Title in pencil upper left., Date derived from related print, Print00126., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Title from item., In margin lower left: A. C. 352 ; English Hindi 10,000., Date derived from founding of British India Press., Text is also in Hindi., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Publisher:
Issued by the Director General of Health Services, Govt. of India. Published by the Advertising Branch, Ministry of I. & B. Govt. of India and Printed by British India Press, Bombay 10.
Subject (Topic):
Public health, Teeth, Care and hygiene, Children, and Toothbrushes
Title, date, and place of publication from item., In lower margin: U. S. Government Printing Office : 1942 O-485813 ; WH 2., One of a series of WWII posters produced for the U.S. Public Health Service showing the "big lunk" doing all the right healthy things to keep on the job for the war effort., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Publisher:
Federal Security Agency, U. S. Public Health Service and U.S. Government Printing Office
Subject (Topic):
Dental care, Dentistry, World War,1939-1945, Teeth, Care and hygiene, and United States
"From the bustle and life visible on all sides it would seem that the period is fair-time, when the rustics and agricultural population of the vicinity in general flock into the town, holiday-making. A travelling mountebank has established his theatre in the market place; the person of the ingenious charlatan is decked out in a fine court dress, with bag wig, powder, sword, and laced hat complete, the better to excite the respect of his audience; he is holding forth on the marvellous properties ascribed to the nostrums which he is seeking to palm off on the simple villagers as wonder-working elixirs; while his attendants, Merry Andrew and Jack Pudding, are going through their share of the performance. One branch of the mountebank physician's profession was the drawing of teeth; an unfortunate sufferer is submitting himself to the hands of the empiric's assistant. The rural audience is stolidly contemplating the antics of the party, without being particularly moved by Dr. Botherum's imposing eloquence, these vagabond scamps being frequently clever rogues, blessed with an inexhaustible fund of bewildering oratory, and witty repartee at glib command. Leaving the quack, we find plentiful and suggestive materials to employ the humourist's skilful graver scattered around. In the centre, a scene of jealousy is displayed; the beguilements of a portly butcher are prevailing against the assumed privileges of a slip-shod tailor, who is seemingly tempted to have recourse to his sheers, to cut the amorous entanglement summarily asunder. On the left, the promiscuous and greedy feeding associated with 'fairings,' is going busily forward, and on the opposite side are exhibited all the drolleries which can be got out of a Jew pedlar, his pack, the diversified actions of customers he is trying to tempt with his wares, and the bargains for finery into which the fair and softer sex are vainly trying to beguile the cunning Hebrew on their own accounts. It seems probable that Rowlandson in his print of Doctor Botherum may have had a certain Doctor Bossy in his eye, a German practitioner of considerable skill, who enjoyed a comfortable private practice, said to have been the last of the respectable charlatans who exhibited in the British metropolis. This benevolent empiric, as Angelo informs us, dispensed medicines and practised the healing art, publicly and gratuitously on a stage, his booth being erected weekly in the midst of Covent-Garden Market, where the mountebank, handsomely dressed and wearing a gold-laced cocked hat, arrived in his chariot with a liveried servant behind. According to the old custom, the itinerant quack-doctor, with his attendant gang, was as constant a visitor at every market-place as the pedlar with his pack."--Grego
Description:
Title etched below image., Attributed to Rowlandson by Grego., Sheet trimmed within plate mark., Twelve lines of verse below image, six on either side of title: High o'er the gaping crowd, on market day, while Andrew drolls the blockheads pence away ..., Not in the Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum. Division I, political and personal satires., Temporary local Medical Library subject terms: Mountebanks -- Tooth Extraction -- Dr. Bossey., and 1 print : aquatint and etching, hand-colored ; sheet 373 x 433 mm.
Publisher:
Pubd. 6 March 1800 at R. Ackermann's Repository of the Arts, 101 Strand
Subject (Topic):
Quacks and quackery, Teeth, Extraction, Jews, City & town life, Plazas, Medicine shows, Audiences, Crowds, Peddlers, and Butchers
Title etched below image., Date and place of publication supplied by curator., See: British Museum, Department of Prints and Drawings. Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum, political and personal satires, no. 8909., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Title from item., Date derived from printing company history., Text is also in Hindi., This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing., and Condition: Excellent; UL corner fold; LR edge small tear.
Publisher:
Issued by the Health Education Section, Directorate General of Health Services, Government of India. Published by the Advertising Branch, Ministry of I & B and Printed by Glasgow Printing Co., Ltd. Howrah
Subject (Topic):
Public health, Teeth, Care and hygiene, Nutrition and dental health, Vegetables in human nutrition, Rabbits, Carrots, and Vegetables
Title from item., Place of publication and date supplied by curator., Copy after John Collier (Timothy Bobbin)., Copy of illustration in Human Passions Delineated, 1773., Sheet trimmed within plate., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Title from item., In margin lower right: 10,000., Date derived from founding of Sree Saraswaty Press., Text is also in Hindi., and This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing.
Publisher:
Issued by the Health Education Section, Directorate General of Health Services, Government of India. Published by the Advertising Branch, Ministry of I. & B. and printed by Sree Saraswaty Press, Calcutta
Subject (Topic):
Public health, Nutrition, Teeth, Care and hygiene, Fruit in human nutrition, Monkeys, and Pears
On a stage a man in a hat extracts a tooth from a patient as a clown taunts him; the audience on three sides of the stage look on with looks of horror or amusement
Description:
Title etched below image., Publication date from Isaac., Sheet trimmed to plate mark on top edge., and Not in the Catalogue of prints and drawings in the British Museum. Division I, political and personal satires.
Publisher:
Printed and published by W. Davison, Alnwick
Subject (Topic):
Teeth, Extraction, Dentistry, Audiences, Clowns, and Pain
Title from item., Date derived from printmaker's date of death., Place of publication from item., This electronic record is derived from historic data and may not reflect our current information. Review and updating of records is ongoing., and Temporary local Medical Library subject terms: Mountebanks; Medicine chests.
Publisher:
apud Nic. Cavalli
Subject (Topic):
Dentistry, Teeth, Extraction, Quacks & quackery, Pain, Medicines, Medical equipment & supplies, and Monkeys