Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Diascordium> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 46 of
46
with 100 triples per page.
- Diascordium abstract "In pre-modern medicine, diascordium (medical Lat diascordium, for diascordiōn, from Gr διὰ σκορδίων, [a preparation] of scordium, σκόρδιον, \"a strong-smelling plant mentioned by Dioscorides\", possibly Teucrium scordium), or diascord, is a kind of electuary, or opiate, first described by Fracastorius, and denominated from the dried leaves of scordium, which is an ingredient therein. The other ingredients are red roses, bole, storax, cinnamon, cassia lignea (coarse bark of Cinnamomum cassia), dittany, tormentil roots, bistort, gentian, galbanum, amber, terra sigillata, opium, long pepper, ginger, mel rosatum, and malmsey. It was used against malignant fevers, the plague, worms, colic, to promote sleep, and resist putrefaction. In 1746, diascordium was offered in two forms: with or without opium.In 1654, Nicholas Culpeper wrote in his London Dispensatorie about the mixture: \"It is a well composed Electuary, a something appropriate to the nature of women, for it Provokes the Terms, hastens their Labor, helps their usual sickness at the time of their Lying-in, I know nothing better.\"Over the years, the composition of diascordium was modified, until it gradually changed into what became known as pulvis catechu compositus (\"compound powder of catechu\").".
- Diascordium wikiPageID "11416184".
- Diascordium wikiPageLength "1893".
- Diascordium wikiPageOutDegree "23".
- Diascordium wikiPageRevisionID "618373596".
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Bistort.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Catechu.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Category:History_of_medicine.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Cinnamomum_cassia.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Colic.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Dittany.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Electuary.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Galbanum.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Gentiana.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Girolamo_Fracastoro.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Greek_language.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Malvasia.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Mel_rosatum.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Nicholas_Culpeper.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Opiate.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Opium.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Pedanius_Dioscorides.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Potentilla.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Styrax_balsam.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Terra_sigillata.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Teucrium_scordium.
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLink Trunk_(botany).
- Diascordium wikiPageWikiLinkText "Diascordium".
- Diascordium wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Opioidergics.
- Diascordium wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Diascordium subject Category:History_of_medicine.
- Diascordium hypernym Kind.
- Diascordium type Work.
- Diascordium type Field.
- Diascordium type Source.
- Diascordium type Work.
- Diascordium comment "In pre-modern medicine, diascordium (medical Lat diascordium, for diascordiōn, from Gr διὰ σκορδίων, [a preparation] of scordium, σκόρδιον, \"a strong-smelling plant mentioned by Dioscorides\", possibly Teucrium scordium), or diascord, is a kind of electuary, or opiate, first described by Fracastorius, and denominated from the dried leaves of scordium, which is an ingredient therein.".
- Diascordium label "Diascordium".
- Diascordium sameAs Q1442985.
- Diascordium sameAs Diascordium.
- Diascordium sameAs Diascordium.
- Diascordium sameAs m.02rbqrg.
- Diascordium sameAs Q1442985.
- Diascordium wasDerivedFrom Diascordium?oldid=618373596.
- Diascordium isPrimaryTopicOf Diascordium.