ANATOMICAL ILLUSTRATION 949 
of J. Dryander, Marburg, 1541, 70 leaves, 45 woodcuts, one re- 
peated, and two on one plate. These books are all of quarto 
size. In addition I have had six copies of the Incipit Anatomia 
Mundini in the editions of Ketham mentioned below. 
Six editions of Ketham’s Fasciculus Medicine (or Medicine) 
came under observation, all of folio size; Venice, 1495, Latin 
edition; Venice, 1500, Italian; Venice, 1500, Latin; Milan, 1509, 
Italian; Venice, 1522, Latin; Venice, 1522, Italian. All these 
contain woodcuts to be mentioned below. 
The plate of the skeleton by Richard Helain, Paris and Nirn- 
berg, 1498, 53 em. high, from the library of Dr. Mortimer Frank 
of Chicago. 
J. Peyligk, Philosophie Naturalis Compendium, containing 
the Compendiosa. capitis physici declaratio, which is the illus- 
trated part, Leipzig, 1499, folio, frontispiece and thirteen separate 
anatomical illustrations in the text. 
Magnus Hundt, Antropologium de hominis dignitate natura 
et proprietatibus, Leipzig, 1501, 4°, 120 leaves, 19 figures, one 
being repeated. Two copies of this rare book came under obser- 
vation, one in the Surgeon General’s library and the other in the 
library of Dr. Mortimer Frank of Chicago. 
Phryesen (Fries, Frisen, ete.), Spiegel der Artzney, three copies, 
the Strassburg edition of 1519, folio, Dutch, 4 figures; Strassburg, 
1529, German, 141 leaves, one picture in addition to the illumi- 
nated title page, and the same, Strassburg, 1532. 
Berengarius (Carpus), his Commentaries on Mundinus (men- 
tioned above) Bologna, 1521, 4°, 528 leaves and 21 woodcuts. 
Three editions of his Isogogee Breves: Bologna, 1523, 4°, 80 leaves, 
23 figures; a small pocket edition, 1530, 132 leaves, with 24 very 
crude, small woodcuts copied from the edition of 1523; Venice, 
1535, 4°, 63 leaves, 19 cuts. 
Petrus d’Abano, Conciliator differentiarum philosophorum, 
1526, containing the first printed pictures of the abdominal mus- 
cles copied from the edition of 1496. 
Leonardo da Vinci, I Manosceritti di Leonardo da Vinci della 
Reale Biblioteca di Windsor, ete., Paris, 1898, 1901, etc.; ten 
of the twenty-four volumes contain anatomical sketches and 
