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A roll call that maps Edwardian medicine.A vital register for researchers.List Of The Fellows And Members Extra-Licentiates And Licentiates Of The Royal College Of Physicians Of London. 1906 is a meticulous medical professional directory and historical physician register, recording fellows, members and licentiates associated with the Royal College of Physicians of London. Compiled at a moment when the practice and institutions of medicine were modernising, its pages function as vintage medical listings and compact academic medical records: concise entries that reveal professional rank, institutional ties and the networks that bound London medical practitioners to hospitals, societies and universities. As a primary source for early 20th century medicine, it exposes the texture of British medical history, revealing patterns of medical society membership, professional mobility and the institutional shape of clinical authority. Researchers of all sorts will find it a precise reference for historians while family historians and those tracing medical lineages will value it as a genealogy research resource.Valuable to casual readers and to classic-literature collectors alike, the volume balances archival heft with straightforward readability; it is as useful on a research bench as it is on a collector’s shelf. Out of print for decades and now republished by Alpha Editions. Restored for today’s and future generations. More than a reprint - a collector’s item and a cultural treasure. Carefully prepared for contemporary readers, this edition preserves the original publication’s authority while making the register accessible to modern research practices such as cross-referencing and citation. Whether you are charting a physician’s career, annotating a period novel with precise professional context, or assembling a collection of vintage medical listings, this 1906 register repays attention with dense, verifiable detail. Librarians, curators and independent researchers will find the republished register straightforward to cite and easy to integrate into research collections. Use it to confirm professional standing, to situate doctors within the institutional map of the period, or to enrich narratives of Edwardian era medical life in London.