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A04527 The treasury of healthe conteynyng many profitable medycines gathered out of Hypocrates, Galen and Auycen, by one Petrus Hyspanus [and] translated into Englysh by Humfre Lloyde who hath added therunto the causes and sygnes of euery dysease, wyth the Aphorismes of Hypocrates, and Iacobus de Partybus redacted to a certayne order according to the membres of mans body, and a compendiouse table conteynyng the purginge and confortatyue medycynes, wyth the exposicyo[n] of certayne names [and] weyghtes in this boke contayned wyth an epystle of Diocles vnto kyng Antigonus.; Thesaurus pauperum. English John XXI, Pope, d. 1277.; Llwyd, Humphrey, 1527-1568.; Diocles, of Carystus. Epistola de secunda valetudine tuenda. English.; Hippocrates. 1553 (1553) STC 14651.7; ESTC S107816 127,259 448

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convulsyon shall shortly folow thei which haue swellyng in theyr backes before they be xiiii yere old comyng of shortnesse of brethe or a sore cough shal shortly dye If it chance a drōken man sodenly to fal spechlesse he shall shortlye dye of a conuulsyon excepte eyther he fall to an agew or els he receyue his spech agayne at the houre when the surfyt is digestyd They which sodenly ar taken w t paynes in the head therwyth lose theyr speche route they dye shortly if they be not taken w t an agew Whosoeuer hath his braynes hurt any way doth sodēly lose his spech ¶ Of bloud spyttynge Capi. xxi YOnge men be chieflye troubled w t spittyng of bloud consumptyons hote feuers and the fallynge Euyll The spyttel in a continual Feuer beinge wane of colour bloudy stinkyng or cholericke is an euel tokē He that spitteth frothy bloud is diseasyd in the lyghtes If he that spitteth bloud spit therwith al filthye matter it is an euyll sygne To vomit bloud w tout an agew is helthful but in an ague peruicious ¶ Of the pleurisye Capi. xxii IF in the beginnyng of a Pleurysye the pacyent vse to spit it shortneth the disease but yf it chance afward it prolongeth the paynes The Northwynd blowing a long season to geder engendreth colykes coughes and pleurisyes Pleurisyes peripeunomyes rewmes and coughes do chiefli raygne in the wynter If he whiche hath the pleurisie be not purged in .xiiii. dayes the fluxyon wyl change to matter The pleurisy once changed to matter if the paciēt be not purged with in fourty dayes after the brekinge furth of the matter he shall fal to a consumptyon A sodeyne laxe folowing a pleurysie or a peripeunomy is verye peryllouse They whose belchinge smellith ●umwhat sharpe or tarte be not geuen to the pleurisye The frenesye in a peripeunomye is an euil token Whosoeuer hauinge filthy matter in the voyd place of the stomake or hauing the hydropsy is lāced or brēned yf all the matter or water issue furthe it is present death ¶ Of the consumpsion or ptisike Cap. xxiii AUtume or heruest is very yuill to thē which be in a consumption A drye somer with muche northewynd and a moyst heruest w t southwyndes do engendre in the wynter folowynge coughes and rewmes to dyuerse consumptyons In consumptions purge downeward and vpward They whiche be betwixt .xviii. .xxv. be chieflye troubled with the ptisike If his spittell which hathe a consumpsition beinge cast vpon coles do stincke and the heare fall of his heade it is a signe of death A sodeyne laxe to him that is in a consumptyon and his heare fall o● is deadly Mylke is vnholsome to thē whiche haue the headake or that be syke of any feuer and to thē which hau● noyse and wynde in the hyer parte of ther belyes and that haue cholerike decoctions in hote feuers or y t haue lost muche of theyr bloude of the contrarye parte it is good to such as haue a consumption wythout an agew and also it may be ministred to them which haue agewes long tyme if none of the abouesayd tokens do appere to such as haue bene longe seke of a consumption Aptisike or laxe with spittynge of fylthy matter yf the spittinge cease is deadly ¶ Of the dispositions of the hert Ca. 24. GReat brennynge in the stomake prickynge about the h●rt is an euil token in an agew They which lose theyr strength of ●entymes wythout manifest occasiō●hall dye sodenly ¶ Of the Pappes Capi. xxv IF the Pappes of a woman whi●h is w t child of two do waxe lyttel ●he shall lose one child and if it be y e right Pappe it is a man childe and if it be the lyft a woman If a woman that neyther is with child nother hath brought furthe a child haue milke in her pappes she is past her Floures Bloude drawing to the pappes of a woman is a signe of the frenesy If thou wilt stoppe the floures of a woman put a great ventose vpō her pappes Muche mylke yssuyng out of the tetes of a woman y t is with child betokeneth the child to be very weake and feble but if the pappes be hard the child is strong and helthful Lyke as the decreasing of the pappes is a signe of the destructyon of the child so the hardnes of the same signifieth great paynes in the pappes legges knees or eyes and the lyfe of the child Of the stomake Cap. xxvi THe stomacke is most hote in the wynter and springtyme and then also the slepes be longest Men can not wel away w t much meat in the somer and herueste but meanly in the spring and best of all in the wynter In all dyseases to be stedfast of mynd and to be content wyth such thinges as be mynystred to hym is a laudable sygne but the contrarye is very euyl Drynke of wyne doth take away hunger If he whiche goeth very dry to bedde steppe it is good If they which haue certayne murmuryng and wynd in theyr belyes haue greate paynes in the loynes they shal haue moyst deiections if y e wind do nether com furth nor great multitude of vryne and al these do chance in feuers If in a laxe or vomyt suche thinges be purged as oughte to be purged it doth ease the paciēt and it is nothing greuouse but if no it chaūceth contrary Let suche as can not easly vomit be purged downewarde but not in the somer In all kynde of diseases if blacke choler be purged vpward or downewarde wythout a medicyne it is perillouse In the paynes of the small guttes callyd yl●aca vomytynge yeskynge convulsyon or dotynge be euyl A convulsion and yeskyng after a great purging ar to be fearyd A sodeyne and voluntary vomiting healeth hym that hath had a longe laxe Yeskynge is good to him whiche hath a heate swelling in the liuer ¶ Of the diseasys in the liuer Capi. xxvii AN agew taketh away y e grefe and paynes in the lyuer A wounde in the braynes hert midrife smal guttes stomake or lyuer is deadly If he whose lyuer mattreth be brēnid and therout issue pure and whit matter he shal eskape but if it be lik dregges he shall shortly dye Many diseases proper to y e somer do chance in haruest as quartaines and Hydropsyes engendryd in the splene If he whiche hath the dropsye be woundyd it is harde to hele hym Whosoeuer hath grypinges about the hauel and paynes in the loynes and cannot be helped bi purgatiōs or otherwise shal fal to a dry hidropsye The coughe goinge before the hidropsye is euyl but in the hydropsy much worse If they which he splenetike haue a blody flux which wil long continewe they fall to the hydropsye or theyr meat shal cume throughe thē vndygestyd and so they dye A bloudy fluxe an hidropsy or madnesse after a frenesy are laudable Whoso haue theyr lyuer full of water and it breake downwarde to the bely it is death If
he that hath an agew be taken wi●h the yelow iandes y e .vii. the .ix. the .xi. or .xiiii. day it is laudable yf the right side waxe not hard but if it do it is contrary An agew taketh away the paines vnder the syddes yf it be withoute great heate and swellyng ¶ Of the gaule and splene Capi. xxviii IF the yelow Iaundes chance in an agew before the seuenth day it is euyl They whiche haue the yelow iandes be not ful of wynd If ther lyuer whyche haue the yelowe ye iandes be hard it is an euil sygne A bloudy flux is good to th●● y ● be splenetyke ¶ Of al kynd of fluxyons Cap. x●●● IN a laxe dyuerse kyndes of 〈◊〉 be good except they change to 〈◊〉 as be euyll Blacke sieges lyke to fylthy b●●ude bein● voluntary be wounder●●●l euyl wh●rther they be w t an 〈◊〉 or w tout an agew and y e de●ker to our they haue the worse they be but yf these sieges com throughe a p●rgacion they be more laudable 〈◊〉 althoughe they be of diuerse coloures the be not euyl To haue a siege of playne m●●●●cholye or to perbreake the same in y ● beginnyng of any disease is deadly Whosoeuer is brought weake ether by some greuouse disease or siknes of longe contynuāce or by woūdes receyued or eny other waye and thervpon haue a syege of melancholie like to blacke bloud he shal doutlesse dey the day after A bloudy fluxe begynnynge with a melancholike siege is deadly Lytle peaces ●f fleshe appearinge in a bloudye sie●e be tokens of present death Uayne desyre to the stole in a woman w t child killeth the child Tart or sharpe belching sodenlye chancing to hym whose meate cometh throughe him indigestid is veri good In lōg continuāce of a bloudye flux to absteine frō meate is veri euyl if it be w t an ague much wors A bloudy flux is good to such as be splenetike A sodayne bloudy fluxe after a sincer or cleane siege is to be fearyd If a great laxe chance in a whyte morfewe it taketh away y e disease Frothy sieges in a fluxe do declare the flegme to come from the head It is an euell token in a sharpe agewe to haue a convulsion or painful gripinges in the bely Paynes in the hyer partes of the bely be more gentle of leasser perill then they whiche be in the lower parte If he whiche hath the strangurye be takē with the paynes in the smal guttes callyd iliaca he shall dye w t in seuen dayes excepte a feuer take hym with muche flux of vryn ☞ Of the fundament Ca. xxx IF the Hemorrhoydes chaunce to such as be melancolike mad or frentike it is laudable If he that hath longe tyme had the hemorrhoydes be healyd not one left open it is to be feared least he fall to a consumptyon or hidropsye The hemorrhoydes be very good to such as haue a melācholike madnesse or great grefe in the raynes ¶ Of the disposicyon of raynes Capi. xxxi THey which haue the paynes in the raynes after .xl. yeres of age can not be healyd They whose vryne is full of grauel be seke of the stone eyther in the raynes or in the bladder Dyseases in the raynes and bladder are skant curable in old men Lytle bladders or bubles in a mās vryne do betoken paynes in the raynes and longe diseasys The hyer part of the vryne fattye thicke is a sygne of paynes in the raynes and sume greuouse disease If the aboue sayd tokens appeare in suche as be seke in the raynes also haue sore paines in the muscles of y e backe if the paynes be inwarde it signifieth an apostem in the inner partes but if they be outward the apostem shalbe ther also Much flegme conteyned betwixt the stomacke and the midrife hauīg no way to the bely is sone dissoluid if it issue by the vaynes to the bladder and thence furth in vryne ¶ Of the diseases in the bladder Cap. 32. IN moyst and wete season longe agewes fluxes rottenesse y e falling euyl the squinancy and the palsye do cheflye raygne but contrarye in dry seasons cōsumptions blearnes goutes strāguryes bloudy fluxes Children be often greued w t paynes in the throte and fallinge of the iawes wormes in the bely stranguryes Old men haue moost comenlye these diseasys shortnesse of brethe rewme the coughe the strāguri difficulty of vryne goutes daselinge in the head paynes in y e raynes palses in theyr bodies out of iust temperanse y ● ytche watchinges w t moystnesse in the bely eyes and nosthriles dulnesse of syght and hering If his water that is seke of an Ague be litell in quantitie thicke and ful of crūmes th●rvpō his vryne folowe much in quantitie and thine it is very good Whosoeuer in an ague hath his water troubled lyke to the vryne of an oxe or cowe hath or shortly shall haue the headake In such diseasys as shalbe endyd the seuenth daye ther shall appeare in the pacyentes vryne a red cloude the fourth daye with other reasonable tokens Uryne whyte and cleare is not laudable and especially in them whych be frentike or do●ing They which be lyke to haue an apostem in theyr ioyntes be deliuerid therof by much vryne white thick as that which cometh from such as haue ben iiii dayes seke of an ague Bloud or matter in the vrine doth declare vlcers and biles eyther in y e raynes or blad●er Lytell peces 〈◊〉 fleshe and heares in the vryne co●●●rom the raynes Contentes lyk● branne in y e vrine signifye a Pocke or Scabbe in the bladder They which p●sse bloud haue a vayne broken in th●●●ynes If they which 〈◊〉 bloud or cromes or els hau●●he ●tranguri if the paynes be bene●h the beli about the share the disease is in the bladder Grauell in the vryne betokeneth y e stone in the bladder He that pisseth bloude or matter he in whose vrine skales do appere or the water haue a strōg smel hath vlcers in the bladder Whoso hath pustules or welkes in his yarde and if they breake and the matter runne oute they shalbe shortly hole To pisse muche in the night dothe betoken a lytlel siege The strangury chanceth to that parson which hath a hote swellinge in the fundament or matrix and to hym whose reynes do matter yesking euer foloweth the heate swellyng in the lyuer Diseases in the raynes and blader are hard to heale in old men Contētes in the botome of the vrine lyke vnto thicke branne signify the disease longe to continue If the water do appeare vnlike of substance it betokeneth great mystemperāce for diuersitye of humors within the body Drinking of wyne healeth y e strāgurye and hym y t cannot holde hys water it is also good to let bloud of the inner vaynes about y e ancle ¶ Of the membr●s of generatyon in men Capi. xxxiii LYkewyse in men eyther for the raritie of
noyouse to the synowes the bones y e teth the braines the mary in the backe vnto those al hote thynges be profitable and good A sodeyne Feuer healeth y ● crāpe A convulsyon after sleape in an ague is to be feared To be short breathyd in an ague is the signe of a convulsion A convulsyon or gripinges in the bely in sharpe agues be very euil A convulsyon after the drynking of hellebore is deadly To haue a convulsyon with a sore wounde is death A conuulsyon is perillouse to him that hath blede muche A convulsyon or yeskynge after a great inadityon be very euell If a dronken man lose his speche haue a cōuulsyō he shal shortly die A convulsion cometh of immoderate fulnesse or emptinesse so doth yeskynge Yeskinge vomiting a convulsiō or m●dnesse coming vpon hym y t is payn●d in the smal guttes are to be fearyd The crampe or madnesse w t much watching is very perillouse He that is taken with a sore convulsyon yf he lyue foure dayes shall e●kape A convulsyon after a purgatyon is very perillouse If a yonge man beinge fleshy be taken wyth a distension of the synowes in the Somer tyme. let hym be washed wyth cold water for y e doth encrease the heate and y e heate dothe asswage hys paynes In sore woundes a convulsion or distencyon be very euyll ¶ Of the drousynes in the head Capi. ● TO dote or to be astonied after a blowe or stripe is very euil ¶ Of the membres being set awrye Capi. xi IN a contynuall agew if the lyppes the eyes the browes or the nose stand awry so that the pacyent can not heare or see and be therwith very weke he shal dye shortly after ¶ Of the disposicion of the eyes Capi. xii OF the tymes of y e yere if it chāce the winter to be drye and y e northwind to blowe the springtime moyst with the southwynd y e somer folowing there shal many be troubled with blernesse but of the cōtrary part if the wynter be moyst wyth muche southwind the springtime drye with northwindes men shalbe likewise vexed with dry blernisse If in autune or Heruest there be muche drought and northwyndes it shal do good to moyst persōs and women but other it shall vexe wyth drye blernes When the tymes of the yere be dry m●ny shall haue bler eyes The southwynde blowinge dayly for a season wyl engender daselinge in the eyes Diseases of the eyes do cheflye rainge in somer In a continuall agewe if the eyes be wrythen a syde and the pacyent weake and cannot see it is a pr●sent token of death In all kyndes of Feuers and other diseases voluntarye teares be laudable ▪ but if they flowe contrary to the pacyentes mynd they be to be fearyd It is very good ▪ if he that is diseasyd in y e eyes be taken w t a sodē lax All dyseasys in the eyes be healyd eyther by drinking of swete wynes or with baths of whote water or lettyng of bloude or with a purgaciō If a man be seke marke hys eyes when he slepyth for yf anye whyte thynge appeare betwixt the eye liddes and the pacient haue no greate laxe nor receyued any purgatiō before is a terrible and deadly sygne ❧ Of the disposion of the eares Capi. xiii WHosoeuer vseth to voyde choler and in y e meane while waxeth defe the laxe stoppeth and of the contrary part a sodeyne lax deiectyon of choler taketh awaye defnesse To waxe defe in a continuall agew the pacyent beinge weake of body is a token of death Uoluntary bleding at the nose or a sodaine lax dothe take awaye the de●nes which comyth of an ague ☞ Of the dysposition of the nose Capi. xiiii THey whose nostrilles be ful of superfluouse moystnesse and haue also theyr nature or seade very watrish be not helthful of body and they that be contrary enioy continual helth Horsnesse and continuall fluxion of sneuil in old men do in no meās waxe rype A dry Somer wyth often northwynd and a moyst Haruest wyth y e southwind doth engendre in y e next wynter the heade ake y e coughe horsenesse and much fluxyon of rewme by the nosthrils but yf the Heruest be drye and the northwynd blowe the rewme shall endure muche longer Old men be often greuyd with fluxyon of rewme and y e coughe Muche rewme conteyned in the stomake is changed within twenty days to playne matter All cold thinges as snow and yse do engender distillatyons ¶ Of the bledinge at the nose Capi. xv OLd men and children do ofte blede at the nose If it chance him that is seke of an agewe to blede he shall haue a laxe in the decrease of his feuer He that waxeth deffe throughe an agewe bledithe at the nose shal recouer his hearinge Who so is like to haue an apostem in ani of his ioyntes and in the meane while bleadeth at the nose is sure to recouer his helth If a woman whose floures be stopped do chance to blead at the nose it is a good sygne Bleding at the nose or eares taketh away the headake To haue the crampe or to dote while the nose bledeth is an euyll sygne ¶ Of nesing Capi xvi IF a woman hauynge the mother or beīg in paynes of child birth chance to nese it is very good Nesinge taketh away belchinge All nesing that cometh of the head is caused eyther of the brayne being hote or the empti place of the heade being very moyst for the ayre with in conteined brekith out throughe a narowe passage and therby causeth the noyse ¶ Of the disposions of the mouth tong Capi. xvii YOnge childrē and infantes be often troubled wyth vlcers in the mouthe and to muche vomytinge Of al other men they which lispe be most troubled with mani sieges and laxes ¶ Of the diseases in the teth Capi. xviii IT is the sygne of contynuance in an ague to haue much slimy matter about the tethe When the teeth begin to grow children are payned with feuers crampes and ytchinge of the gummes ▪ espicially in the growyng of the gūme teethe ¶ Of the grefes in the throte Ca. xix OFtentimes diseases propre for the somer season do chance in autume as the squinancy shortnes of breth and the paynes in the flape that couereth the wynde pype A suffocatyon chancinge to hym that hath an agew and no swelling remayne in the throte is a token of dethe If the squinancye fal downe to the lyghtes and the pacient lyue seuen dayes the fluxion wil turne to matter If he that hath the squinancy do swell in the neckei tis a good token for the fluxion is dryuen outward He that hath an agew not beinge able to turne hys necke neyther to swallowe his meate w tout a manifest swelling in the throte shal short lye dye ☞ Of the brest and lyghtes Cap. xx TO haue the brethe somwhat stopped in an agew is an euyll token for a
the bodye the spirites goo out so that the seede cā not come to his due place or for the thiknesse therof the humour cannot get furthe neyther wax hote for the coldnes and so it heapeth in y t place or els y e same thyng cometh of great heate A bone a gristel a synow and the the toppe of the yard beinge cut wil nether grow nor ioyne together ¶ Of the membres of generation in women Ca. xxxiiii IF the wynter be moyst and warme the southwind blow the sprīg time dry w t northwyndes those women that be then with child shall of euery lyght occasyon lose theyr children the children then borne shalbe weake and seckely wherfore they shal eyther dye strenght w t or els al theyr lyfe tyme be fayntye and full of diseasys If a woman with child must ned● be purged let that be from y e fourth moneth to the seuenth yet those sūwhat leasse but before foure after seuin let thē receyue no purgacions The suffumigation of swete odurs doth bring furth the floures is good for dyuerse other thinges if it dyd not cause y e head to be drousi Lettynge of bloud dothe kyll the child but the nyer y e byrthe the more perillouse it is If a woman w t child be taken with any greuouse disease it is death The fluxyon of the floures taketh a way vomiting of bloud If the floures stoppe it is good to blede at the nose It is perillouse for a woman with child to haue a great laxe Nesynge is very good to her that hath the moder or that trauaylethe of childbyrth She whose flours be euil colourid or that kepe not theyr comyn cour●● had nede to take a purgatyon If thou woldest know whether ● woman hath conceyuyd or no geu● her water and hony myngled together to drinke whē she goeth to slepe and if she fele grypinges and paynes in her belye she is with childe i● she fele non she is not A woman whiche hath conceuyd a male is well colouryd but if it be a female it is contrary Those women whiche be very smal and leane before they conceiue shal lose one child before thei wax grose Those wemen which beinge meane of body do lose theyr children the secōd or thyrd moneth without manifest occasyon haue the closures of theyr wombes ful of fylthy matter wherfore they cannot susteyne the weyght of y e child but sodēly breke They whiche be verye fat cannot conceyue tyl they wax leane for the ●outh of theyr matrix is stopped ●p with fatnesse If thou wylt prouoke the floures ●ause the woman to nese and in the ●eane while stop her nose mouth They whiche be wyth childe haue ●heyr wombes closed vp If a woman with childe be taken wyth an agew and waxe very hote without manifest occasion she hath great paynes in childebyrthe or els ●he loseth her child with perill of her ●wne lyfe If a convulsyon and fayntnesse ●ake a womā in y e tyme of her flou●●s it is perillouse If the floures haue to much yssue ther do ensue dyuerse diseases yf they be stopped ther foloweth great grefe in the wombe If a woman hath not conceyued thou wilt know whether she shal conceyue or no ▪ let her be well coueryd with clothes beneth let a suffumigacion be made of hote things and odoriferous for if the smel com vp throughe her body to the nose mouth be sure y t she is not barayne of hir selfe If a woman with childe haue her flours it is impossible y e child shuld be helthfull The floures stopping w t an ague or great cold and the woman lothe her meate say she is wyth child The matrix cold and grosse or veri moyst is not apt to conceyue for y e seed is therin quenched distroyed Likewise if it be dry and very hote for thē is the seed lost for lacke nourishment but they whose matrix is of a meane temperature be plētifull do often conceyue if y u wilt know more rede aboue in y e disposion of y e Pappes ¶ Of the disposyon of the outward membres Capi. xxxv IF two great grefes do happen in diuerse mēbres at one tyme the gre●ter taketh away the leasse Paynes in the knees and loynes or grypynges in the bely coming vpō hym that hath non agew do sygnifye that he shulde be purged downe warde In paynful feuers apostemes do often happen about the knees and chekes The siknesse shall chiefly remaine in that place which was greuyd before it beganne The ioyntes of such as haue had a feuer for a long season shal ake be ful of pustules Great paynes swellynges in the ioyntes w t any brekinge or issue do signifie that the goute or crāpe shal folow and many be remedied wyth much washyng w t cold water for y t doth extenuat the humor and take a way the paynes for a meane colde extinguisheth Letting of bloud doth vtterly take a way such paynes as begynne at y e backe thēce remoue to the armes Enuches be neuer bald nor gouty Women haue neuer the goute as longe as they haue theyr floures A childe hath neuer the goute vntil he hath knowen a woman All kynde of goutes if the inflāmation be quenchid wythin fourty dayes do end All goutes do chieflye reygne in springtyme and haruest If the hippe bone fall out of his place after a long sciatica ther shall muche matter folowe or the legge will consume away and the pacient shall halt except he be brennyd ¶ Of the Feuers and Agues Capi. xxxvi THe siknesse it self the time of y e yere do playnly declare the tyme of the fyttes the chefe time of the disease the order in y ● fittes Old men be neuer troubled wyth sore agewes because theyr bodyes be cold All sharpe diseasys are iudged in fourtene dayes Quartanes in somer be very short in Autume muche longer in winter longest of all It is muche better that he whyche hath a convulsyon be takē wyth an agew then he which hath an agewe be taken wyth a convulsyon If his fleshe that hath a sore ague do eyther fall nothynge away at al or decay very much it is euil for the fyrst betokenith long contynuance of the disease and the other great wekenesse in the person At the beginning and endynge of an agew al thynges be of more strēgthe then in the chefe part therof In al diseases they be in leasse ieopardy to whose nature age accustō or time of the yeare the sicknes doth agre then they wyth whome it doth in no poynt agree Wh●n the somer is not vnlike to the springe tyme you shall loke for muche sweting in al agewes In dry seasons ther shall reygne diuerse sore agewes All dyseases in the haruest season be perillouse and deadlye but in the springtyme most gentyl and easy In the somer these do chiefly reygne contynual and brenynge agews tertyan and