38 



THE HISTORY OF TROPICAL MEDICINE 



Anderson (1908). Third Report. Wellcome Tropical Research Labora- 

 tories, 310; (191 1) Fourth Report same Laboratories, 248 (London). 

 These are most valuable observations upon Primitive Medicine in the 

 Anglo-Egyptian Sudan. 



Berdoe (1913). The Origin and Growth of the Healing Art (London). 

 (Contains articles on the Medicine of Primitive Man of Egypt, Judea, 

 Chaldea, India, Persia, Mexico, and Peru.) 



Castellani (191 6). British Medical Journal, ii., October 21 (London). 

 (Tartar Emetic and Protozoal Diseases.) 



Chalmers and Archibald (1914). Two early eighteenth-century treatises 

 on Tropical Medicine, Royal Society of Medicine. (Contains Dracontiasis, 

 Dermatophiliasis, Epidemic Gangrenous Rectitis, Malarial Fevers, 

 Cholera, Dysenteries, Smallpox, Climatic Bubo (?), Endemic Yellow 

 Fever in West Africa, Filariasis, Diarrhoea, Yaws.) 



Chalmers and Maloof (1918). A Siidanese Arabic Medical Manuscript, 

 Royal Society of Medicine. (Gives an account of the method of treat- 

 ment of disease in the Anglo-Egyptian Sudan some 200 years ago.) 



Charaka. English translation (Calcutta) . 



Chemin (1914). Archives de Medecine et Pharmacie Navale, January 

 February, etc. (Paris). (Remarks upon the History of Japanese 

 Medicine.) 



Dabry (1863). La Medecine chez les Chinois (Paris). 



Dorothea Singer (1916). Transactions Royal Society of Medicine (London). 



(Plague Tracts.) 

 GiMLETTE (1915). Malay Poisons and Charms (London). 

 Hensinger (1839). Geschicte der Indische Medicin, Sach's Medicin. 

 Jee (1896). A Short History of Aryan Medical Science (London). 

 Keegel (1887). Superstition in Native Medicine (Ceylon Medical Journal). 

 Lepage, F. A. (181 3). Recherches historiques sur la Medecine des Chinois. 



These (Paris). 



Low (1916). Transactions of the Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 

 vol, X., pp. 37-42 (London). (History of Tartar Emetic.) 



Macdonald (1879). Historical Sketch of Medicine (Edinburgh). (Contains 

 a translation of some palm-leaf manuscripts, without date, by Burmese 

 physicians.) 



Morgan (191 8). Organic Compounds of Arsenic and Antimony (London). 

 Oribasius (1557). Opera BasJese. 



Rho, F. (1904). Dal Vecchio al Nuovo in Patologia Esotica (Roma). 



Roth, W. E. (1897). Ethnological Studies among the North- West Central 



Aborigines (Brisbane) . (Contains a chapter on Disease, Accident, and 



Death.) 



Ross (1910) . Catalogue of the Arabic and Persian Manuscripts in the Oriental 



Public Library at Bankipore. (Vol. iv. contains the Arabic medical 



works, and is very interesting and useful to us.) (Calcutta.) 

 Rush (181 8). Medical Inquiries and Observations. (The first volume 



contains an account of medicine amongst the North American Indians.) 

 Seligmann, C. G. (1902). Journal of the Anthropological Institute (London). 



(The Medicine, Surgery, and Midwifery of the Sinangolo, an inland tribe 



inhabiting the Rigo District of British New Guinea.) 

 Singer (1912). Annals of Tropical Medicine and Parasitology, vi. 87, 379 



(Liverpool). With D, Singer (191 7). Annals of Medical History, I., 



i. I, New York. (Facastoro and Infection.) 

 Su^RUTA. English translation (Calcutta), also a Latin translation about 



1837 in Berlin. 



WijEsiNGHE (1889). Mahawansa, pp. 44, 125, 156 (notes), 158. 



Wise, T. S. (1867). Review of the History of Medicine (London). (Deals 



with medicine among the Hindus and Chinese.) 

 Whitney (i 885) . History of Medical Progress in Japan. Transactions of the 



Asiatic Society of Japan (Yokohama) . 



