§ 12. EARLY MODERN. 27 



LoBELTUS (M.), i.e. de l'Obel. Plantarum seu stii-pium historia. 

 Antw. 1576. fol. 



* Icones. Antw. 1581. obi. 4". 



Again in 1591, with Index in seven languages. 

 *CAMEEAiiros (J.). De plantis Epitome. . . . Francof. 1586. 4". 

 An abridgment of Matthiolus, with Gesner's excellent figiu'es. 



*CoLrit^A (F.), e.e. CoLONNA. Phytohasanos. Neapoli, 1592. 4°. 



The fii-st plates on copper, etched by the author himself. Another 

 edition, with copies of the original plates, came out, Mediolani, 

 17-14, sm. fol. 

 ^Gerard (J.). The Herball. Loncl. 1597. fol. 



[Ed. 2.] Enlarged and amended by Thomas Johnson, 1633, and 

 1636, both being line for line the same. By far the most popular 

 of our old Herbals. 



^ITatthiolus (P. A.), i.e. Mattioli. Opera, quae extant omnia. 

 Basiliae, 1598. fol. 



Edited by C. Bauhin ; best complete edition. 

 *CLrsros (C). Eariornm plantarum Mstoria. Antw. 1601. fol. 



Includes the Hispania and Pannonia, with some additions. 



fFnAGOso (J.). Aromatum, fructuum et simplicium . . . Argent. 

 1601. 8°. 



Also a Latin version, Discursos, Madr. 1572. 8°. 

 CESALPim (A.). De plantis lib. XVI. Florentiae, 1583. 4°. 

 Appendix. . . . Romae, 1603. 4°. 



This is the celebrated production which first defined a rational 

 system of arrangement. 

 *E.ENEAiMi7S (P.). Specimen historiae plantarum. Paris, 1611. 4". 

 Illustrated by etchings, which admirably express the habits of the 

 plants depicted. 

 Bey (J. T.). Florilegium novum. [Oppenheim], 1612. fol. 

 SwEEUT (E.). Florilegium. . . . Francof. 1612. fol. 



Five subsequent editions ; containing rough woodcuts. 

 Passaeus (C), i.e. Du Pas. Hortus floriclus. Arnhemii, 1614[-17]. 

 obi. 4". 



+ A garden of Flowers. . . . Utrecht, 1615. obi. fol. 



*DoDONAETJS (R.), i.e. DoDOExs. Stirpium hist, pemptades sex. 

 Antw. 1583. fol. 



Revised edition in 1616. This last is that quoted by Linnaeus 

 in his Species Plantarum, chiefly for figures of European plants. 



*CoLUMNA (F.). Ecphrasis. Eomae, 1616. 4". 



An earlier edition is stated to exist (1606), but I have not seen 

 it; this work (also the Phytohasanos) is much sought after, on 

 account of the beautifxdly executed plates. 



