Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Antimonial_cup> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 65 of
65
with 100 triples per page.
- Antimonial_cup abstract "An antimonial cup was a small half-pint mug or cup cast in antimony popular in Europe during the 17th and 18th centuries. They were also known under the names "pocula emetica," "calices vomitorii," or "emetic cups", as wine that was kept in one for a 24 hour period gained an emetic or laxative quality. The tartaric acid in the wine acted upon the metal cup and formed tartarised antimony.".
- Antimonial_cup thumbnail Antimonyall_Cupps.jpg?width=300.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageID "3747704".
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageLength "6977".
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageOutDegree "37".
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageRevisionID "548256484".
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Act_of_Parliament.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Antimonial.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Antimony.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Antimony_pill.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Antimony_potassium_tartrate.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Ariccia.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Basel.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Basel,_Switzerland.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Basil_Valentine.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Category:Antimony.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Category:Drinkware.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Category:Emetics.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Category:Laxatives.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Catharsis.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Emetic.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Ephraim_Chambers.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink File:Antimonyall_Cupps.jpg.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink File:Captain_Cooks_antimonial_cup.jpg.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Geological_Museum.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink George_Monckton-Arundell,_8th_Viscount_Galway.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Glass_of_antimony.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Greenwich.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Greenwich,_London.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Isaac_Smith_(Royal_Navy_officer).
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink James_Cook.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink James_Wolfe.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Laxative.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink National_Maritime_Museum.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Potassium_nitrate.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Provenance.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Monckton.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Scurvy.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Tartaric_acid.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Tartarised_antimony.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Tartrate_of_antimony.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLink Vomiting.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLinkText "Antimonial cup".
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLinkText "Cups made from pure antimony".
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageWikiLinkText "antimonial cup".
- Antimonial_cup hasPhotoCollection Antimonial_cup.
- Antimonial_cup wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Antimonial_cup subject Category:Antimony.
- Antimonial_cup subject Category:Drinkware.
- Antimonial_cup subject Category:Emetics.
- Antimonial_cup subject Category:Laxatives.
- Antimonial_cup hypernym Mug.
- Antimonial_cup type Drug.
- Antimonial_cup type Container.
- Antimonial_cup type Drug.
- Antimonial_cup type Element.
- Antimonial_cup type Metalloid.
- Antimonial_cup comment "An antimonial cup was a small half-pint mug or cup cast in antimony popular in Europe during the 17th and 18th centuries. They were also known under the names "pocula emetica," "calices vomitorii," or "emetic cups", as wine that was kept in one for a 24 hour period gained an emetic or laxative quality. The tartaric acid in the wine acted upon the metal cup and formed tartarised antimony.".
- Antimonial_cup label "Antimonial cup".
- Antimonial_cup sameAs m.09yvr6.
- Antimonial_cup sameAs Q4774961.
- Antimonial_cup sameAs Q4774961.
- Antimonial_cup wasDerivedFrom Antimonial_cup?oldid=548256484.
- Antimonial_cup depiction Antimonyall_Cupps.jpg.
- Antimonial_cup isPrimaryTopicOf Antimonial_cup.