CONTENTS «i 
LIX Giacomo da Manlio 323 
His Ascaracon 325 
RENAISSANCE PLANT WRITERS 326 
LX Dioscorides at the Revival of Learning 326 
Translations 326 
Synopsis of Annotators, from 1480 to 1628, etc....... 327 
: LXI seit i ee Brunswick 330 
333 
LXII Ween Barbarus 334 
His Aster, or Stella, as Alchemilla 335 
: His Buphthalmum or Herba Paralysts .....0...00c0c000: 335 
. is Amellus as Chamomitlla 336 
LXIII Wi ceoedlon Vergilius ; his eee nloss 337 
LXIV Ruellius ; his Aster 337 
Aster as Aspergu iy 338 
LXV Manardi; his Her ba Stella 338 
LXVI Conadncs : 339 
EXVIY Brontels oc55. a ac ee 340 
He declines to identify Aster. 341 
His Garyophylion ; 341 
LXVIII Bock (Tragus) 342 
His Stellaria pendi 343 
His Aster or Uva Lupina (Herb Paris) 344 
His Aster or Tinctorius Flos 346 
LXIX Fuchs " 348 
He correctly distinguishes Aster from Eryngium...... 349 
He issues the first correct nan of Aster 350 
His Aster-description 351 
ae LXX. Dorstenius 353 
ee LXXI Euricius Cordus oe S85 
LXXII Valerius Cordus 355 
Cordus establishes the identification of Aster........... 356 
LXXIII Conrad Gesner 358 
Gesner’s Botanical Writings 359 
: Gesner on Polytype Genera 360 
Gesner’s Plant-names 361 
4 ‘¢ Conizoides,’” OF Gésme? $ ASEET oii ece docs cies div ces 361 
Gesner’s Five Aster-species 363 
sters of Thomas Penny and of Rauwolf. 363 
EX XIV Anguillara 365 
Anguillara’s Search for Dioscorides’ Plants 365 
Anguillara’s Botanical Garden 366 
Anguillara in persecution and exile 268 
Anguillara’s Semplici. ihc BGe 
Anguillara as Source for Cratevas 371 
