Just for fun, here are a few older terms I put together:
Old Chemical Names
Aqua Fortis nitric acid, HNO3
Black Brimstone crude sulphur
Black Lead, Plumbago graphite
Blue Vitriol, Blue copper sulphate CuSO4•5H2O
Copperas
Butter of Antimony antimony trichloride SbCl3
Brimstone Sulphur, S
Copperas originally blue vitriols. Later this term was sometimes used for
all vitriols/sulphates
blue copperas copper sulphate, CuSO4
green copperas ferrous sulphate FeSO4•7H2O
Corrosive Sublimate mercuric chloride HgCl2
Crystallised Vertigris cupric acetate, Cu(C2H3O2)2•H2O
Cyprial Vitriol copper sulphate CuSO4
Dragon’s Blood the resinous fruit of Daemonoraps; also resin
from the fruit of a Malayan rattan palm Calamus
Draco, other species of Calamus, or the tropical
American tree Lingoum Draco, or the blood tree
Croton Draco
Minium red lead, Pb3O4 (formerly this term referred to cinnabar,
which is mercuric sulphide, HgS)
Muriate of Iron iron chloride
Spirits of Wine ethyl alcohol C2H5OH
Sweet Spirits of Nitre 4% solution of ethyl nitrate, C2H5NO3 in alcohol
Shell lac orange shellac
Spirit of Hartshorn ammonia, NH3
Sugar of Lead lead acetate, Pb(CH3CO)2•3H2O
(saccharum saturni - it does taste sweet. Ask me how I . . .)
Tincture of Steel, of Iron alcoholic solution of ferric chloride FeCl3•6H2O
Gum Sandarac resin from the Sandarac, or avar, tree, Morocco.
Vitriolic acid, or sulphuric acid, H2SO4
Oil of Vitriol
Yellow Prussiate My favorite. Our Gov't says it is poisonous if used in Kasenite,
of Soda (a.k.a. which one might touch. But, Our Gov't says it is alright to use it
sodium ferrocyanide, as an anti-caking agent in Sea Salt. Which one does eat.
Na4Fe(CN)6•10H2O And feed to one's children. Read the label some day.