Forum Activity for @docteur-panacek

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
10 Jul 2012 08:07:15AM
69 posts

18th Century Medical Treatments: The Cough of the Lungs.


Bloggers' Corner

My dear patients,

It is time i must begin to take my task as your Health Advisor more seriously and provide you with some more accurate and genuine modern remedies our beloved 18th century has to offer.

The next prescription is taken out of a notebook compiled by members of the family of Rev. William Twigge, archdeacon of Limerick from 1705 to 1726. It was probably the work of his wife Diana and daughter Jane (later Pery) and written between 1704 and l71 5. The notebook contains a large number of recipes for baking cakes, preserving fruit and vegetables and making drinks. The remedies show the kinds of illness which were prevalent among the class to which the Twigge family belonged and throw some light on how people thought they could be cured or alleviated.

The Twigges' notebook contains 46 remedies for various ailments. It would be interesting to know whether they have any scientific basis or not, but experimentation is not recommended.

To make the snaile water for the consumsion or
cough of the lungs.

Take 2 quarts of house snails well washt in water and salt
five or six times over, their heads being cut off, one quart
of earth wormes washt as the snailes, chickweed,
mallows, maidenhair, coltisfoot, hysop, aspeckane,
liverwort, white horehound, ground ivey, hartstongue,
wild time and the tops of rosemary, of each one handfull.
Pick and cleanse all these herbs very well and chop them
with the snails and worms. Steep them well cleansed in
red cow's milk for a whole night and let the milk cover
them a hair's breadth. Add to these one pound and a
halfe of the best raisens of the sun stoned and bruised,
one pound and a halfe of the best figgs slit and bruised.
Then add a capon slaid and bruises to mash, two young
pigeons slaid and bruised to mash, 4 ounces of liquorish
scraped and bruised, 2 handfulls of parsly roots sliced
and bruised. Then cover all the above named things ordered
as above in a hand's breadth of red cow's milk jn
your limbeck pot, then put on your limbeck lid and let
them stand and steep some time. Be sure to past your
limbeck head that noe aire come out. Then draw your
water with a pretty quick fire and put white sugar candy
in the mouth of your receiver in a fine cloth for your water
to run through. You must: tak off your limbeck head for
fear of burning. You may draw 5 or 6 quarts of water
from the above quantity. You must put into each bottle of
water an ounce of white sugar candy in powder. You may
drink a glass of this water thus prepared morning and
evening for some time and you will finde effects from it.

At Your Health !!!

Dr. Panacek, War Surgeon.

The Doctor Visiting the Sick Bed , artist unknown (18th century).


updated by @docteur-panacek: 06 Oct 2016 06:13:30AM
Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
20 Jul 2012 08:00:52AM
69 posts

18th Century Medical Treatments: The Cough of the Lungs.


Bloggers' Corner

Ow Mylady, this principle is recently discovered by a very intelligent colleague of mine, Dr. S. Hahnemann.

He just proposed the principle of "like cures like", or the idea that we can stimulate the body to heal itself by administering (very dilute solutions of) ingredients that would cause the symptoms of the ailment. Instead of bringing the unbalanced humors back into balance, like every well educated doctor these days would do, he suggests that disease should be treated by the principle of the Law of Similars.
Because a lot of his patients were complaining about his remedies, he HAD to dilute the ingredients, or he would have lost most of them... So he became a fanatic believer in "the Law of Infinitesimals". This supposes that the smaller a dose of a medication, the more powerful its effect.

So, the conclusion is evident: lets dilute the Escargots in Brandy... That way their power will dilute into the Brandy and we will all be MUCH happier...

Yes, the ways of our modern 18th Century Medicine are truly Miraculous.

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
10 Jul 2012 11:51:43PM
69 posts

18th Century Medical Treatments: The Cough of the Lungs.


Bloggers' Corner

So true dear Professor. I have planned on writing an nice article on that subject. The history of medicine is a never ending treasure chest.

(my biggest advice on 18th century courtiers: DON'T GET ILL, at any cost avoid contact with the medical professionals... In those days Medicine was VERY bad for your health)

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
10 Jul 2012 09:23:26AM
69 posts

18th Century Medical Treatments: The Cough of the Lungs.


Bloggers' Corner

Ahhh Lady Candace, next month i will give you the ingredients of the purging ale. No fear, your health is in good hands (errhhhmmm, errhhhmmmm)

Dear Lord Myron, it is a BRITISH recipe, they are not Gourmands like the French or the Flemish...

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
10 Jul 2012 08:07:15AM
69 posts

18th Century Medical Treatments: The Cough of the Lungs.


Bloggers' Corner

My dear patients,

It is time i must begin to take my task as your Health Advisor more seriously and provide you with some more accurate and genuine modern remedies our beloved 18th century has to offer.

The next prescription is taken out of a notebook compiled by members of the family of Rev. William Twigge, archdeacon of Limerick from 1705 to 1726. It was probably the work of his wife Diana and daughter Jane (later Pery) and written between 1704 and l71 5. The notebook contains a large number of recipes for baking cakes, preserving fruit and vegetables and making drinks. The remedies show the kinds of illness which were prevalent among the class to which the Twigge family belonged and throw some light on how people thought they could be cured or alleviated.

The Twigges' notebook contains 46 remedies for various ailments. It would be interesting to know whether they have any scientific basis or not, but experimentation is not recommended.

To make the snaile water for the consumsion or
cough of the lungs.

Take 2 quarts of house snails well washt in water and salt
five or six times over, their heads being cut off, one quart
of earth wormes washt as the snailes, chickweed,
mallows, maidenhair, coltisfoot, hysop, aspeckane,
liverwort, white horehound, ground ivey, hartstongue,
wild time and the tops of rosemary, of each one handfull.
Pick and cleanse all these herbs very well and chop them
with the snails and worms. Steep them well cleansed in
red cow's milk for a whole night and let the milk cover
them a hair's breadth. Add to these one pound and a
halfe of the best raisens of the sun stoned and bruised,
one pound and a halfe of the best figgs slit and bruised.
Then add a capon slaid and bruises to mash, two young
pigeons slaid and bruised to mash, 4 ounces of liquorish
scraped and bruised, 2 handfulls of parsly roots sliced
and bruised. Then cover all the above named things ordered
as above in a hand's breadth of red cow's milk jn
your limbeck pot, then put on your limbeck lid and let
them stand and steep some time. Be sure to past your
limbeck head that noe aire come out. Then draw your
water with a pretty quick fire and put white sugar candy
in the mouth of your receiver in a fine cloth for your water
to run through. You must: tak off your limbeck head for
fear of burning. You may draw 5 or 6 quarts of water
from the above quantity. You must put into each bottle of
water an ounce of white sugar candy in powder. You may
drink a glass of this water thus prepared morning and
evening for some time and you will finde effects from it.

At Your Health !!!

Dr. Panacek, War Surgeon.

The Doctor Visiting the Sick Bed , artist unknown (18th century).


updated by @docteur-panacek: 06 Oct 2016 06:13:30AM
Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
05 Jun 2012 11:01:42AM
69 posts

L'aventurier collection from Le Grenier du Chateau


Marketplace Archive ** CLOSED **

Already one of my favorite outfits Monsieur (Stormy wanted me to have a new coat for a long time).

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
05 Jun 2012 11:01:42AM
69 posts

L'aventurier collection from Le Grenier du Chateau


Marketplace Archive ** CLOSED **

Already one of my favorite outfits Monsieur (Stormy wanted me to have a new coat for a long time).

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
12 Jan 2014 03:35:26AM
69 posts



Dear Sir, being an bersceptic and an atheist, i will attend the session, just to judge for myself its all a deception. (and to be completely sure all the patients i murdere... ehhhhh ever cured.... wont come back to take revenge on me...).

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
16 Jan 2012 07:39:47AM
69 posts

AR - Pavillon de Sérénité & Furnishings _ V. Important Change


Marketplace Archive ** CLOSED **

Dammm cow, she is driving me NUTS... I gave her a nice place to stay, fresh hay and a hot water bath every day... and still ain't satisfied... She even drank my secret stock of self made Brandy... Pffffffffff

(((Anyway dear Duc, you have done an outstanding job here. Congratulations ! LOVE it !!!)))

Docteur Panacek
@docteur-panacek
14 Dec 2011 10:23:36PM
69 posts

Le Vicomte Collection get Versailles Label!


Marketplace Archive ** CLOSED **

I can hardly wait Monsieur.
(Stormy complains all the time about my old wornout coat, so i think its time to get a new one).
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