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E-grāmata: Garden of Medicinal Plants

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The Royal College of Physicians celebrates its 500th anniversary in 2018, and to observe this landmark is publishing this series of ten books. Each of the books focuses on fifty themed elements that have contributed to making the RCP what it is today, together adding up to 500 reflections on 500 years. Some of the people, ideas, objects and manuscripts featured are directly connected to the College, while others have had an influence that can still be felt in its work.

This, the second book in the Reflections series, focuses on the RCP's gardens and their history; important plants and doctors and others involved the gardens' development.
A Garden Of Medicinal Plants
8(4)
Dramatis Personae
9(3)
The History Of The Garden
12(8)
Ricinus communis
13(1)
Salix
14(1)
Drimys winteri
14(1)
Halesia Carolina
14(6)
Plants From The Beginning Of Time
20(10)
Platanus orientalis subsp. insularis
21(1)
Papaver somniferum
22(1)
Conium maculatum
23(1)
Afropa belladonna
24(4)
Origanum dictamnus
28(2)
Plants Illustrating The Doctrines Of Signatures And Humours
30(12)
Scrophularia nodosa
32(1)
Hepatica nobilis
33(1)
Pulmonaria officinalis
34(1)
Aconifum species
35(3)
Polypodium glycyrrhiza
38(1)
Capsicum annuum
38(4)
Plants With An Association With The College
42(6)
Fothergilla gardenii
43(1)
Punica granatum
44(4)
Plants From The College's Pharmacopoeia Londinensis(1618)
48(8)
Borago officinalis
52(1)
Calendula officinalis
53(1)
Melilotus officinalis
54(1)
Acorus calamus, Acorus gramineus
54(2)
Plants That Were Milestones In The Discovery Of Medicines
56(16)
Digitalis purpurea
58(2)
Cinchona
60(4)
Artemisia annua
64(2)
Dioscorea batatas
66(3)
Arundo donax, Hordeum vulgare
69(3)
Poisonous Plants Which Have Changed The World
72(16)
Nicotiana tabacum, Nicotiana rustica
73(3)
Aristolochia clemalitis
76(3)
Argemone mexicana
79(3)
Rhododendron yakushimanum
82(3)
Nerium oleander
85(3)
More Poisonous Plants, Uses And Abuses
88(8)
Brugmansia suaveolens
89(2)
Euphorbia charaias. Euphorbia milii. Euphorbia peplus
91(5)
Herbal Medicines
96(10)
Echinacea purpurea
98(3)
Senna corymbosa
101(1)
Vitex agnus-castus
102(4)
Plants For Treating Cancer
106(6)
Veratrum album
107(1)
Veratrum californicum
108(2)
Taxus baccata
110(2)
Plants As Sources Of Modern Medicines
112(13)
Ephedra sinica, Ephedra gerardiana
113(4)
Galega officinalis
117(2)
Valeriana officinalis
119(3)
Illicium anisatum, Illicium verum
122(3)
Bibliography 125
Dr Henry Oakeley was a psychiatrist whose main botanical interest for 50 years was in orchids, but for the last ten has been in the use of plants as medicines, from earliest times to the present day.

Jane Knowles has been in charge of the Garden at the Royal College of Physicians since 2005, after eleven years at the Chelsea Physic Garden as head of propagation and medicinal plants.

Prof Michael de Swiet is professor emeritus of obstetric medicine at Imperial College London and is particularly interested in medicinal plants and women's health. He also volunteers at the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.

Prof Tony Dayan was a neuropathologist before moving into toxicology, first in drug industry research and then in academia. His abiding scientific interest is in mechanisms of health and disease.