another PhD student about your work and for them to know exactly what you’re talking about.” It is also, perhaps, the best way of studying a man who was a super-mediator in his own life, and one who valued the sharing of knowledge. As Alice puts it, this “collective engagement with knowledge production and diffusion is something that Sloane himself would no doubt appreciate!” 

No doubt.

new-search

Categories:
 
 
 
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Checking Tongues in the Eighteenth Century

A bored physician looks at the tongue of an old lady; suggesting the waste of physician's time by hypochondriacs. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

A bored physician looks at the tongue of an old lady; suggesting the waste of physician’s time by hypochondriacs. Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Miley Cyrus must, by now, have the most photographed tongue in history. My friend Jennifer Marotta recently  sent me this link about the diseases that Miley might pick up or spread by licking sledgehammers, mirrors and so forth. Although Jennifer had asked whether there were any nasty early modern equivalents, I became mesmerized by the sight of Miley’s tongue… and the secrets that it might reveal. Checking the tongue was a crucial part of diagnosis in early modern medicine.  

One of Hans Sloane’s correspondents, Giorgio Baglivi, was an Italian physician known for his work on medical practice. Baglivi, like Sloane, believed in the importance of bedside observation. In The Practice of Physick (1704), Baglivi outlined what a full medical examination should entail: “the Sick Persons Excrements and Urine, his Tongue and his Eyes, his Pulse and his Face, the Affections of his Mind, his former way of living, and the errors he has been guilty of in the way of Conduct” (30).

Physicians, of course, had no way to see or hear inside the human body. Examining the tongue was perhaps the best tool available, as it would provide

“a more certain and naked view of that state of the Blood than any other Sign”.

This included the taste, colour, “and other qualities of the Tongue” (157). In their letters to Sloane, several patients mentioned the state of their tongues.

Tongues were variously described as moist, clammy, or dry. Mrs Conyers, who had stomach pain, wheezing and shivering, apparently had a moist tongue and hands. In 1710, William Derham wrote that his wife had a “moist, & not very white” tongue, but by the following morning the tongue had become drier. Thomas Isted, according to his doctor, suffered from a clammy tongue, as well as sweating and sizy (viscous) blood.

Taste was also an important detail. Mr Campbell, who “had indulged his palate and rarely exercised as his business was very sedentary”, suffered from a foul and dry tongue. This was in addition to terrible urine (“thick and muddy”, “foul and turbid, gray, ropy and tough”) and a “muddy complexion”. The foulness had spread throughout his body.

The colour of tongues was most often described as black or white. In 1720, Dr Allen had several chest and stomach problems that were on the mend, but he also had a “slow fever, a brown but afterwards black Tongue” and low spirits. A “young gentleman” in 1725 had a violent peripneumonick fever accompanied with a “dry black tongue”; his strength was failing so rapidly that the physician did not want to try bleeding the patient. Sir William Thomson, in 1739, had a dry throat and “soon after the edge of the tip of his tongue grew hairy, white and almost transparent”. The physician believed “that an aphthous [blister] crust would creep down the throat and probably pass as a thorough thrush to the anus”. Unpleasant.

These details revealed the body’s interior. As Baglivi noted,

“if the Tongue is moist, so is the Constitution of the Blood; if dry, than the Blood is of a dry inflammatory Nature”.

An acidic taste, for example, revealed an acidic blood, or a salty taste meant salty blood (296). A canny physician could also make a prognosis, based on the evidence. For a patient delirious with an acute fever and a parched tongue (signs of inflamed viscera), the physician should avoid applying blisters, otherwise the patient would likely be “seiz’d with Convulsions before they die” (424). In malignant fevers, “a foul Tongue and trembling Hands are always dangerous in acute Diseases” (165). Black tongues were a bad sign. When a patient had an acute disorder, “a black Tongue is almost always followed by a Delirium” (88). Worst of all, though was a cold tongue: “Death follows soon after” (174).

Although displaying the body is part of the act for many female pop stars, the visibility of Miley’s tongue allows us to see inside her body in a surprisingly intimate way. The good news is, she is at present no danger of a mortal distemper.

The bad news is, her tongue does appear a little white. (Others have provided modern diagnoses here and here.) Baglivi did not mention white tongues specifically, but white-coated blood suggested inflammation of the internal organs. In any case, I sincerely hope that Miley doesn’t develop Sir William Thomson’s creeping thrush.

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Letter 3966

M. Ferrers to Hinde – Paris Decemr ye 2d: 1732 N:S


Item info

Date: Paris Decemr ye 2d: 1732 N:S
Author: M. Ferrers
Recipient: Hinde

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: MS 4066
Folio: f. 99-100



Original Page



Transcription

Paris Decemr ye 2d: 1732 N:S I should be quite asham’d to have been so long a time without writing to Dear Mr Hinde had not ye perpetuate dessluxion upon my eyes render’d it so wheasy to me that I now never thought attempt il but when forced by Business of necessity, I am att a loss how to account for this disorder to which I never in my life had ye least disposition, it came all att once upon me & notwithstanding all I have done it still subsists, & tho: I have sometimes been better yet I cannot say my Eyes have ever been quite well since they were first attached I am so little acquant’d with this disorder that I really am nor a judge of what is proper to be done in it but as I have allways heard that Sr. Hans Sloane was particularly famous in all cases of ye Eyes it would be doing me a great pleasure if you would be so good as to give him a fee & consult him upon this Head, the symptoms are that my Eyes are subject to be Blood shot that ye lids without being swell’d are wheasy & full of small veins which never appear’d in their natural situation, & when I wake in the morning seem to stick to ye balls of my Eyes & when I open them they feel as if they were turn as under from whence proceeds a sharp water which makes them seem raw with in, I do not perceive them Hotter than usual & ye sight less weak’d then one could Imagine in so long a time for it is now nine months that this disorder hath subsisted & is ye first time in my life that I ever had any thing of the kind I early discern that ye first cold greatly increases it & in that case my Eyes run a sharp water that makes them smart as if they had been cut with a razor they are not generally attend’d with any Itching & when they have run most I have allways observ’d that ye Humour never produced any Blisters where it fell which makes me all most sure that ye Humour is not ye same of that which hath so long perscented me find it rather that of a dessluxion because it falls alternatively on my teeth & that ye eyes are not both att a time equally affected, but sometimes one & sometimes ye other even in ye same day are differently distress’d I have been twice blister’d att ye beginning once between my shoulders without bennifit & once since upon ye back of my head, which I shall never venture to repeat for tho it lag on but 36 hours which was 12 less then when I apply’d it for my teeth in England yet it had a very diffirent effect which was that for ten days after I could hardly see any thing below me so that I am afraid of Blisters except I could be secure that those behind ye ears would not produce the same effect In a word I never found any thing relieve me but bleeding which I was once forced to try when ye pain & inflamation was very violent & attend’d with great shooting pains I never found that any thing cooling reliev’d me as rose & [planias?] water with powder of lusty & Caliminaris on ye contrary I thought it rather Increas’d ye complaint since which time I have made use of warm water with a few drops of Honey water in it to wash them & have often used ye Honey water alone to anoint ye Eyelids without finding any inconvenience from it & have thought it hath rather lessen’d a fullness in the vessells that adhere to ye nose which I have observ’d to have subsisted from ye beginning of ye [compl.ins] which together with another observation of my Eyes being always better towards night except that ye candles seems full of rages it all ye symptoms that I am able to describe & would beg Sr Hans Sloanes oppinion & diveetion of what I ought to do in this case being quite Ignorant of what is proper my self, I ought to make an excuse for having been so tedious in this relation but as it is too esential a point to be neglected I hope you will be so good as to forgive it as for ye rest of my complaints they are better or worse in proportion to ye weather which is att present very cold & consequently makes me suffer every way, I am also grown subject to [Chollaiss?] Heart burning & many disorders of ye stomach but notwithstanding am grown fatter & look better then in many years past, I should be glad to hear that yr state of Health was more favourable as also that Mr Hindes complains [text cut out] abated – I am glad yr young [Geat?] [text cut out] mises so much Health & strength & gives so much entertainment to ye whole Family, I cannot say that I ever could give into ye amusement of being able to divert my self with little Children but I have often envy’d those that found pleasure in them & therefore give Mrs Hinde Joy upon that occassion I beg my compliments to her & both Mr Hindes & am Dear Madam with perfect truth & esteem Yr very Humble Sert: M-Ferrens




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A M. Ferrers
    Gender:
    Age:unknown
  • Description

    “The symptoms are that my Eyes are subject to be Blood shot that ye lids without being swell’d are full of small veins… & when I wake in the morning seem to stick to ye balls of my Eyes & when I open them they feel as if they were turn as under from whence proceeds a sharp water which makes them seem raw… with in ye sight less weak’d then one could Imagine in so long a time for it is now nine months that this disorder hath subsisted… Eyes run a sharp water that makes them smart as if they had been cut with a razor they are not generally attend’d with any Itching… my teeth and ye eyes are not both att a time equally affected, but sometimes one & sometimes the other even in ye same day are differently distress’d. I have been twice blister’d att ye beginning once between my shoulders without bennifit & once since upon ye back of my head… those behind ye ears would not produce the same effect… ye pain & inflamation was very violent... & attend’d with great shooting pains. I am also grown subject to [Chollaiss?] Heart burning & many disorders of ye stomach”

  • Diagnosis
  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    Patient “never found that any thing cooling reliev’d [her] as rose & [planias?] water with powder of lusty & Caliminaris on ye contrary [she] thought it rather Increas’d ye complaint”


    Ongoing Treatment:

    Patient has “made use of warm water with a few drops of Honey water in it to wash them & have often used ye Honey water alone to anoint ye Eyelids without finding any inconvenience from it & have thought it hath rather lessen’d a fullness in the vessells [she has] made use of warm water with a few drops of Honey water in it to wash them [eyes] & have often used ye Honey water alone to anoint ye Eyelids”


    Response:
  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Pain, Stomach, Heartburn, Eyes, Inflammations

Letter 2671

W. Parker to Hans Sloane – December 29, 1725


Item info

Date: December 29, 1725
Author: W. Parker
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4076
Folio: f. 223



Original Page



Transcription

(f. 223) Cranbrook in Kent Decr ye 29th 1725 Sr A young gentleman, who has been my patient for some time, being desirous of better advice, I thought he could apply himself no where better than to yours. The case has appear’d to me to be as follows. The Gentleman is about 21 years of age. I was first sent for to him in June last, he then complain’d of a dry, husky cough, spitting little or nothing, had a very quick pulse, night sweats though not to any great degree, more feverish a night than a days, some difficulty in breathing, wasting in flesh, appetite as likewise, digestion pretty tollerable, neither stools nor urine much alter’d from a healthy person. I order’d him an Electuary (after a gentle purge) of conserv. Ros. rub. fruct. cynosbat. pulv. Haly & coral.rub. drinking after it a draught of a decoction of sarsa, china, ering. condit. some times with equal parts of warm milk from ye cow, some times alone; as also a linctus for his cough of oyl and pectoral syrup, some times oyl & Diacodium as his cough afflicted him more or less. He found some relief by this but not so much as expected. I then order’d him Dr. Morton’s balsamic pills taking after ym a draught of the decoction of ye cortex in which was boil’d some Balsam of tolu; as also some balsamic lozenges for his cough. These had so good effect as to recover him again to a pretty good state of health, his night sweats went off, as did his fever and quickness of pulse, a little of his cough remain’d but not very troublesome, his appetite & digestion became good, and he rested as well as usual a nights. (f. 223v) In October last I was call’d to him again, I found him in a violent peripneumonick fever, from a cold lately taken as we could judge; his pulse very quick & high, great difficulty of breathing, dry black tongue, a vexatious cough but expectorated very little during ye violence of ye fever or after a very restless nights with sweats now & then toward morning. I order’d him to be let blood immediately, his blood was very sizy, I would have repeated bleeding, but his strength fail’d so fast yt I thought it dangerous to attempt. I order’d him boluses of pulv. e. chel. comp & sperm. ceti. with pectoral decoctions, oyly linctuses, blisters and ye like, ’till I gott ye violence of ye Fever pretty well abated; after that I put him upon drinking Asses milk with testaceous powders & order’d him also a Decoction of ye cortex as before to be taken at stated times between his milk, all wch he continues still to take but not with much success. His quick pulse with hectic heats still remains, as does his dry vexatious cough and some difficulty of breathing, the asses milk seems to agree with his stomach very well, but he getts flesh or strength but very slowly. He sweats a little sometimes towards morning, but sleeps pretty well unless disturb’d by his cough. His stools are & have been very regular. His appetite not very good but what he eats, he seems to digest well enough. I fear these may be Tubercles breeding in his Lungs. This Sr is all yt occurs to me at present of ye case, as having but a very short time allow’d one to write in. However I am particularly glad to have any opportunity of returning you any hearty thanks for ye favour I received from you, when you were pleas’d to give me your advice and recommendation to follow my studies under ye learned Dr Boerhaave at Leyden, which will allways be gratefully remember’d by Sr Yr most oblig’d humble servant W Parker




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A Young Gentleman
    Gender:
    Age:About 21 years of age
  • Description

    Patient initially complained of "a dry, husky cough", lack of saliva, a quick pulse, sweating (more profuse at night than in the day), some difficulty in breathing, wasting of the flesh and appetite diminished. Digestion was tolerable and his stools and urine were healthy.

  • Diagnosis

    fol. 224, Sloane's scribbled prescription: "pulv. cort. linct. lac Ammonia. oxymel. serllit.[?] fontanell. super scapul."

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    Patient was proscribed an electuary, taken after a "gentle purge", and a decoction, lintus for his cough as well as a pectoral syrup. A diacodium was also prescribed as were Dr Morton's balsamic pills, to be taken after a decoction, and balsamic lozenges for his cough.


    Ongoing Treatment:

    A second course of treatment, after the patient suffered a relapse in his condition, was that he be blooded - though his physical condition made this only possible once - and given boulses, pectoral decoc, oyly linctuses and blisters. He was also given asses milk to drink.


    Response:

    The patient responded well to the initial course of treatment given in June and seemed to recover his health. A relapse in October saw the same symptoms return with similar intensity. A new course of treatment was provided but not with the success of the previous regimen.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Fevers, Coughs, Wasting

The Sir Hans Sloane Birthday Collection: Giants’ Shoulders #70

Sir Hans Sloane, collector and physician, was born on 16 April 1660. To celebrate his 354th birthday, I’m hosting the history of science carnival: Giants’ Shoulders #70. Sloane collected stuff of all kinds, from curiosities (natural and man-made) and botanical samples to manuscripts. He was very thorough… So what does one give the man who had (nearly) everything for his birthday? The gift of knowledge! Hosting Giants’ Shoulders follows–in a small way—in the footsteps of Sloane, who edited the Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society for two decades.

Newspaper recipes pasted into a manuscript recipe book. Wellcome, WMS 7366, p. 78. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Newspaper recipes pasted into a manuscript recipe book.
Wellcome, WMS 7366, p. 78. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

Being a physician was central to Sloane’s identity, so it’s fitting to start off with a round-up of history of medicine links. I must, of course, include a painful seventeenth-century medical case: that of “Samuel’s Stone-induced suffering”. Sloane, like many other eighteenth-century physicians, was no stranger to proprietary remedies; he even had his own special eye remedy. This month, we have “Proprietary Panaceas and Not-So-Secret Recipes”, “Newspaper Remedies and Commercial Medicine in Eighteenth-Century Recipe Books” and “The Business of Medicine”. Sloane was particularly interested in finding useful remedies and would, no doubt, have approved of our modern interest in reviving old treatments or exploring non-Western ones (“Under the Influence”). He was equally intrigued by indigenous knowledge (as was “A Pirate Surgeon in Panama) and older popular treatments (as was Thomas Scattergood in the early nineteenth century, here and here).

As President of the Royal College of Physicians from 1719, Sloane also would have been familiar with medical disputes and prosecutions against irregular practitioners, such as “Master Docturdo and Fartado: Libellous Doctors in Early Modern Britain”. A post on “The Return of Nicholas Culpeper” finds the traces of Culpeper’s career around London. I’ve often wondered whether Sloane would simply have seen Culpeper as an irregular practitioner, or appreciated what they had in common–botanical interests and willingness to treat the poor.

Photograph of a telescope that belonged to Caroline Herschel. Image Credit: Geni, 2008, Wikimedia Commons.

Photograph of a telescope that belonged to Caroline Herschel. Image Credit: Geni, 2008, Wikimedia Commons.

A driving factor in Sloane’s career was his insatiable curiosity. A teacher tells us why the history of science “is essential to engage students”, while “Hydra meets Handel” shows children participating in early modern science by gathering “duck pond detritus”. Sloane also encouraged curiosity in others, including women; for only two examples, he exchanged letters and botanical samples with the Duchess of Beaufort and Cassandra Willughby. There were lots of early modern women who practiced science—and this month, there were posts on Margaret Cavendish, Emilie du Chatelet and Caroline Herschel. Women could also be important patrons of science, such as Angela Burdett-Coutts. (Sloane certainly benefited from the patronage of women early in his medical career, particularly that of the Duchess of Albemarle.)

In his botanical research, Sloane catalogued and classified his specimens. Language was increasingly important in describing experiments and specimens, and was being developed and refined out of necessity. Robert Hooke, for example, coined sixty-eight words including (my favourites) “splatch” and “punk”. Over at Evolving Thoughts, a series on speciation outlines the origins of “speciation”, Linneaus’ contribution and late eighteenth-century developments. There are lots of posts this month about curiosities that might have appealed to Sloane, which I’ve divided into man-made and beautiful objects. Under man-made (and sometimes horrifying) objects, we have Holler’s copper plate, Dead Men’s Teeth (a.k.a. dentures), a Time-Traveling, Vote-Gathering Miraculous Acousticon, Brunel’s Atmospheric Railway and the plutonium box. Under beautiful objects, we have the Salagrama Stones, the Vessels of Hermes, a triangular book about alchemy, Nathaniel Wallich’s specimens, and a colourful atlas.

T. Rowlandson, 1787. A fashionable dentist's practice: healthy teeth are being extracted from poor children to create dentures for the wealthy. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

T. Rowlandson, 1787. A fashionable dentist’s practice: healthy teeth are being extracted from poor children to create dentures for the wealthy. Image Credit: Wellcome Library, London.

One of the reasons that Sloane was so well-known for his botanical expertise is that he had actually travelled to Jamaica early in his career, gathered local knowledge and tried out local remedies. On behalf of the Royal Society, he also requested that some explorers bring back specific items or look into particular issues. In 1700, Edmond Halley returned to St. Helena and reported on the area. Halley’s travel descriptions weren’t intended for the Royal Society, but his travels would certainly have been of interest. Explorers have also been the mappers of new and old areas. There is a series of posts on “A Concise History of Geological Maps”, which highlights the many uses of mapping beyond the geographical (2, 3 and 4). The newest areas are sometimes very far away, such as Martian canals or the centre of the Earth. Getting to some places might have been impossible in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, though astronomical photography might help to span the distance. But in the end, the question remains: we can take humans out of their usual lands, but can we take the terrestriality out of the humans?

Experimentation, itself a way of exploring the universe, became increasingly important from the early eighteenth century. This month, I read about Isaac Newton’s experiments as instances of special power, the most famous failed science experiment, the lack of religious barriers to the practice of early modern science, experimental self-asphyxiation and experimental embryology in China. The secrets of the universe, however, are often invisible to the naked eye—perhaps more so than early eighteenth-century people even would have guessed. What about trying to study “the unfashionable ether”, magnetism and light rays, quantum physics… or medieval multiverses and modern cosmic conundrums? And that’s before we even get to time! Sloane would have been familiar with the attempts to measure time and longitude, but less so the pervasiveness of modern standardised time, the ancient methods of measuring the movements of the sun or a twentieth-century physicist’s obsession with time and existence.

Sloane would have been no stranger to scientific disputes (especially since he sometimes played mediator). Recently, there has been much lively discussion among historians of scientists about the T.V. series Cosmos. By and large, historians of science have been highly critical of the choices made: the focus on Giordano Bruno, the inaccuracies in the story of Bruno, frustrating omissions and outright misrepresentations. Other historians were a bit more sympathetic, with suggestions that historians of science need to tell more compelling stories and that we need to provide better alternatives to the Cosmos style of history.

Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Hunters in the Snow (Winter), 1565. Source: Wikimedia Commons, from Kunsthistoriches Museum.

Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Hunters in the Snow (Winter), 1565. Source: Wikimedia Commons, from Kunsthistoriches Museum.

To end the Sloane birthday edition, I offer some book reviews. Sloane, of course, was constantly adding to his library, as do most historians. You might be interested in acquiring Everyday Renaissance Astrology, The Book of Trees, Ice Time (especially for those of us suffering from this never-ending winter in North America), or Books and Readers at the Dawn of the Victorian Age.

Happy reading! See you next month over at The Renaissance Mathematicus, where Thony Christie will be hosting Giants’ Shoulders #71. His contact details are here, if you want to start sending in nominations for May.