ANATOMICAL ILLUSTRATION 967 
PU. cxip.natura 
ls bific. 4.10 fi, Duris apantbue 
~ Burcéns,y,can,c, * cattus i vino 
rlity. KG fert.ariftologis 
vi. Opbor?.rlviij. {plenetict, Sple 
ij.apbort.cxrit, - utumn? tnimic? eft fplenert 
| bet put pulmoné.q: pay pos 
tabe Scum 
Alber.rt9.de gia 
libo,c. vij,tn fi, 
bus tins caput. ty. 
: Par eft membrii o2gas 
Lonfantinys | nici pumifanguisine  Tenapote  £par? figura 
ftruméralitcr gnarius, ie ; 
arnefanguine a villis 
nervoy vacua tvenulis otertus 
magniocaui.rubicundy.et luz 
bricofum, 11 dextro latere sialis 
collocati ftoacbo fuprepofiti_ve 
Gy 7 det Siete puma aoe d1geftionc 
, ~. Lpar eflemembii organic ds — 
ae HUS.CHE coe pinerfitas formax In ptib? a 
: toto. *flon em gliber ps ei? inre 
Sy gralie sud capt adr landbl 
Lametl penute tpi? epar intri 
Nicolus.fmo,¥. fice aftitucces.ocanttate zgibbo 
BraC,V.C.). fitaté babedt eandé ci toto. né tn 
- ft gfa nomé totiue merencur, 
&par auc latine dz tecur quafita 
Bute? riiti, tercr 
Tena chilis 
Fig. 10 Part of page from Hundt’s Antropologium, 1501 
John Schott. In this earlier picture the ureters are not shown, 
and the intestine is represented as connected with the bladder. 
I am indebted to Wieger’s treatise for the sketch of 1504, that 
appeared in the Margarita Philosophica published by Grieninger. 
This figure was reproduced in other texts and the original of this 
cut (fig. 11) is in Brunschwig’s Destillirbuch. 
Leonardo da Vinci. With Da Vinci we come to the one man 
who, before Vesalius, showed independence in observation and 
