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                <text>Shows stages 2-9 in the breast cancer suffered by Mrs Broadbent of Leeds from late 1840 to early 1841. The watercolours are silhouetted to the shape of the cancerous area, and stitched together at one side so that the entire sequence can be flicked through. For stage 1 see the separate half-length portrait of her, Wellcome Library catalogue no. 665377i.&#13;
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                <text>An horrific omnium gatherum of the "heroic" medical and surgical treatments typical of establishment medicine around the time of the French Revolution. Two amputations are taking place. A friar holds a crucifix before the patient on the right. Near the middle, a woman with one exposed breast has a pair of amulets dangled before her eyes by a theurgist friar: perhaps she is portrayed as the next candidate for surgery (mastectomy). The setting is a hospital of the grandest kind: Christine Stevenson's 'Medicine and magnificence : British hospital and asylum architecture, 1660-1815', New Haven: Yale University Press, 2000, discusses the rationales in Britain of such palatial buildings&#13;
&#13;
1 drawing : pen and grey ink and watercolour over pencil ; sheet 29.5 by 43.2 cm&#13;
&#13;
Medicine vessels lower right labelled "unguent balsa" and "ung. me"</text>
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                <text>Credit: A statue of Germania whose prominent breasts have been removed in accordance with the "Lex Heinze" law on censorship. Drawing, ca. 1923. Wellcome Collection. In copyright&#13;
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&#13;
Ms. Ludwig IX 3 (83.ML.99), fol. 105v</text>
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&#13;
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&#13;
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Lieure 848-2(2)&#13;
Lieure 849-2(2)&#13;
Lieure 850-2(2)&#13;
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