
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Source(s): Images (In order): @wellscathedral.org.uk; Yates Thompson MS 3, f. 284v @blogs.bl.uk/digitisedmanuscripts/2014/02/happy-st-apollonias-day.html; forgery from 18th-French ivory carving @americanscientist.org/article/forging-islamic-science; “the tooth work as hell’s demon” April 2019 tweet from Dr. Lindsay Fitzharris. Articles: _British Dental Journal_, T. Anderson, “Dental Treatment in Medieval England, 2004, 197, p.o. 419-425; “The story of the tooth-worm,” B.R. Townsend, _Bulletin if the History of Medicine_, vol. 15, no. 1 (January 1944), pp. 37-48, Johns Hopkins University Press; @museumofhealthcare.wordpress.com, 2013 “Grin and Bear It: Toothache Day and Why It Was Best to Avaoid the Dentist in the Ancient World,” Feb 9, 2013, Varsha Jayaraman.