Figures
12.1A true bill (1603). The Bodleian Libraries, University of Oxford, Firth. b.15. Image attribution CC-BY-NC 4.0
12.2The upper part of The Red-Crosse (1625). © British Library Board, General Reference Collection C.20.f.5.(69)
12.3A section containing statistical analysis in LONDONS LORD HAVE MERCY UPON US (Anon. 1665b). © British Library Board, General Reference Collection 74/C.20.f.4.(123)
12.4The Mourning-Cross (1665). Guildhall Library, City of London
12.5The General Bill of Mortallity (1666). Harvard Library. Public domain mark
14.1Correlations between the layered structures of medication and medical communication (sixteenth and seventeenth centuries)
14.3The numerical distribution of persuasive phrases in the recipe collections
14.5The distribution of persuasive phrases in recipes included in recipe collections
14.6The frequency of categories related to persuasion in Ars medica and in the recipe collections
15.1Variety of persuasion: percentage of available persuasion indicators / recipe
15.2Percentage of recipes with attitude, booster, and evidential markers
15.3Percentage of recipes with engagement markers, code glosses, and hedges
15.4Percentage of recipes with modal verbs must, shall (obl.), and may
15.5Percentage of recipes with modal verbs shall (fut.), will (fut.), and efficacy phrases