ANATOMICAL ILLUSTRATION 985 
not illustrated, and, therefore, do not properly come under con- 
sideration here. 
Summary. The chief printed illustrations of anatomy before 
Vesalius may now be chronologically arranged, omitting different 
editions of the same work with slight modifications of the figures: 
1491. The arrangement of the viscera in the human female in 
Ketham’s Fasciculus Medicine. 
1493. The skeleton of Richard Helain. 
1493(?). A demonstration of visceral anatomy in the Meler- 
stat edition of Mundinus. 
1496. The abdominal muscles, in the Conciliator differen- 
tiarum. 
1497. Plate of the Griininger skeleton. 
1497. The wounded man with internal anatomy in Brun- 
schwig’s Chirurgie. 
1499. Anatomy of the three body cavities, together with fig- 
ures of the separate organs, in Peyligk’s Compendicsa. 
1501. Similar illustrations in Hundt’s Antropologium. 
1503-’04. Organs of the thorax and abdomen in Reisch’s 
Margarita Philosophica. 
1510 (?). Leonardo da Vinci, more than 750 sketches of human 
anatomy; not, however, published. 
1513. Mundinus, zodiacal signs and rough sketch of the heart. 
1517. Plates of visceral anatomy and of the skeleton published 
by Johann Schott. 
1518. Skeleton and visceral anatomy in Phryesen’s Spiegel 
der Artzney. 
1521, ’22-’23. Berengarius, commentaries on Mundinus and 
Isogogee breves. 
1536. Fliegende Blatter. 
1538. Six Tabule Anatomice of Vesalius. 
1537. Dryander, Anatomiae, corporis humani, etc. 
1541. Dryander, edition of Mundinus, with 45 illustrations. 
1541. Ryff, Anatomi. 
