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Illustrations

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2017

Rohan Deb Roy
Affiliation:
University of Reading
Type
Chapter
Information
Malarial Subjects
Empire, Medicine and Nonhumans in British India, 1820–1909
, pp. viii - x
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - ND
This content is Open Access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/cclicenses/

Illustrations

  1. 1.1Photograph of a bottle of quinine bearing the label Howards and Sons, c. 1860–1910

  2. 1.2Title page of John Eliot Howard's The Quinology of the East Indian Plantations, first published in 1869

  3. 1.3Oil painting of Pelletier and Caventou discovering quinine by Ernest Board, c. 1910–1920

  4. 1.4Wood-engraving describing the gathering and drying of cinchona bark in a Peruvian forest, c. 1867

  5. 1.5Photograph of a cinchona nursery at Munsong in British Sikkim

  6. 1.6Photograph of a cinchona tree in British Ceylon, 1882

  7. 1.7A sample of Cinchona Pahudiana from Java cultivated in Nilgiris, 1877

  8. 1.8A sample of Cinchona Officinalis from Madras cultivated in Java

  9. 1.9Wood-engraving of the planting of the first cinchona tree in a new plantation in the Nilgiris

  10. 1.10Wood-engraving showing Balmadie's Cinchona Plantation Near Dolcamund, Madras Presidency, 1872

  11. 1.11Photograph of local inhabitants labouring in a cinchona plantation in British Ceylon, c. 1880–1896

  12. 1.12Photograph of local inhabitants labouring at Munsong cinchona plantations in British Sikkim

  13. 2.1Image of Albarello drug jar used for cinchona bark, Spain, c. 1731–1770

  14. 2.2Sketch with the note ‘Gleaners of the Pontine Marshes. These people suffered from malaria when working on the Marshes’, 1837

  15. 2.3Lithograph of ‘A group of people adrift in a boat, perhaps suffering from malaria’, 1850

  16. 2.4Reproduction of an engraving after M. Sand (1823–1889), ‘The Ghost of the Swamp: An Allegory of Malaria’, c. 1850s

  17. 2.5Photograph of local inhabitants engaged in the cinchona plantations in Ceylon (most probably in Peradeniya), c. 1880–1890

  18. 2.6Photograph of a group of Nepalese fishermen, containing the note ‘The fishermen are Tharos, natives of the Terai, who have the peculiarity of being proof to its malaria (which in certain seasons is deadly to anyone else)’, 1876

  19. 4.1Photograph of a cinchona tree (succirubra) at the Government Plantation at Rungbee. It contains the note ‘View of three European men sitting beneath cinchona trees’, c. 1870s

  20. 4.2Photograph of ‘Cinchona succirubra and portion of Plantation No. 5 at Rungbee near Darjeeling showing the tallest plant of C. succirubra age 2 years and 9 months. The head gardener in the picture is 5 feet 9 inches in height’, 1867

  21. 4.3Sketch of the cinchona plantations in Darjeeling, Bengal, 1872

  22. 4.4Photograph of a ridge covered with Cinchona Ledgeriana in Munsong, British Sikkim

  23. 5.1Signboard on malaria issued by the imperial postal department containing the caption ‘Quinine is the only cure for malaria’, c. 1900

  24. 5.2Advertisement of Strong iron bedstead fitted with mosquito frame, January 1900

  25. 5.3Advertisement for The Folding Hood of Mosquito Net by White and Wright, 1902

  26. 5.4Advertisement for The Mosquito House by White and Wright, 1902

  27. 5.5Advertisement for Calvert's ‘Anti-Mosquito Soap’ showing one woman covered in mosquitoes while another is free from them, c. 1890

  28. 5.6Copy of the original artwork used to create the Mosquito patch during the Korean War, c. 1950–1955

  29. 5.7A cluster of four photographs showing sanitary measures being undertaken against mosquitoes, 1910

  30. 5.8Cover page of a Bengali book by Ksitishchandra Bhattacharya entitled Moshar Juddho (War of Mosquitoes), 1922

  31. 5.9Illustration used in a Bengali book entitled Hindustani Upakatha edited by Ramananda Chatterjee. The illustration carries the note, ‘The father of the farmer engages in war with the father of the bania within the stomach of a mosquito’, 1912

  32. 5.10Photograph of British troops taking their daily dose of quinine, Salonika, July 1916

  33. 5.11Photograph of Captain Robertson Sadiya and Hospital Assistant ‘throwing quinine into the mouths of loaded coolies,’ 1911–1912

  34. 5.12Advertisement of ‘Wellcome Tabloid Quinine Bisulphate’, 1910

  35. 5.13Ephemera containing the note ‘Orange Quinine Wine, prepared according to the British Pharmacopoeia, 1898’

  36. 5.14Photograph of Buffalo sacrifice during a malarial epidemic in Mettaguda in British India, 1917

  37. 5.15Photograph of ‘Sadiya. Captain Robertson and Hospital Assistant giving quinine to Nagas’, 1911–1912

  38. 5.16Photograph of ‘Quinine distribution work, (Jhelum). Villagers being given doses of quinine’, c. 1929

  39. 6.1Colour lithograph containing the note, ‘The malaria mosquito under a spotlight’, c. 1943–53

  40. 6.2Advertisement of an anti-malarial drug ‘Baikol’ published in the Bengali magazine Ananda Bazar Patrika Saradiya, 1942

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