Hill, John, 1714?-1775
Hill, John, 1716?-1775
Hill, John, ca. 1714-1775
Hill, John ca.1716-1775 British apothecary and naturalist; author of many compilations dealing with horticulture, botany or medicine
Hill, John
Johnson, Abraham
VIAF ID: 306233283 ( Personal )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/306233283
Preferred Forms
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Hill, John
- 100 1 _ ‡a Hill, John ‡d ca.1716-1775 ‡c British apothecary and naturalist; author of many compilations dealing with horticulture, botany or medicine
- 100 1 _ ‡a Hill, John, ‡d 1714?-1775
- 100 1 _ ‡a Hill, John, ‡d 1714?-1775
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (42)
5xx's: Related Names (17)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Chesterfield, ...
- 500 1 _ ‡a Cole, Benjamin ‡d 1696 or 7-1783
- 500 1 _ ‡a Dodsley, Robert ‡d 1703-1764
- 500 1 _ ‡a Eidous, Marc-Antoine ‡d 1724-1790
- 500 1 _ ‡a Hale, Thomas ‡d 17..-1763)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Hill, John
- 500 1 _ ‡a Hill, John ‡d 1714-1775
- 500 1 _ ‡a Hill, John ‡d 1714?-1775
- 500 1 _ ‡a Johnson, Abraham
- 500 1 _ ‡a Johnson, Abraham, ‡d 1714?-1775
- 500 0 _ ‡a M.
- 500 1 _ ‡a Marshall, Joseph
- 500 1 _ ‡a Mirabeau, Victor Riqueti ‡d 1715-1789; marquis de)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Moët, Jean-Pierre ‡d 1721-1806
- 500 1 _ ‡a Osborne, Thomas ‡d d. 1767.
- 500 1 _ ‡a Quesnay, François ‡d 1694-1774)
- 500 1 _ ‡a Theophrastus, c ‡d 371-c. 286 a.C.
Works
Title | Sources |
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The actor; or, A treatise on the art of playing. | |
The adventures of Mr George Edwards, a Creole | |
Les aventures de M. Loville | |
British herbal an history of plants and trees, natives of Britain cultivated for use, or raised for beauty | |
compleat body of gardening | |
The conduct of a married life Laid down in a series of letters, written by the Honourable Juliana-Susannah Seymour, to a young lady, her relation, lately married. | |
The construction of timber, from its early growth : explained by the microscope and proved from experiments, in a great variety of kinds: in five books. On the parts of trees; their vessels ; and their encrease by growth : ... | |
Decade of curious and elegant trees and plants. | |
The distinct symptoms of the gravel and stone : Explained to the patient; in all their stages and circumstances: with the conduct of life necessary to prevent the encrease of the complaint; the most proper management in the fits, and during the intervals: and Safe and effectual Medicines, easily prepared at Home, for the several States of the Disorder; particularly, The Use of Sparry Waters, the greatest of all Remedies, hitherto not rightly understood | |
Economy of human life | |
Essays in natural history and philosophy. : Containing a series of discoveries, by the assistance of microscopes | |
La femme comme on n'en connoit point : ou primauté de la femme sur l'homme | |
Fossils arranged according to their obvious characters : with their history and description; under the articles of form, hardness, weight, surface, colour, and qualities; the place of their production, their uses, and distinctive English, and classical Latin names. | |
The gardener's pocket-book, ca. 1775: | |
A general natural history: or, new and accurate descriptions of the animals, vegetables, and minerals, of the different parts of the world ; with their virtues and uses, as far as hitherto certainly known, in medicine and mechanics: illustrated by a general review of the knowledge of the ancients, and the discoveries and improvements of later ages in these studies. Including the history of the materia medica, pictoria, and tinctoria, of the present and earlier ages. As also observations on the neglected properties of many valuable substances known at present ; and attempts to discover the lost medicines, &c. of former ages, in a series of critical enquiries into the materia medica of the ancient Greeks. With a great number of figures, elegantly engraved. By John Hill. | |
génération solitaire | |
History of animals | |
Hortus Kewensis. Sistens herbas exoticas, indigenasque rariores, in area botanica... apud Kew ... cultas ... | |
Hypochondriasis. A practical treatise on the nature and cure of that disorder ; commonly called the hyp and hypo. By Sir John Hill | |
The Inspector Containing a collection of essays and letters lately published in a new daily-paper, called, The London daily advertiser, and literary gazette. | |
internal structure and the life of plants | |
De Lapidibus. | |
The letters and papers of Sir John Hill : 1714-1775 | |
Letters from the inspector to a lady, with the genuine answers. Both printed verbatim from the originals | |
Lucina sine concubitu. | |
Lucine affranchie des loix du concours | |
The management of the gout : by a physician from his own case. With The Virtues of an English Plant Bardana, Not regarded in the Present Practice; but safe and effectual in alleviating that Disease | |
Manuel de tous les ages, ou Économie de la vie humaine; traduit d'un ancien manuscrit indien en anglois, & de l'anglois en franc̜ois, sur la dernière edition. Par Miss. D. P. | |
Memorie aan het Koninglyk Genoodschap der Wetenschappen, te Londen, overgelevert, waarin op eene onwederspreeklyke wyze zoowel uit het vernuft als uit de ondervinding bewezen word, dat eene vrouw of vryster zonder toedoen eens mans, zwanger worden en kinderen baaren kan | |
A method of producing double flowers from single by a regular course of culture. Illustrated with figures. | |
The naval history of Britain, from the earliest periods of which there are accounts in history, to the conclusion of the year M.DCC.LVI. | |
old man's guide to health and longer life with rules for diet, exercise and physic, for preserving a good constitution and preventing disorders in a bad one | |
On the management and education of children | |
Orpheus : an English opera | |
The power of water-dock against the scurvy : whether in the plain root or essence. With marks to know that disease in all its states; instances of its being mistaken for other disorders; and rules of life for those afflicted with it | |
Proc. Int. Cong. Hist. Med., 1974: | |
A review of the works of the Royal Society of London : containing animadversions on such of the papers as deserve particular observation. In eight parts: Under the several Heads of Arts, Antiquities, Medicine, Miracles, Zoophytes, Animals, Vegetables, Minerals | |
The rout A farce of two acts as it is perform'd at the Theatre-Royal in Drury-Lane. | |
A satisfactory refutation of Sir Hypo Bardana's [i.e. Sir John Hill's] "Circumstances" ..., 1775?: | |
The sleep of plants, and cause of motion in the sensitive plant | |
The Smartiad a satire. Occasioned by an epic poem, intitled The Hilliad. | |
Some projects recommended to the Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Mamufactures [sic], and Commerce. By the Inspector | |
The story of Elizabeth Canning considered by Dr. Hill. With remarks on what has been called, A clear state of her case, by Mr. Fielding ; and answers to the several arguments and suppositions of that writer | |
[Theophrastou tou Eresiou Peri tōn lithōn biblion]. Theophrastus's History of stones. With an English version, and critical and philosophical notes, including the modern history of the gems, &c, described by that author, and of many other of the native fossils. | |
Thoughts concerning God and nature : in answer to Lord Bolingbroke's philosophy | |
To David Garrick, Esq ; the petition of I. In behalf of herself and her sisters | |
Traité des pierres de Théophraste | |
Urania, or, A compleat view of the heavens, containing the antient and modern astronomy, in form of a dictionary : illustrated with a great number of figures, comprising all the constellations, with the stars laid down according to their exact situations and magnitudes, from repeated and accurate observations : in which, beside explanations of all the terms used in that science, by the early as well as late authors, and in the Arabian, as well as the Egyptian and Grecian astronomy, the science is traced from its origin to the present period, and the improvements made, from time to time, are laid down in a plain and familiar manner ... | |
Valerian : Or, the virtues of that root in nervous disorders; and the characters which distinguish the true from the false | |
The virtues of honey in preventing many of the worst disorders : and in the certain cure of several others: particulary the gravel, asthmas, coughs, hoarseness, and a tough morning phlegm. With A particular Direction of the Manner of taking it for the Cure of Consumptions. To which is prefix'd An Account of the Origin and Nature of Honey; Its various Kinds, English and Foreign; and the Marks which distinguish them: also a Method to obtain Honey as fine in England as from any Part of the World; and the best Ways of taking it. With The Genuine Receipt for the Syrup of Capillaire as made in Italy; and for the celebrated Aristaean Confection | |
virtues of sage in lengthening human life with rules to attain old age in health and cheerfulness |