01961nam 2200409 n 450 99639518500331620221108083839.0(CKB)4330000000317819(EEBO)2264191396(UnM)99872549(EXLCZ)99433000000031781919850423d1651 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|A directory for midvvives[electronic resource] or, a guide for women, in their conception, bearing, and suckling their children. Containing, 1. The anatomie of the vessels of generation. 2. The formation of the child in the womb. 3. What hinders conception, and its remedies. 4. What furthers conception. 6. Of miscarriage in women. 7. A guide for women in their labor. 8. A guide for women in their lying-in. 9. Of nursing children. By Nich. Culpeper, Gent. Student in physick and astrologieLondon Printed by Peter Cole, at the sign of the Printing-Press in Cornhil, near the Royal Exchange1651[32], 217, [23] p., platesAnontation on Thomason copy: "Apr: 12".Reproductions of the originals in the Cushing Collection, Yale University Medical School Library (Early English books) and in the British Library (Thomason Tracts).eebo-0158GynecologyDiagnosisEarly works to 1800ObstetricsEarly works to 1800GynecologyFormulae, receipts, prescriptionsEarly works to 1800GynecologyPracticeEarly works to 1800GynecologyDiagnosisObstetricsGynecologyFormulae, receipts, prescriptionsGynecologyPracticeCulpeper Nicholas1616-1654.793347Cu-RivESCu-RivESCStRLINWaOLNBOOK996395185003316A directory for midvvives2387451UNISA04313nam 2200481 450 991079379810332120221101100522.01-911188-50-X1-911188-48-8(CKB)4100000008206889(MiAaPQ)EBC5763970(EXLCZ)99410000000820688920190729e20192003 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMarkets in Early Medieval Europe trading and 'productive' sites, 650-850 /edited by Tim Pestell and Katharina UlmschneiderOxford ;Havertown, Pennsylvania :Windgather Press,2019.1 online resource (322 pages)1-911188-47-X Includes bibliographical references and index.Introduction: Early medieval markets and 'productive' sites / Katharina Ulmschneider and Tim Pestell -- 1. History, numismatics and the early medieval economy. Production and distribution in early and middle Anglo-Saxon England / Mark Blackburn -- 'Productive' sites and the pattern of coin loss in England, 600-1180 / Mark Blackburn -- Variations in the composition of the currency at different places in England / Michael Metcalf -- The Hinterlands of three southern English Emporia: some common themes / Ben Palmer -- 2. Trading and 'productive' sites in the British Isles. Markets and 'productive' sites: a view from western Britain / David Griffiths -- Markets around the Solent: unravelling a 'productive' site on the Isle of Wight / Katharina Ulmschneider -- The early Anglo-Saxon framework for the middle Anglo-Saxon economics: the case of East Kent / Stuart Brookes -- Exceptional finds, exceptional sites? Barham and Coddenham, Suffolk / John Newman -- Six middle Anglo-Saxon sites in West Norfolk / Andrew Rogerson -- The afterlife of 'productive' sites in East Anglia / Tim Pestell -- Middle Anglo-Saxon Lincolnshire: an emerging picture / Kevin Leahy -- The Anglian and Anglo-Scandinavian sites at Cottam, East Yorkshire / Julian D. Richards -- 3. Markets and settlements on the early Medieval continent. Markets and fairs in Norway and Sweden between the eighth and sixteenth centuries / Peter Sawyer -- Manor and market at Lake Tissø in the sixth to eleventh centuries: the Danish 'productive' sites / Lars Jørgensen -- Gross Strömkendorf: a market site of the eighth century on the Baltic Sea Cost / Astrid Tummuscheit -- Tjitsma, Wijnaldum: an early Medieval production site in the Netherlands / Caroline Tulp -- The fate of the ports of the Lower Seine Valley at the end of the ninth century / Jacques Le Maho -- San Vincenzo in the making: the discovery of an early Medieval production site on the east bank of the Volturno / Matthew Moran.Major sites such as Hamwic and Dorestad typically dominate any discussion of early medieval trade and emporia - this study is altogether atypical in many ways. Comprising nineteen papers taken from a conference held at Worcester College, Oxford in 2000, the focus here is very much on the smaller, more rural trading centres and inland markets of Northern Europe. The contributors reflect very different approaches to the material, including studies that examine up-to-date historical, archaeological and numismatic evidence from Britain, Denmark, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden dating from the 7th to 9th century. The authors consider the rather controversial use of metal-detecting in identifying and defining new sites and patterns of interaction and exchange, highlighting its positive contribution.MarketsEuropeHistoryEuropeCommerceHistoryTo 1500CongressesEuropeEconomic conditionsTo 1492CongressesEuropeConditions économiquesJusqu'à 1492CongrèsEuropefastConference papers and proceedings.fastHistory.fastMarketsHistory.381.18094Pestell TimUlmschneider KatharinaMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910793798103321Markets in early medieval Europe1093164UNINA