APPENDIX. 7G5 



Simon Januensis— See pages C. 44. 582. 652. 



Sloane, Sir Hans, 1660-1753. In 1687 physician to the ^'overuor of 

 Barbados and Jamaica. His library and large collections of natural Jiistory 

 formed the nueleus of the British Museum. He wrote (1) Catdo(ju.f plniitaniin 



qujB in insula Jamaica sponte provoniunt vel vulgo coluntur iKlJrrtis 



aliis quibusdam, quse in insulis Maderae, Barbados, Nieves et St. Cliristopliuri 

 nascuntur, Londini, 1696. (2) A voyage to the islands Madera, Barbados, 

 Nieves, St. Christophers and Jamaica. London, 1707-172.5, fol. 



See pages 18. 73. 188. 203. 288. 591. 615. 629. 710. 



Susruta. The aiithor of '^Ayurvedas" i.e. the book of health, an old 

 Sanskrit medical work in which a large number of eastern drugs are nn'iitioucil. 

 It was first printed in the original language at Calcutta, 2 vols., 1835-I83G, and 

 afterwards translated nnder the name Susrutas AyurveAat, id est iiiediciDa; 

 systema a venerabili D'hanvantare demonstratum, a Susruta disciptdo composi- 

 tum. Nunc primum ex Sanskrita in Latinum sermonem vertit .... Fr. 

 Hessler, Erlangee, 3 vols., 1844-1850. And by the same translator. Com- 

 mentarii et annotationes in Susruta; ayurvedara, 1852-185.5. Susruta wa^ once 

 supposed to have written centuries before Christ, but chiefly the research<!S«jf 

 Prof. Haas, London, in the Zeitschrift der Deulschen Morgenl(iwl<fchen (kM- 

 schaft, XXX. (1876) 617 sqq. and xxxi. (1877) 647, make it not improbable that 

 the Sanskrit " Susruta " might have been generated from the Greek llip- 

 pokrates by way of the intermediate form "Bukrat." The oldest testimony 

 as to the time of Susruta (and Charaka, see before) is the stat<.-i,M;nt oi Urn 

 Abu Oseibiah, in the 13th century, that Susruta had been trai, ..' 'i into 

 Arabic about the end of the 8th century. .„ ,.. 



See pages 154. 188. 211. 225. 295. 315. 421. 425. 436. 50.3. o4-. 5<2. 644. 



Tabernffimontanus, Jacob Theodor, physician at Heidelberg; di-i 

 A.D. 1590. A pupil of Tragus.-Neuw Kreuterbuch, Frankfurt 1588, fo-o 

 second part, 1591 both with fig. Later editions, also m Ge™an.^h ^^^I^^^ 

 Bauhin anci HierMiymus Bauhin. Latin translation, Eicones plantarum seu 

 stirpium . . . Francofurti, 1590, with 2225 engravings. 



See pages 308. 390. 731. 

 , Talbor, or also Tabor, Eobert, 1642-1681. This sin||Iar ,~ ^ 

 having been apprenticed to Dear, an apotliecaiy of Caml^rid e ^^ ^ 

 Essex, where ho practised medicine with nuich ^-,Jf-n,,J^:„ wL « Li..^ 

 to London, and in 1672 published a small book call d n./- -Aoy . ^^^^^ 



account of the canse and cure of agues (London, i-h ^_^ ^j^^ ^^^ , ^^ 



he was appointed physician to the king, and on -/tn ■ ^ ^j^^^^l^Tof 

 received the honour of knighthood at Whitehall. ^'^; /' V^V.,,,,],,, n. caused 

 the College of Physicians ; and to save hmi ^o™ f^^ with him in Im 

 a letter to be written restraining that body frf /"'^rt^Soiutment ... i . >1 

 •nedical practice. (Baker, I.e. at page 344 "ot* t^; , , j^ .Vrvices prfurrocd," 

 physician, made in consideration of "good and acceptaWe ^ ^^i^_^ ^^.^^ 



«J to the issuing of a patent under the P^JJ f^*'' 7,„„um, t, ^ ther with 

 granting to Sir Eobert Talbor an annuity »' *^yV j^ ordinary to tlx ' 

 the profits and privileges appertaining to a pn3» i ^,,,.„n]ed in the i: '' 

 •■eign. In 1679 Talbor visited France and ^P-^'"'^. ^gg (this includ- th" 

 'jes nouvcUes etc. pendant l'ann6e I'^rS (pri», i / .^^ he inado in the 



»5««. de France! 23rd Sept., 1C79). The Jo nn y ^.^^P ^^ ^^^-^ xiV., of 

 ^uite of the young queen of Spain, Louise d Ui tai ^^^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^ 

 ^yhom he is described as })remier mddecm- imr „ j^Yi-ior, as is proved by 

 tice in London was carried on by his ^rot'ier, i^ • . . 5-40, icx 



an advertisement in the True News or Mercunu. Angncus, 



r\ J^^/v 



