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“My written books of surgery in the Englishe tonge” : the London company of Barber-Surgeons and the Lylye of Medicynes

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Connelly, Erin (2017) “My written books of surgery in the Englishe tonge” : the London company of Barber-Surgeons and the Lylye of Medicynes. Manuscript Studies: A Journal of the Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies, 2 (2). pp. 369-391. doi:10.1353/mns.2017.0018

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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1353/mns.2017.0018

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Abstract

The Middle English Lylye of Medicynes is an early fifteenth-century translation of Bernard of Gordon’s Latin Lilium medicinae (completed in 1305). The Lylye is contained in Oxford Bodleian Library MS. Ashmole 1505 as a sole text. Although there are many extant witnesses in Latin, there are no other known Middle English copies. The Lylye contains thousands of medicinal ingredients, including 360 individual recipes identified with Rx, with accompanying guidelines for diagnosis and prognosis. Although the text does contain some medical theory and etiology (based on thought from Arabic medicine, specifically Ibn Sīnā, and Antiquity, predominantly Galen and Hippocrates), its main feature is the large volume of medicinal recipes. It is thought to have been commissioned by Robert Broke, ‘master of the king’s stillatories,’ in the early fifteenth century during the reign of Henry VI. This article explores the later provenance of the Lylye amongst the Gale family of barber-surgeons in sixteenth-century London.

Item Type: Journal Article
Divisions: Faculty of Science > Life Sciences (2010- )
Journal or Publication Title: Manuscript Studies: A Journal of the Schoenberg Institute for Manuscript Studies
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
ISSN: 2381-5329
Official Date: 2 November 2017
Dates:
DateEvent
2 November 2017Published
Volume: 2
Number: 2
Page Range: pp. 369-391
DOI: 10.1353/mns.2017.0018
Status: Peer Reviewed
Publication Status: Published
Access rights to Published version: Restricted or Subscription Access
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