Search Results for: AZ-700-German Probesfragen 🎵 AZ-700-German Online Praxisprüfung 😍 AZ-700-German Tests 🆘 Suchen Sie einfach auf ▷ www.itzert.com ◁ nach kostenloser Download von [ AZ-700-German ] 😏AZ-700-German Ausbildungsressourcen

Letter 2890

Charles du Bois to Hans Sloane – June 25, 1725


Item info

Date: June 25, 1725
Author: Charles du Bois
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4048
Folio: f. 8



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 8] Sr My thanks being paid only verbally for your Noble present, I take this occasion of returning your Paper, & also of repeating my acknowledgement for you curious & instructing Book, & for the humanity you have always shew’d me, & particularly in your last kind allowing an old Acquaintance to take up some of your valuable time to see the great accessions to your ample Collection I shall with great pleasure attend your, when your more significant affaires will allow you to give me notice when my Attendance on you will be least inconvenient. I am Yor Obliged humb servt Charles du Bois June 25, 1725.

Charles du Bois was a botanist working as the cashier-general of the East India Company. He became acquainted with other natural historians like James Petiver, William Sherard and Sloane, and was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1700 (B. D. Jackson, Dubois, Charles (bap. 1658, d. 1740), rev. P. E. Kell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/8113, accessed 8 July 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 0669

John Ray to Hans Sloane – February 19, 1700/01


Item info

Date: February 19, 1700/01
Author: John Ray
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 135-136



Original Page



Transcription

Ray asks Sloane to thank Preston for him. He informs Sloane that he has completed his Methods, but believes that no bookseller will be interested. Dr Robinson’s letter informed Ray that recent losses have made booksellers wary. Ray was a theologian and naturalist who collected and catalogued his botanical findings in the much lauded Historia plantarum (1686, 1688) (Scott Mandelbrote, Ray , John (16271705), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2005 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/23203, accessed 18 June 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 0782

Charles du Bois to Hans Sloane – December 2, 1703


Item info

Date: December 2, 1703
Author: Charles du Bois
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4039
Folio: f. 221



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 221] Sr I am obliged to Dr Bulkley at Fort St George & to be even with him intend to send him a Few books in his own way, You are so great a Master, that if you will do me the Favour to send me a List to ye Value of 4 or 5 – of such medicinal or Chirurgical books as are new & well done, it will keep up in him ye Spirit of improving Natural history, which has been so far advanced by you, that I’m sure you can’t help promoting it all laudible ways, a Line by ye peny post will find me if directed to ye Lamp in Fenchurch street, I am Sr Yor Obliged humb sert Chales du Bois Decr 2 1703

Charles du Bois was a botanist working as the cashier-general of the East India Company. He became acquainted with other natural historians like James Petiver, William Sherard and Sloane, and was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1700 (B. D. Jackson, Dubois, Charles (bap. 1658, d. 1740), rev. P. E. Kell, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/8113, accessed 8 July 2013]).




Patient Details

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.

Letter 3523

Richard Richardson to Hans Sloane – November 19, 1728


Item info

Date: November 19, 1728
Author: Richard Richardson
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 6-7



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 6] Hon d Sr I am now at preston where I designe to take up my winter Quarters & to returne into (La)keshire about the beginning of march I hope in that time to pick up something in Nat: Hist that may be acceptable to yu. I am very much obliged to yu for the valuable present of plants which I received fro Mr Miller for my garden some of the tender ones came so late that I fear I shall loose them the rest I left in good health, I thinke in good hands along with the plants I also received the favour of the two Bookes I am glad to find Dr Ruysch in such good health that he is still able to go on with his Anatomical observations. The Treates de Belammite I was very well pleased with & in it with the account of all the Bookes of fossils which have for some time by put been printed in Germany some of which I have not yet seen. Mr Millers List of plants for the physick garden came to me so late that I could not find them all though I had them in the garden, but have noted down such as I could not find which I promised to send him in the spring & if there is any thing omitted in his list which I can procure him I shall be very glad to serve him & if it lys in my power to do any thing that is obliging to you, you may be assured of the best endeavours of your obled: servant Ric: Richardson preston nov: 14 1728

Richardson was a physician and botanist who traveled widely in England, Wales, and Scotland in search of rare specimens. He corresponded and exchanged plants with many well-known botanists and naturalists (W. P. Courtney, Richardson, Richard (16631741), rev. Peter Davis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2010 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/23576, accessed 31 May 2011]).




Patient Details

Johann Eberhard Rau

Johann Eberhard Rau (1695-1770) was a Protestant theologian and professor. He studied at the University of Marburg and was elected a member of the Royal Academy of Sciences in Berlin for his scientific achievements in 1729. He received a professorship at the University of Frankfurt in 1746.

Reference:

Otto Friedrich, “Rau, Johann Eberhard”, in: General German Biography (1888), S. 379-380 [Online version]; http://www.deutsche-biographie.de/pnd131494376.html?anchor=adb [accessed 14 April 2017]).



Dates: to

Occupation: Unknown

Relationship to Sloane: Virtual International Authority File:

Letter 2686

Francis Bernard to Hans Sloane – January 20, 1697/8


Item info

Date: January 20, 1697/8
Author: Francis Bernard
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4037
Folio: ff. 10-11



Original Page



Transcription

Bernard has learned of two books printed at Nuremberg. He asks Sloane to try to procure them from one of his German contacts. Francis Bernard (bap. 1628, d. 1698) was an apothecary and physician. He worked at St Bartholomew’s Hospital from 1661 and was noted for his labours during the great plague of 1665. He was made an Honorary Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1680. Bernard had a large library with books in Greek, Latin, French, and Italian (Juanita Burnby, ‘Bernard, Francis (bap. 1628, d. 1698)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/2241, accessed 23 July 2014]).




Patient Details

Letter 0694

George Stepney to Hans Sloane – July 16, 1701


Item info

Date: July 16, 1701
Author: George Stepney
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: f. 191



Original Page



Transcription

The enclosed was recommended to Stepney. It is a book by Count Marsigli. Stepney sends it as a gift to the Royal Society. Marsigli was an ambassador that who brokered the ‘Treaty of Peace with ye Turks’ and is ‘very knowing in antiquities’. Stepney was a renowned diplomat and expert on all things German. He became a member of the Royal Society in 1697 (Linda Frey and Marsha Frey, Stepney, George (16631707), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/26404, accessed 25 June 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 0994

George Stepney to Hans Sloane – May 5, 1705


Item info

Date: May 5, 1705
Author: George Stepney
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4040
Folio: f. 28



Original Page



Transcription

Stepney encloses a treatise about the ear recommended by Dr Garelli, Physician to the Emperor. He held onto it these past two months because he had no means to convey it to England. Stepney was a renowned diplomat and expert on all things German. He became a member of the Royal Society in 1697 (Linda Frey and Marsha Frey, Stepney, George (16631707), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/26404, accessed 25 June 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 2303

John King to Hans Sloane – November 17, 1718


Item info

Date: November 17, 1718
Author: John King
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4045
Folio: ff. 168-169



Original Page



Transcription

King asks for Sloane’s help in finding work for his ‘Eldest Daughter, just turned of 18’. She understands and can read French and knows a little German. He does not want her to work below her station, but desperately wants her to find something. He laments that ‘It is many good Gentlemen’s ill fate to be reduced in the World’. King was a Church of England clergyman, who married William Durham’s daughter Ann. When she passed away he married Elizabeth Aris, with whom he had six children. His son, also named John King, became a classical scholar (W. P. Courtney, King, John (16521732), rev. Leonard W. Cowie, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2009 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15575, accessed 15 Aug 2011]).




Patient Details