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(c) De diversa mole qua sanguis fluit per pulmones. (ii) De circulatione sanguinis per vas minima. (i) De circulatione sanguinis in animalibus genitis et non genitis. (k) Elementa Medicine, lib. i. cap. 21. et passim. (l) The first medical publication which distinguished this country, after Dr Pitcairne's, was that of the Edinburgh Medical Essays, in the year 1732. Vid. the article MONRO. (m) Patet (says he) medicinam esse memoriam erum quae cuilibet morbo usus ostendit suffic utilia. Nam notas non esse corporum intra venas fluentium aut confertentium naturas, adeoque sola observatione innotescere quid cuique morbo conveniat, postquam sepius eadem eadem morbo profuisse comperimus. De Div. Morbi.
one of the cities that the children of Israel built for Pharaoh in Egypt (Exod. i. ii.) during the time of their servitude. This is probably the same city with Pithomos mentioned by Herodotus, which he places upon the canal made by the kings Necho and Darius to join the Red sea with the Nile, and by that means with the Mediterranean. We find also in the ancient geographers, that there was an arm of the Nile called Padmelicus, Phatnicus, Phatnium, or Phatnicus. Bochart says, that Pithom and Raamses are about five leagues above the division of the Nile, and beyond this river; but this assertion has no proof from antiquity. This author contents himself with relating what was said of Egypt in his own time. Marsha will have Pithom to be the same as Pelusium or Darietta.