[555] Kühn, XII, 909, 916, and in vol. XIV the entire treatise De remediis parabilibus.
[556] Kühn, X, 560.
[557] Kühn, X, 1010-11.
[558] Kühn, XIII, 571-72.
[559] Kühn, XIV, 62, and see Puschmann, History of Medical Education (1891), p. 108.
[560] Kühn, XIV, 10, 30, 79; and see Puschmann (1891), 109-11, where there is bibliography of the subject.
[561] Kühn, X, 792.
[562] Kühn, XIV, 26.
[563] The meaning of the word “apothecary” is explained as follows in a fourteenth century manuscript at Chartres which is a miscellany of religious treatises with a bestiary and lapidary and bears the title, “Apothecarius moralis monasterii S. Petri Carnotensis.”
“Apothecarius est, secundum Hugucium, qui nonnullas diversarum rerum species in apothecis suis aggregat.. .. Apothecarius dicitur is qui species aromaticas et res quacunque arti medicine et cirurgie necessarias habet penes se et venales exponit,” fol. 3. “According to Hugutius an apothecary is one who collects samples of various commodities in his stores. An apothecary is called one who has at hand and exposes for sale aromatic species and all sorts of things needful in medicine and surgery.”