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The Medicines of Katherine, Duchess of Norfolk, 1463–71

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 September 2015

Hannes Kleineke*
Affiliation:
History of Parliament, 18 Bloomsbury Square, London WC1A 0NS, UK
*
*Email address for correspondence: hkleinek@histparl.ac.uk
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Abstract

This article discusses the medicinal remedies consumed at the court of the Yorkist kings of England in the light of a lawsuit in the court of common pleas (edited in an appendix) between John Clerk, king’s apothecary to Edward IV, and Katherine Neville, Duchess of Norfolk, over the partial non-payment of the apothecary’s bills. It argues that the consumption of apothecaries’ wares in large quantities was not merely a direct result of the excessive diet of the late medieval aristocracy, but in itself represented a facet of the conspicuous consumption inherent in the lifestyle of this particular social class. The remedies supplied by Clerk over a period of several years and listed in the legal record are set in the context of contemporary collections of medical recipes, particularly a ‘dispensary’ in the British Library’s Harleian collection generally attributed to the king’s apothecary.

Type
Articles
Copyright
© The Author 2015. Published by Cambridge University Press. 

1. Introduction

A common theme in the records documenting the relationship of the late medieval medical practitioner with his patient is the latter’s reluctance to settle the physician’s, surgeon’s or apothecary’s bill.Footnote 1 A refusal to pay often lay behind complaints over a practitioner’s incompetence, as the debtor sought to justify his failure to settle his bill by the creditor’s purported failure to provide the promised (or expected) professional services or goods.Footnote 2 The practitioners perhaps worst affected by the non-settlement of bills were the apothecaries, who were particularly vulnerable on account of their long-distance relationship with their customers: whereas the physician or surgeon came into direct contact with a patient, the apothecary who supplied him with remedies did not invariably do so. Many medicinal remedies were luxury goods, made with rare ingredients, including precious metals and pearls, and the profits to be made from wealthy individuals were thus substantial, but so also were the bills run up by members of the gentry and aristocracy, which were often left unpaid for long periods of time.Footnote 3

An interesting example of such a bill accumulated over several years by a fifteenth-century noblewoman, Katherine Neville, Duchess of Norfolk, was disputed in the Westminster court of common pleas in Hilary term 1475. The document in question (edited below) does not merely demonstrate the size of the debt incurred by the duchess to her apothecary, John Clerk, king’s apothecary to Edward IV of England, but itemises the spices, confections and preparations with which he had supplied the lady’s household over a period of eight years from September 1463 to July 1471. It thus gives an indication of the range and quantity of medicinal remedies supplied to a designated patient over a specified period of time. While there is a growing literature on the medieval apothecary and his trade,Footnote 4 documents that detail the treatment prescribed for a specific individual over a clearly defined period remain extremely rare.Footnote 5 Moreover, in keeping with the duchess’s social status, her bill was a large one: according to John Clerk’s claim, she owed £18 18s. 7d. of a total sum of £27 2s. 9 $\frac{1}{4}$ d., at a time when a craftsman or labourer could expect to earn between 3d. and 8d. a day.Footnote 6 Her case thus provides valuable evidence of the full range of remedies consumed by a member of the high aristocracy, and, indeed, of the wider royal family, at the court of the notoriously gluttonous Edward IV, and sheds light on the interplay of the apothecary’s trade with the conspicuous consumption expected of the late medieval aristocracy.Footnote 7

2. John Clerk and his clients

The apothecary John Clerk ranked among the leading members of his trade. He supplied many of the higher nobility, and by letters patent of 17 February 1462 was formally appointed king’s apothecary to Edward IV.Footnote 8 Like many contemporary apothecaries, Clerk was a member of the London Grocers’ Company, and twice (in 1467 and 1475) served as its warden.Footnote 9 He did, however, also cultivate (or at least build up) connexions among the medical establishment. For much of his career he was a parishioner of the London church of St Mary Woolchurch, but by the end of his life he had moved to neighbouring St Stephen’s, Walbrook, a parish where many of London’s medical practitioners became concentrated during the fifteenth century, perhaps an indication of his growing ties in that community.Footnote 10 He was particularly close to Roger Marchall, the royal physician and noted medical writer, who appointed him an executor of his will and for whose children he later provided.Footnote 11 Indeed, Clerk was a man of some learning: he is known to have owned BL, MS Harley 273, a fourteenth-century collection of secular and religious texts, and probably also, as Peter Murray Jones and Tig Lang have argued, BL, MS Harley 1628, which contains – among other texts – the ‘dispensary’ of an apothecary supplying Edward IV and other members of the higher nobility, the very group of individuals who formed Clerk’s customer base.Footnote 12 Clerk survived into the reign of Richard III; although he drafted a will on 8 July 1479, he probably died not long before 15 March 1484, when probate was granted.Footnote 13

The circle of aristocrats and courtiers who patronised the king’s apothecary is illustrated by the ‘dispensary’ in Harley 1628. It included members of the immediate royal family, such as the king’s mother, the Dowager Duchess of York, and his siblings, the Duchess of Burgundy and the Dukes of Clarence and Gloucester, members of the higher and lesser nobility, like the Duke and Duchess of Buckingham, the Countesses of Warwick and Richmond and Lords Dynham and Maltravers, and lesser courtiers like Sir Thomas Montgomery, John Sapcotes, respectively a knight and an esquire of the body to Edward IV, and Thomas Grayson, a yeoman of the king’s chamber.Footnote 14 A striking feature of this list is the number of high-ranking ladies among whom the services of the king’s apothecary were evidently fashionable, and it is plausible that the Duchess of Norfolk was another of his customers.Footnote 15 The absence from the dispensary in Harley 1628 of any mention of the duchess, whose long-running business relationship with John Clerk is documented by the lawsuit of 1475, would seem to render the book’s attribution to John Clerk problematic, but this is not necessarily so. Not only do the personal prescriptions for named individuals contained within constitute an incomplete list of the owner’s clients, but they were added to the manuscript apparently randomly as an afterthought. Furthermore, the few that can be dated with any degree of certainty point to a date of addition between the mid-1470s and mid-1480s.Footnote 16 By this time Clerk and the Duchess of Norfolk may have parted company, perhaps on account of her unpaid bills, which may, indeed, have been one symptom of wider-ranging financial difficulties.

Katherine Neville was born, probably in the first years of the fifteenth century, as daughter of Ralph Neville, first Earl of Westmorland, and his second wife, Joan Beaufort, daughter of John of Gaunt, Duke of Lancaster, by his third wife Katherine Swynford, and was thus a niece of Henry IV and first cousin to Henry V.Footnote 17 The prolific Nevilles were adept at contracting advantageous marriages for their female offspring, and in January 1412 Katherine was married to the young Earl Marshall, John Mowbray (1392–1432), Earl of Nottingham and Norfolk, who came of age the following year. Mowbray’s premature death in October 1432 left Katherine a wealthy widow, and in view of her relative youth it is not surprising that she went on to marry (and survive) three further husbands. The first of these was Sir Thomas Strangways, in the light of his inferior social status perhaps her own choice. Equally, there is no reason to suppose that her third husband, John, Viscount Beaumont, was anything but an agreeable choice to her. They were much of an age, and he too had been widowed rather prematurely, at the age of about thirty-two. When Beaumont was killed while fighting on the Lancastrian side at the battle of Northampton in 1460, Katherine might have expected to settle down to a dignified widowhood, but any intentions she might have had were overthrown by the marriage of her nephew, Edward IV, to Elizabeth Wydeville. The new queen, as is well known, came with a horde of impecunious relatives for whom the king had to provide as best he could. The wealthy dowager duchess was singled out as bride for the queen’s second brother, John Wydeville, a young man in his early twenties. Modern views of the marriage have been coloured by the near-hysterical outrage of the chronicler known as the pseudo-William Worcester, who decried this ‘maritagium diabolicum’,Footnote 18 but we have no way of knowing what relations between the couple were like. What is clear is that Katherine’s family, above all her nephew Richard Neville, Earl of Warwick, but probably also her grandson, John Mowbray (1444–76), Duke of Norfolk, were unimpressed. Norfolk, who was about the same age as his new step-grandfather, had particular reason to feel aggrieved, since Katherine continued to hold a substantial part of the Mowbray estates in dower, and he is unlikely to have disapproved strongly of Wydeville’s summary execution at Warwick’s behest in August 1469.Footnote 19 Katherine for her part lived on for more than a decade. She is last recorded at the coronation of Richard III in 1483, and not heard of thereafter.Footnote 20

Both before and after her short-lived final marriage, Katherine, like other ladies of her social standing, maintained a house in the parish of St Martin in the Fields on the outskirts of London.Footnote 21 Here, she found herself in convenient proximity to the king’s court, when it was based at Westminster or Greenwich, and had easy access to the markets of London. Among other luxury goods, these markets supplied Katherine and her household with a range of medicinal remedies and preventative drugs. We have no way of knowing which and how many suppliers of such goods she patronised, but among them, and perhaps principal among them, was John Clerk.Footnote 22

3. The dispute of 1475

Late medieval English society was highly litigious. Men (and, in some instances, women) took their squabbles over land and property, assaults and other physical offences and payments and contractual obligations to the royal law courts on a regular basis. The records of these courts thus afford valuable insights into a broad range of events and circumstances otherwise hidden from the modern observer. At the same time, the medieval legal records, and above all those of the common law courts, are not without their problems. In the first place, the sheer volume of the surviving materials renders any quantitative analysis, other than on a very modest scale, impractical. Moreover, the surviving record of any individual case is frequently incomplete; verdicts, in particular, are rare. Other difficulties are inherent in the information recorded as well as the manner in which this was done. Crucially, what was documented were allegations and counter-allegations, rather than verified facts, and the procedural inflexibility of the common law meant that complex sets of circumstances needed to be reduced to a simple question that could be pronounced upon by a jury. Moreover, the formulaic way in which events were recorded, in keeping with the requirements of the administrative practices of the law courts, can make it difficult to tease out what had really occurred. Circumstantial detail over and above the standard formulae of the legal record may generally be taken to strengthen the likelihood that there was a factual basis to the events related.Footnote 23

A case containing such detail was that brought by John Clerk against his one-time client Katherine Neville before the justices of common pleas in Hilary term 1475. The case, enrolled in TNA, CP 40/853, rots 139–139d, has not been previously noticed by scholars, and is edited below for the first time. According to Clerk’s complaint, he had supplied to the Duchess of Norfolk spices and medicinal remedies at various times (per diversas vices) during a period of almost eight years from 7 September 1463 to 5 July 1471. For these supplies the duchess still owed him £18 18s. 7d., the balance of a greater sum of £27 2s. 9 $\frac{1}{4}$ d., only part of which she had paid.Footnote 24 The duchess denied that she owed Clerk any such debt, and the matter was committed to trial by jury. On the first possible return date, the sheriffs of London failed to make a return to the writ summoning the jury, and the record of the case ends with a renewed instruction to the same officials to produce a jury in court. The text presents the difficulties characteristic of the common law records of the period: the only known record of the case is its enrolment on the plea roll of the court of common pleas; the two parties’ claims are unsupported by any concrete evidence; and no verdict or other outcome is noted. The case may have been settled out of court, as many such disputes (including litigation between patients and practitioners) were,Footnote 25 or it may simply have petered out. Unless Katherine’s debt to her apothecary was settled by her executors, it may well have been one that Clerk’s own executors had to write off, when he himself died about a year after his unreliable customer. Yet, rather than in the fairly commonplace proceedings for debt, the real interest of the case lies in the list of remedies supplied by Clerk, which can here be linked to an individual aristocratic client, or at least her household.

4. Katherine Neville’s medicines

The medicines which Clerk supplied to the Duchess of Norfolk spanned the full panoply of the apothecary’s wares. They included ‘simples’, or individual herbs and spices like saffron, mace, turmeric, stavesacre, galingale, gentian, powdered mint, liquorice, cinnamon and sandalwood, as well as other dried flowers and herbs, but also more complex concoctions and compound preparations. There were conserves of roses, plums, crabapples and tamarinds, and a quince marmalade. More obviously medicinal preparations included various unspecified pills, sugar candies for the chest, a number of plasters (three of them explicitly for the stomach) and ointments, waters of dragonwort, hyssop, roses and honeysuckle,Footnote 26 powders, fumigations and a pomander, some of them explicitly intended as prophylactics against the pestilence. Finally, there were some rare and costly substances like the half pound of ‘mummy’, glossed as ‘Mannes fflesshe dryed’, and thus probably representing the genuine middle-eastern article,Footnote 27 and composites like ‘Manus Christi’, made from rosewater, sugar and ground pearls,Footnote 28 ‘royal paste’, a confection of sugar and honey with ginger, mace and cloves,Footnote 29 and the universal antidote, theriac, which Clerk supplied to the duchess in two varieties, ‘Diatessaron Theriac’ and ‘Great Theriac’, the latter a highly complex preparation requiring four times as many ingredients as even the simpler (but still complicated) diatessaron variety.Footnote 30

While individual herbs and spices and some of the simpler preparations like syrups, waters and ointments formed part of the apothecary’s staple wares and are found, for example, in the inventory of the early fifteenth-century London apothecary John Hexham, and a century later in that of John Amfles (or Amphylys), an apothecary at Bishop’s Lynn in Norfolk,Footnote 31 the rarer substances and more complex pharmaceutical compounds were obviously restricted to the upper end of the market. They covered the same range of remedies which Edward IV consumed in large quantities and which Clerk, and perhaps a few others of his trade, also sold to other members of the aristocracy, and were, as the dispensary in Harley 1628 indicates, often made up specially for each customer.Footnote 32 In type, and in many instances even in name, the composites sold by Clerk nevertheless correspond to standard remedies found in the medical and pharmaceutical tracts of the period, although individual prescriptions could vary. This can be demonstrated by a comparison of some of the recipes found in contemporary collections, like the dispensary in Harley 1628,Footnote 33 or BL, Harley 2378, a composite manuscript or commonplace book of possible East Anglian provenance, some of the contents of which appear to be associated with one Nicholas Spaldyng.Footnote 34 Thus, a wide variety of mixtures of aromatic herbs and flowers could be used in making pomanders,Footnote 35 while different assortments of spices gave distinctive flavours to the draughts described as ‘Hippocras’.Footnote 36 The importance of a client’s income and status is exemplified by the separate recipes in Harley 1628 for ‘dragetum regalis’ and ‘dragetum commune’, and fumigations ‘pro rege’ and ‘commune’.Footnote 37

The extensive list of Katherine’s medicines illustrates the degree to which the medical treatment of the late medieval aristocracy was part of the conspicuous consumption that characterised the lives of that class more generally. Thus, the remedies supplied to the duchess, a member of the very highest echelons of society, indeed, a great-aunt of the king and the sister-in-law of his queen, included some rare and expensive substances, and in substantial quantities. If Katherine’s medicines containing pearls were not in the same league as the concoction requiring sapphires, emeralds, coral, pearls, gold and silver prepared for her cousin Margaret, Duchess of Burgundy (arguably one of the wealthiest princesses of her day),Footnote 38 they were still beyond the reach of most of her contemporaries, and in the years of their association Clerk claimed to have supplied to her no less than 6lb 7oz of ‘Manus Christi’ and a further 12lb of unspecified ‘confections of pearls’. Equally, the duchess was supplied with the universal antidote, theriac, not only in its more common diatessaron variety, but also with the more complex and costly ‘Great Theriac’.Footnote 39 If less pricy by comparison, many of the individual spices and substances supplied by the apothecary were still expensive luxury goods imported by foreign, mostly Italian, merchants. This was true not only of the apparently genuine ‘mummy’, but also of exotic spices like cinnamon, mace, cloves, sandalwood, ginger and rhubarb,Footnote 40 and also of sugar, of which the duchess purchased the very best quality, made from the third cut of the sugar cane.Footnote 41

With the exception of the few instances where Clerk’s plea explicitly stated the purpose of a particular remedy, it is only occasionally possible to hazard a guess at the ailments for which particular preparations were prescribed, or, indeed, to be certain that Katherine was the only recipient (prophylactics against the plague might well have been shared with other members of her household). At the heart of medieval medical theory lay the concept of humoral balance, which could be disturbed by a variety of factors, principally relating to diet. Most of the ailments likely to afflict a patient were, therefore, attributed to an excess or deficiency of at least one of the four humours, which medication, along with dietary adjustments and supplements, aimed to redress. Allowing for financial circumstances, a remarkably wide range of herbs, spices, minerals and other animal and vegetable substances were employed in complex combinations to restore equilibrium according to the personal needs of each individual.Footnote 42 Particularly ‘noble’ ingredients, such as precious metals, pearls and gemstones, were prized for their perfect equilibrium by those who could afford them; those further down the economic scale had to make do with less perfect substitutes.Footnote 43 Retrospective diagnosis is further complicated by the fact that a number of very different conditions could be ascribed to the over-production or lack of one specific humour: an excess of black bile, the melancholic humour, could, for example, result in depression, various skin diseases, digestive problems or, in extreme cases, cancer or leprosy.Footnote 44 In some instances, however, it is possible to hazard a guess as to the purpose of a particular ‘simple’ or combination of ingredients, either because it was explicitly stated, or on account of the cumulative evidence of multiple remedies pointing to the same condition.

Not surprisingly, prophylactics against the plague featured large. On at least two and perhaps three occasions during the period covered by Clerk’s claims was the capital struck by epidemics. In the autumn of 1464 the Westminster law courts were suspended on account of the disease which had been rife since the previous year; three years later another plague struck during a meeting of parliament, claiming the lives of several lords and members of the Commons, and there was a further, more serious, outbreak in 1471.Footnote 45 The Edwardian court consumed supposed preventatives in considerable quantities. The dispensatory in Harley 1628 included recipes for waters, electuaries and powders against the pestilence, as well as prescriptions for remedies specifically provided for the king.Footnote 46 For Katherine, John Clerk similarly provided fumigations and a pomander, intended as protection from the miasmatic air thought to carry and spread the epidemic,Footnote 47 more than 8lb of cordial powders and over 6lb of waters explicitly against the disease, and, of course, the aforementioned theriac, the universal antidote particularly prescribed for the pestilence.

A few of Katherine’s medicines allow for some conclusions as to the state of her health. A number of the substances that Clerk supplied may point to the results of a lifetime of consuming the rich diet of a late medieval aristocrat.Footnote 48 There was a disjuncture between the recommendations of the late medieval regimina santitatis, the contemporary popularity of which is attested by the numerous surviving examples, and the active behaviour of the upper classes in the face of their physicians’ best efforts.Footnote 49 Under the terms of Edward IV’s household ordinances, the king’s physician was required to attend him at meal times and oversee his diet; the monarch, however, was – as contemporaries recorded – ‘most immoderate’ in his eating and drinking, and was even in the habit of taking emetics ‘for the delight of gorging his stomach once more’.Footnote 50 If gluttony was a particular characteristic of the late Edwardian court, it was merely an exaggerated example of noble standards of living in the period.Footnote 51 Sweetmeats, combined with the sweetened wines that were becoming increasingly popular in the fifteenth century were a common feature of the diet of noble ladies in the period. Thus in 1450 the citizens of Exeter plied Edward IV’s future mother-in-law, Jacquetta, Lady Rivers and Dowager Duchess of Bedford, with sugared wafers, spiced buns and various types of wine,Footnote 52 and the physician attending Honor, Lady Lisle, early in Henry VIII’s reign was probably not alone in advising his mistress against late-night snacks and recommending a moderate diet.Footnote 53 Among his prescriptions were occasional small quantities of marmalade, in lieu of heavier treats, and this may also have been the purpose of the ‘chardequynse’ and perhaps of the preserves of roses, plums, crabapples and tamarinds purchased from Clerk by Katherine. A common cordial taken as a digestive at the end of a probably excessive meal was the spiced wine known as ‘Hippocras’, after the celebrated Ancient Greek physician Hippocrates.Footnote 54 John Clerk sold the latter to Katherine by the gallon as a ‘potion’, and the owner of Harley 1628 supplied hippocras spiced with cinnamon to her sister Cecily, Duchess of York,Footnote 55 while the Exeter citizens rounded off Jacquetta of Luxembourg’s entertainment with a supply of hippocras made from red wine sweetened with sugar and spiced with cinnamon, ginger and long pepper.Footnote 56 Other remedies supplied to the Duchess of Norfolk that may point to digestive or related problems were the various plasters for the stomach,Footnote 57 while the preparations for the patient’s liver may also have been necessitated by the effects of an aristocratic diet, including (from a modern perspective) the regular consumption of large quantities of rich wines.Footnote 58 Nor was the king alone in ignoring his long-suffering physicians’ advice. The exasperated tone of Lady Lisle’s physician speaks vividly of her reluctance to follow his instructions, while some decades earlier the refusal of one of the canons of Gisburn priory in Yorkshire to forsake ‘unwholesome food’ and follow a regimen prescribed by his physician was pleaded in court as a justification for the practitioner’s failure to effect a cure.Footnote 59

Finally, there were among Katherine’s medicines some individual remedies that may point to specific complaints: there were the sugar candies for the chest; the stavesacre, also referred to as ‘Lice-bane’ or ‘Lousewort’, a plant known for its properties in combating body lice,Footnote 60 which was also recommended as a remedy for the toothache;Footnote 61 cinnamon, which as well as being prescribed for digestive problems was thought to heal diseased gums;Footnote 62 water of honeysuckle, which was said to ‘[sle] þe cankyr in the mouth or in þe body’;Footnote 63 and, along with waters against the pestilence, John Clerk also supplied similar preparations against the itch (pruritus).Footnote 64

5. Conclusion

The case of the Duchess of Norfolk’s dispute with her apothecary and the list of the remedies he supplied provide a vivid illustration of a number of aspects of the relationship of the late medieval aristocracy with the medical professionals of their day. In conjunction with other medical manuscripts of the period, it confirms the centrality of two concerns: the fear of epidemic disease on the one hand, and the need to combat the effects of an immoderate diet on the other. Whereas the physician of the period was concerned with preserving his patient’s health, to the aristocrat a rich diet formed part of the conspicuous consumption that was expected of him by contemporary norms, and one that he was reluctant to forego. Thus, late medieval physicians industriously drew up dietary regimina for their patients, which they – as exemplified by the obdurate canon of Gisburn – promptly ignored, only to blame their hapless medical attendants for the ill effects they suffered as a result.Footnote 65 At best, the late medieval nobleman or woman might be persuaded to moderate their indulgence by swallowing marginally less harmful foodstuffs designed to assist their digestion, such as Katherine Neville’s ‘chardequynse’ or the late-night marmalade recommended by Lady’s Lisle physician. Contemporary medical theory itself subscribed to an element of conspicuous consumption in attributing particularly beneficial qualities to costly substances such as gold, pearls and precious stones, which apothecaries ground into compound medicines for those who could afford them.

A side effect of the aristocratic lifestyle could be a chronic shortage of ready money; in contemporary terms, the Duchess of Norfolk’s tardiness in paying her apothecary’s bills was not particularly unusual. Medical practitioners, as Carole Rawcliffe has demonstrated, frequently had to wait for extended periods before their bills were settled,Footnote 66 and among the worst culprits was the king himself. Thus, by May 1475, Edward IV alone owed to Clerk the substantial sum of £283 6s. 2 $\frac{1}{2}$ d., which he would never pay; in lieu of settlement the apothecary had to be content with an exemption from the payment of customs on goods shipped from the port of London.Footnote 67 Nor was John Clerk alone in having to pursue the ageing Duchess of Norfolk for outstanding debts. About the same time, the Luccese merchant Humphrey Gentille was seeking payment of bills run up in Sir John Wydeville’s lifetime,Footnote 68 while the executors of the London brewer John Tattershall sought £26 for 156 barrels of ale at 3s. 4d. per barrel.Footnote 69 If the disappearance from the plea rolls of Clerk’s lawsuit against Katherine Neville raises the possibility that they negotiated a settlement out of court, the evidence of the duchess’s other creditors rounding on her, along with her absence from the list of later customers of the king’s apothecary in the dispensary in Harley 1628, may suggest that they parted company on less than amicable terms.

Appendix

The National Archives, CP 40/853, rots 139–139d.

In the following, common abbreviations have been silently expanded, capitalisation and the use of ‘u’ and ‘v’ standardised, and a degree of punctuation introduced. Interlinear insertions in the manuscript are indicated by angular brackets (< >), editorial interventions by square brackets ([]).

London – Katerina, Ducissa Norff’, nuper de parochia Sancti Martini in Campis in comitatu Midd’, wedowe, summonita fuit ad respondendum Johanni Clerk, civi et grocero London’, de placito quod reddat ei decem et octo libras, decem et octo solidos et septem denarios quos ei debet et iniuste detinet etc. Et unde idem Johannes per Thomam Torald, attornatum suum, dicit quod cum predicta Ducissa septimo die Septembris anno regni domini Regis nunc tercio et per diversas vices inter eundem septimum diem et quintum diem Julij anno regni Regis nunc undecimo apud London’ in parochia Beate Marie de Wolchirche in Warda de Walbroke emisset de eodem Johanne decem unceas penediarum pectoralium,Footnote 70 duas unceas olei vocati ‘oyle de Bay’,Footnote 71 duas libras et quinque unceas conservarum rosarum, prunorum, macianorum, et tamarindorum,Footnote 72 sexaginta et unam libras et undecim unceas aquarum dragance, Isopi, rosarum et capprifolij,Footnote 73 octo libras et quatuor dragmas preservativarum contra pestemFootnote 74 et pulverum cordialium, sex libras et novem unceas aquarum compositarum contra pestem et pruritum, sex libras et sex unceas diversorum implastrorum et unguentorum,Footnote 75 sex libras et septem unceas cuiusdam specie cordialis vocate ‘Manus Christi’ composite cum perlys,Footnote 76 quatuor lagenas et unam quartam potacionum vocatarum ‘Ippocrases’ specialiter compositarum, unam libram et quinque unceas suffumigacionum, novem libras et quindecem unceas Drageti Regalis,Footnote 77 duas libras prunorum damasenorum, octo libras et dimidium succadumFootnote 78 et citrinardum, octo libras et undecim unceas succarij trium cottarum,Footnote 79 unam libram et septem unceas diversarum seminum <in dragetis compositis>, sex unceas seve electuarij, unam unceam pulveris Holande, quatuor suppositorum,Footnote 80 unum librum de ‘chardequynse’,Footnote 81 et pastu regaleFootnote 82 ponderante decem libras et novem unceas, duo emplastra pro stomacho,Footnote 83 duodecim <unceas> ‘Epitimacionis’, videlicet cuiusdam aque composite ex diversis aquis et speciebus pro regione epitis,Footnote 84 quinque libras diversarum pigmentarum factarum ad modum Ippocratis, septem unceas et sex dragmas diversarum pillularum, sex libras, quinque unceas et dimidium diversorum electriorum cordialium in lozenges compositorum, duodecim libras confeccionum perlatorum, quadraginta et tres libras, quindecim unceas <et dimidium> zinziberi viridi,Footnote 85 quatuor unceas mascis,Footnote 86 dimidiam libram succarij de candi,Footnote 87 unam libram et duas unceas tiriaci magni et diatasseron,Footnote 88 duas unceas pulveris Sinamomi electi,Footnote 89 tres unceas sicci liquoricij, duas libras liquoricij, tres libras et quindecim unceas diversorum siruporum,Footnote 90 septem libras et duas unceas diversarum aquarum insimul mixtarum,Footnote 91 duas unceas pulveris mente,Footnote 92 dimidiam libram mumme vocate ‘Mannes fflesshe dryed’,Footnote 93 quindecim unceas diversorum florum et herbarum <insimul compositorum> desiccatorum, quatuor unceas pulveris Sandalorum, dimidiam libram rubberi electuarij,Footnote 94 unum pomum ambrie,Footnote 95 duas unceas de Staffizacre,Footnote 96 unum implastrum pro ventre factum cum galbano, duas unceas genciane, unam unceam termerici,Footnote 97 dimidiam unceam galangieFootnote 98 et quatuor unceas croci,Footnote 99 pro viginti et septem libris, duobus solidis, novem denarijs et quadrante solvendis eidem Johanni cum inde requisita fuisset, eadem que Ducissa de octo libris, quatuor solidis, duobus denarijs et quadrante inde eidem Johanni Clerk postea satisfecisset, dicta tamen Ducissa, licet sepius requisitus, predictos decem et octo libras, decem et octo solidos et septem denarios de predictis viginti et septem libris, duobus solidis et novem denariis et quadrante residuos eidem Johanni nondum reddidit, set illos ei hucusque reddere contradixit et ad huc contradicit, unde dicit quod deterioratus est et dampnum habet ad valenciam decem marcarum. Et inde producit sectam etc. Et predicta Ducissa per Johannem Saynton, attornatum <suum>, venit et defendit vim et iniuriam quando etc. Et dicit quod ipsa non debet prefato Johanni Clerk predictos decem et octo libras, decem et octo solidos et septem denarios, nec aliquem denarium inde, in forma qua <idem> Johannnes Clerk superius <versus> eam narravit. Et de hoc ponit se super patriam. Et predictus Johannes Clerk similiter. Ideo preceptum vicecomitibus quod venire faciant hic [rot. 139d] in octabis Purificacionis Beate Marie xij etc. Per quos etc. Et qui nec etc. ad recognoscendum etc. Quia tam etc. ad quem diem hic veniunt partes etc. Et vicecomites non miserunt breve. Ideo sicut prius preceptum est eisdem vicecomitibus quod venire faciant hic a die Pasche in xv dies xij etc. ad recognoscendum in forma predicta etc.

References

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2. See, for instance, the dispute between the London surgeon Nicholas Sax and the Southampton merchant Edmund Broke over the fee for cure of a fistula (The National Archives (Public Record Office) [hereafter TNA], C 1/42/108; C.H. Talbot and E.A. Hammond, The Medical Practitioners in Medieval England: A Biographical Register (London: The Wellcome Historical Medical Library, 1965), 229), the suit by another London surgeon, John Broun, against John Dobson, vicar of Melbourne in Cambridgeshire, whom he had treated for palsy (TNA, C 1/131/8; Talbot and Hammond, op. cit., 128), or the litigation between the surgeon John Dagvyle and Thomas Medewe, the parish priest of Aspden in Hertfordshire, over payment for various remedies (TNA, C 1/150/8).Google Scholar

3. Rawcliffe, Carole, Medicine and Society in Later Medieval England (Stroud: Alan Sutton, 1995), 160161. And cf. the substantial debt of £30 that the infirmarer of Westminster abbey owed to the apothecary Thomas Walden by 1350: Barbara Harvey, Living and Dying in England, 11501540 (Oxford: Clarendon, 1993), 84.Google Scholar

4. The classic general study by G.E. Trease, Pharmacy in History (London: Baillere, Tindall and Cox, 1964) is usefully complemented and updated by Rawcliffe, op. cit. (note 3), ch. 7. On the origins of the apothecaries’ trade in those of the early importers of spices, see T.D. Whittet, ‘Pepperers, Spicers and Grocers – Forerunners of the Apothecaries’, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, 61 (1968), 801–6; Pamela Nightingale, ‘The London Pepperers’ Guild and some Twelfth-Century English Trading Links with Spain’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, 58 (1985), 123–32 and, for the identification of early practitioners in the English provinces, the work of Leslie Matthews and T.D. Whittet published in the 1960s and 1970s. On the evolution of the apothecary’s profession see inter alia B.P. Flood, ‘Sources and Problems in the History of Drug Commerce in Late Medieval Europe’, Pharmacy in History, 17 (1975), 101–5; J.K. Borchardt, ‘Medieval and Renaissance European Apothecaries: The Apothecary Profession’, Drug News and Perspectives, 9 (1996), 372–6; Jean-Pierre Benezet, ‘Apothicaires et pharmaciens entre mobilité et sédentarité’, Revue d’histoire de la Pharmacie, 86 (1998), 397–406; Piers D. Mitchell, Medicine in the Crusades: Warfare, Wounds and the Medieval Surgeon (Cambridge: University Press, 2004), 13–4, 31–2 and passim; S.H. Smith, ‘“The Physician’s Hand”: Trends in the Evolution of the Apothecary and his Art across Europe (1500–1700)’, Nuncius, 24 (2009), 97–125. For the nuts and bolts of the apothecary’s trade, see also G.E. Trease and J.H. Hodson, ‘The Inventory of John Hexham, a Fifteenth-Century Apothecary’, Medical History, 9 (1965), 76–81; R.E. Zupko, ‘Medieval Apothecary: Weights and Measures: The Principal Units of England and France’, Pharmacy in History, 32 (1990), 57–62. On the regulation of the profession see, most recently, Volker Henn, ‘Apothekerdienstbriefe, Apothekerordnungen und Arzneitaxen: Quellen städtischer Gesundheitspolitik des späten Mittelalters’, in Rudolf Holbach and Michel Pauly (eds), Städtische Wirtschaft im Mittelalter: Festschrift für Franz Irsigler zum 70. Geburtstag (Cologne, Weimar, Vienna: Böhlau, 2011), 149–77. Specifically for the apothecaries serving the court of the medieval kings of England see G.E. Trease, ‘The Spicers and Apothecaries of the Royal Household in the Reigns of Henry III, Edward I and Edward III’, Nottingham Medieval Studies, 3 (1959), 19–52; Leslie Gerald Matthews, The Royal Apothecaries (London: The Wellcome Historical Medical Library, 1967), 1–60, and for comparison idem, ‘King John of France and the English Spicers’, Medical History, 5 (1961), 65–76.Google Scholar

5. One such example is the far shorter list of treatments provided by the London practitioner Richard Trewythian for the skinner Nicholas of Ely in 1444: Carole Rawcliffe, Leprosy in Medieval England (Woodbridge: Boydell and Brewer, 2006), 206; and Sophie Page, ‘Richard Trewythian and the Uses of Astrology in Late Medieval England’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 64 (2001), 193–228 (for Trewythian). The account is found in British Library [hereafter BL], MS Sloane 428, fol. 18v. For three years in the 1350s, the records of Westminster Abbey provide the precise recipes of the medicines made up for ailing monks by the monastery’s principal apothecary, Thomas Walden, senior: Harvey, op. cit. (note 3), 95.Google Scholar

6. Dyer, Christopher, Standards of Living in the Later Middle Ages (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), 227.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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9. The distinction between the early apothecaries and the pepperers and spicers, that is, those who traded more generally in spices, is blurred. In London, the apothecaries had apparently become sufficiently numerous to form an association of their own by the early fourteenth century, but within a few decades they were once more subsumed into a wider ‘mistery of the Grossarii, Piperarii and Appotecarii’ (Whittet, op. cit. (note 4), 802–4; Nightingale, op. cit. (note 4), passim). In the provinces, where the apothecaries were fewer in number, they often remained part of the associations of spicers and grocers throughout the medieval period (T.D. Whittet, ‘The Apothecary in Provincial Guilds’, Medical History, 8 (1964), 245–73).Google Scholar

10. Caroline Barron, London in the Later Middle Ages (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), 287, note 120. Clerk’s sales to the Duchess of Norfolk between 1463 and 1471 were said to have taken place in the parish of St Mary Woolchurch: cf. appendix, below.Google Scholar

11. For Marchall, see, most recently, Linda Ehrsam Voigts, ‘A doctor and his books: the manuscripts of Roger Marchall, d. 1477’, in Richard Beadle and A.J. Piper (eds), New Science out of Old Books: Studies in Manuscripts and Early Printed Books in Honour of A. I. Doyle (Aldershot: Scolar Press, 1995), 249–314; eadem, ‘Marchall, Roger’, in Oxford DNB, sub nomine; and also Talbot and Hammond, op. cit. (note 2), 314–5.Google Scholar

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13. TNA, PROB 11/7, ff. 62v–63r. Clerk’s family connexions in London, which may be established from his will, are of no relevance to the present discussion. The identity of his first wife, Joan, has not been established, but his second wife, Katherine, was the widow of the fishmonger William Hayes, and brought him three stepchildren by her first husband, to add to his own three children, Humphrey, John and Christiana: ibid.Google Scholar

14. For brief biographical details of these individuals, see G.E. Cokayne et al. (eds), The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom, 12 vols (London: St Catherine Press, 1910–59), vol. 1, 249–50 (Maltravers), vol. 2, 389–90 (Buckingham), vol. 4, 378–82 (Dynham), vol. 10, 826–7 (Richmond), vol. 12(2), 385, 392–3 (Warwick); J.C. Wedgwood (ed.), The History of Parliament: Biographies of the Members of the Commons House, 1439509 (London: H.M.S.O., 1936), 389–90 (Grayson), 605–6 (Montgomery), 740–1 (Sapcotes).Google Scholar

15. Another of these was Lady Katherine Moleyns, wife of Sir John Howard, one of Edward IV’s carvers, who in 1465, during what was to be her final illness, bought from Clerk unspecified medicines to the value of 20s: Anne Crawford (ed.), The Household Books of John Howard, Duke of Norfolk, 146271, 14813 (Stroud: Richard III and Yorkist History Trust, 1992), pt 1, 505.Google Scholar

16. George, Duke of Clarence, was executed in 1478; Thomas Rotherham, styled Bishop of Lincoln in the dispensary, was preferred to that see in 1472 and translated to York in 1480; Richard III appears both as king and as Duke of Gloucester; a recipe for Lady Dynham is dated expressly to 31 July 1483: Jones, op. cit. (note 12), 10, 11.Google Scholar

17. For what follows, see Rowena E. Archer, ‘Neville, Katherine, Duchess of Norfolk’, in Oxford DNB, sub nomine; Anne F. Sutton and Peter W. Hammond (eds), The Coronation of Richard III: The Extant Documents (Gloucester: Alan Sutton, 1983), 377; Cokayne et al. (eds), op. cit. (note 14), vol. 9, 606–7.Google Scholar

18. Joseph Stevenson (ed.), Letters and Papers Illustrative of the Wars of the English in France during the Reign of Henry the Sixth, King of England (2 vols in 3, London: Longman, 1861–4), vol. 2(2), [783]. The annalist was at pains to overstate further the age difference between the couple (which was certainly substantial): as Katherine’s parents did not marry until 1396, she could not have been ‘almost eighty years of age’ in 1465, as the Annales claim.Google Scholar

19. Michael Hicks, ‘The changing role of the Wydevilles in Yorkist politics to 1483’, in Charles Ross (ed.), Patronage, Pedigree and Power in Later Medieval England (Gloucester: Alan Sutton, 1979), 60–86: 68–9; J.R. Lander, ‘Marriage and Politics in the Fifteenth Century: The Nevilles and the Wydevilles’, Bulletin of the Institute of Historical Research, 36 (1963), 119–53, repr. in idem, Crown and Nobility 1450509 (Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1976), 94–126: 110–1.Google Scholar

20. Sutton and Hammond, op. cit. (note 17), 34, 167, 169, 311, 350.Google Scholar

21. Jennifer Ward, English Noblewomen in the Later Middle Ages (London and New York: Longman, 1992), 84; C.M. Barron, ‘Centres of Conspicuous Consumption: The Aristocratic Town House in London 1200–550’, The London Journal, 20 (1995), 1–16: 9–10.Google Scholar

22. Jonathan Hughes, Arthurian Myths and Alchemy: The Kingship of Edward IV (Stroud: Sutton Publishing, 2002), 197, 284; Rawcliffe, op. cit. (note 3), 164.Google Scholar

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24. It is just possible that the outstanding sum represented the bills run up during the period of the duchess’s marriage to Sir John Wydeville from January 1465 to August 1469, but no such claim was recorded in court, and in the light of the difference in the couple’s age and status it is in any event probable that Katherine maintained a household separate from that of her husband.Google Scholar

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26. These waters were probably similar to the herbal waters referred to in the Lilye of Medicynes, a Middle-English translation of Bernard of Gordon’s Lilium Medicinae, owned by Robert Broke, master of the distillatories and ‘Maker of his Excellent Waters’ to Henry VI: Linda Ehrsam Voigts, ‘The Master of the King’s Stillatories’, in Jenny Stratford (ed.), The Lancastrian Court (Donington: Shaun Tyas, 2003), 233–52: 248.Google Scholar

27. Camille, Michael, ‘The Corpse in the Garden: Mumia in Medieval Herbal Illustrations’, Micrologus, 7 (1999), 297318.Google Scholar

28. For a recipe, see Dirk Schultze, ‘Hippocras Bag, Oil of Exeter and Manus Christi: Recipes in BL Harley 1706’, Anglia, 126 (2008), 429–60.Google Scholar

29. A recipe is found in BL, MS Harley 2378, fol. 158v.Google Scholar

30. Jones, op. cit. (note 12), 7–8; Christiane Nockels Fabbri, ‘Treating Medieval Plague: The Wonderful Virtues of Theriac’, Early Science and Medicine, 12 (2007), 247–83.Google Scholar

31. Trease and Hodson, op. cit. (note 4); TNA, PROB 2/195.Google Scholar

32. Jones, op. cit. (note 12). For a small collection of medical recipes associated with the household of another late medieval noblewoman, Elizabeth Scrope, Viscountess Beaumont and countess of Oxford, at one time wife of Katherine’s stepson William, Viscount Beaumont, see Schultze, op. cit. (note 28). The preparations made by Katherine’s first husband, John Mowbray, for Henry V’s Agincourt campaign in 1415 included the acquisition of a range of medicinal remedies similar to those later consumed by his widow, among them ‘chardequynse’, rosewater, various electuaries against the pestilence and the flux, plasters and various pills: Berkeley Castle Muniments, Gloucestershire, General Account Rolls D1/1/130, m. 23. See Rowena E. Archer, ‘The Mowbrays, Earls of Nottingham and Dukes of Norfolk, to 1432’ (unpublished DPhil thesis: University of Oxford, 1984), ch. 5, and eadem, ‘Preparing for Agincourt’: The Accounts of John Mowbray, Earl of Nottingham and Earl Marshal’, forthcoming. I am grateful to Dr Archer for drawing this document to my attention.Google Scholar

33. Jones, op. cit. (note 12), passim.Google Scholar

34. The manuscript has most recently been discussed by M.C. Jones, ‘Vernacular Literacy in Late-Medieval England: The Example of East Anglian Medical Manuscripts’ (unpublished PhD thesis: University of Glasgow, 2000), 130–4. Some of the recipes within are printed by George Henslow, Medical Works of the Fourteenth Century (London: Chapman and Hall, 1899), 74–122.Google Scholar

35. BL, MS Harley 1628, ff. 14v, 35v, 68v, 155; MS Harley 2378, fol. 168v.Google Scholar

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37. BL, MS Harley 1628, ff. 2v, 14v, 35v, 98v, 156.Google Scholar

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40. For the various imported commodities and the prices they commanded in mid-fifteenth-century London, see Helen Bradley (ed.), The Views of Hosts of Alien Merchants, 1440–4 (Woodbridge: London Record Society 46, 2012), 6, 7 (saffron, mace), 6, 10, 12, 14 (green ginger), 6, 11, 16 (cinnamon), 11 (cloves), 11, 16 (ginger), 19, 40, 48 (sandalwood), 25, 41, 55 (sugar candy), 26 (rhubarb), 31, 38, 56 (galingale), 107 (rose water), 107 (damsons), 134 (liquorice). In 1471 the East Anglian gentlewoman Margaret Paston, who was herself interested in medicine, instructed her son, John III, to procure for her in London as much sugar and dates as half a royal (5s.) would buy, and to let her know the prices that commodities like pepper, cloves, mace, ginger, cinnamon, almonds, rice, galingale and saffron commanded in the capital: Davis, op. cit. (note 39), vol. 1, no. 209A.Google Scholar

41. Bradley, op. cit. (note 40), 24, note 57.Google Scholar

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44. Rawcliffe, op. cit. (note 5), 64–72.Google Scholar

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55. BL, MS Harley 1628, fol. 98.Google Scholar

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57. But note that in 1479 the Stonor correspondent Thomas Betson was treated for an unspecified but potentially fatal illness by a physician named Brinkley with ‘plasters to his hede, to his stomake, and to his bely’: Christine Carpenter (ed.), Kingsford’s Stonor Letters and Papers, 1290483 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996), 344.Google Scholar

58. Medieval medical theory did not recognise the harmful effects of alcohol on the liver in the same way as modern science. The liver was regarded as the second digestive organ after the stomach, where the food, processed by the stomach and intestines, was transformed into the humours. Complaints of the liver were thus regarded as essentially digestive in nature. See eg. Margaret S. Ogden, ‘Guy de Chauliac’s Theory of the Humours’, Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences, 24 (1969), 272–91: 275–6.Google Scholar

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62. Freedman, Paul, ‘The medieval spice trade’, in Pilcher, J.H. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Food History (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012), 324340: 329.Google Scholar

63. BL, MS Harley 2378, fol. 151.Google Scholar

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65. Rawcliffe, op. cit. (note 1), 76.Google Scholar

66. Ibid., 74–5; Lang, op. cit. (note 12), 97.Google Scholar

67. TNA, C 76/159, m. 16.Google Scholar

68. TNA, C 1/15/311.Google Scholar

69. TNA, CP 40/854, rot. 151d. Fifty-four of these barrels were said to have been purchased on 10 April 1465, the remaining 102 barrels on 4 October 1469.Google Scholar

70. Sugar candies for the chest. A recipe for ‘Penydes’, made with sugar, water and egg whites, is found in BL, MS Harley 2378, ff. 157v–158r (Henslow, op. cit. (note 34), 121–2).Google Scholar

71. A recipe is found in BL, MS Harley 2378, fol. 120r (Henslow, op. cit. (note 34), 105).Google Scholar

72. Roses, plums, crabapples and tamarinds. For a recipe for a conserve of roses, see BL, MS Harley 2378, ff. 165v–166r.Google Scholar

73. Dragonwort, hyssop, roses and honeysuckle. Water of dragonwort was said to ‘sle the wormes $\text{w}^{\text{t}}$ inne’ a man, while water of honeysuckle ‘sleth þe cankyr in þe mouth or in þe body’: BL, MS Harley 2378, ff. 150v–151.Google Scholar

74. A recipe containing scabiosa, pimpernel, common tormentil, smearwort, bolus armenicus, terra sigillata, theriac, conserve of roses, sugar and gold leaf is found in BL, MS Harley 1628, fol. 96v.Google Scholar

75. Recipes for various ointments are found in BL, MS Harley 1628, ff. 89v–96r and MS Harley 2378,ff. 151r–152r.Google Scholar

76. A confection made from rosewater, sugar and ground pearls. For a recipe, see Schultze, op. cit. (note 28).Google Scholar

77. Recipes are found in BL, MS Harley 1628, ff. 14v, 98v.Google Scholar

78. Candied fruits.Google Scholar

79. Ms coctarum. Presumably sugar of the third cut (of the sugarcane), the highest quality sugar: Bradley, op. cit. (note 40), 24, note 57.Google Scholar

80. A composite powder, here apparently of four ingredients. For recipes see BL, MS Harley 1628, ff. 68v, 156v.Google Scholar

81. A quince marmalade. For a recipe, see BL, MS Harley 2378, fol. 161r–v. In November 1452 Margaret Paston asked her husband John to send her a supply of ‘chardeqweyns’ from London, ‘for the eyeres be not holsom in this town’: Davis, op. cit. (note 39), vol. 1, no. 144.Google Scholar

82. A confection of sugar and honey with ginger, mace and cloves. A recipe is found in BL, MS Harley 2378, fol. 158v.Google Scholar

83. For a recipe for a plaster for the stomach made of wheat bread, cumin, wormwood, mint and rose leaves, see BL, MS Harley 2378, fol. 28r; another recipe is found in MS Harley 1628, fol. 54r–v.Google Scholar

84. Perhaps a composite water for the liver (Lat. epar, epatis). BL, MS Harley 1628, fol. 32 has a recipe for an electuary ‘contra lapidem et pro epate’. But note that Matthews, Royal Apothecaries, op. cit. (note 4), 48 identifies ‘epithemata’ as a removal of the skin.Google Scholar

85. Green ginger, a sweet and sour ginger preserve. For a recipe, see BL, MS Harley 2378, fol. 162r–v.Google Scholar

86. Mace.Google Scholar

87. For a recipe, see BL, MS Harley 2378, ff. 160v–161r.Google Scholar

88. Diatessaron theriac, a universal remedy against poison, but also recommended for stomach or liver trouble: Getz, op. cit. (note 1), 151–2. Recipes for both diatessaron and ‘great’ theriac (the latter including four times as many ingredients) are found in BL, MS Harley 1628, ff. 88v–89r.Google Scholar

89. Cinnamon.Google Scholar

90. For recipes for a variety of syrups, see BL, MS Harley 1628, ff. 79v–84v. A range of syrups was among the stock of John Hexham: Trease and Hodson, op. cit. (note 4) 79.Google Scholar

91. Among the goods of John Hexham were no fewer than eighty glass bottles with various unspecified waters: Trease and Hodson, op. cit. (note 4), 79.Google Scholar

92. Mint.Google Scholar

93. A gum prepared from Egyptian mummies, used for treating the abdominal area: Getz, op. cit. (note 1), 343.Google Scholar

94. Presumably an electuary of rhubarb.Google Scholar

95. A pomander, against the pestilence. Recipes are found in BL, MS Harley 1628, ff. 14v, 35v, 68v, 73v, 155r and BL, MS Harley 2378, fol. 168v.Google Scholar

96. Stavesacre (Delphinium staphisagria).Google Scholar

97. Ms termeriti.Google Scholar

98. Galingale.Google Scholar

99. Saffron.Google Scholar