966 WILLIAM A. LOCY 
Gregor Reisch. In the 1504 edition of Reisch’s Margarita Phil- 
osophica there is an illustration (see fig. 11) showing new details 
in internal anatomy of the thorax and abdomen. Although the 
anatomy is very crude it is an improvement over the correspond- 
ing figures of Peyligk and Hundt. The kidneys and bladder are 
represented in a more nearly normal position. The lungs are 
Fig.9 Visceral anatomy from Hundt’s Antropologium, 1501 
divided into lobes; the liver, stomach, spleen and intestines are 
still very untrue to nature. The nomenclature of the period is 
shown in the names attached to the organs, the lung, ‘pulmo,’ 
the heart, ‘cor,’ the liver, ‘epax,’ the kidney, ‘ren,’ the bladder, 
‘vesica,’ ete. In 1503 a similar picture had appeared in the edi- 
tion of the Margarita Philosophica from the printing house of 
