THE FourRTEENTH CENTURY 227 
1300? Other medical writers of presumably Salernitan training and of uncertain 
date, but whose works remain in MSS. of the 14th century, include : 
Maestro Giovanni da Parma (a Practica). 
Maestro Gerardo da Cremona (on purgatives, and translations from the Arabic). 
Albertino da Salso or da Plagentia, whose lectures, collected by Tommaso da 
Crema, are in a MS. dated 1368 to 1 85. 
Aegidius Romanus (Liber Exameron, and on human embryology). 
Maestro Ruggero ( Chirurgia ). 
Maestro Rolando (Chirurgia ). 
Guglielmo da Saliceto (Chirurgia ; printed, 1546). 
Ludovicus Tettapharmacus, translator from the Arabic of an Antidotarium, prob- 
ably by Abulcasis, 
Teoderico Borgognoni (Chirurgia, printed in part, Ven. 1484; and Chirurgia dei 
Cavalli, not yet printed ). 
eo Alderotti (on conservation of health). 
Giovanni Alessandrino (on pestilences). 
Crescenzi (g. v.), uses Circa instans as basis, 
1310. Arnald de Vilianova, though not directly of Salerno, became associated with 
it about this date in his commentary on the Regimen Salerni. See zzzfra, p. 242. 
1313-7. Matteo Silvatico, or Matthaeus Sylvaticus ; his PANDECTS are assigned to 
this time; he, born at Mantua, perhaps 1270, a Salernitan physician, perhaps 1297, 
Was maintaining his Colocasias in his botanical garden at Salerno, at his writing, about 
1313. See infra. 
Sus, which was edited by Ammonius, Ingolstadt, 1541. Aever, 3: 382. 
1340? Bartolomeo Mino da Siena, ‘an old Salernitan writer” ( Camus, 16), compiler 
of the * Tractatus herbarum,’’ an alphabetic Latin dictionary of medical plants, pre- 
Served in a 15th century MS. at Modena, with colored figures; prepared from Circa 
‘astans by omitting animal and vegetable remedies, etc. Its figures are substantially 
f Codex C of Dioscorides, Camus. Bartolomeo cites Pietro Spano, who died 
1277, and Matteo Silvatico, of 1 313. Camus thinks that Andrea Mino da Siena (a poet 
of the 14th century, sprung from the Piccolomini family) may have been his son. 
See infra, under Plateario. : 
1340? Salvator, Prior “ Salernitani et Neopolitani Collegii,’’ father of Lr 
1350? Comstanti 1 Calenda, praised as ‘‘insignita,’’ ‘‘ nobilis et erudita mulier; 
Was ‘‘laurea etiam doctoralis,’’ says Mazza.* Like so many of the Salernitan women, 
was not a nun but a married physician, the record of her marriage to Baldassere 
Sancto-mango de Salerno occurring in the Register Regiae Siclae under Joanna ik, 
was queen of Naples, 1 343-1382. Meyer uses her record and her father’s, as an 
“tgument that the School of Salerno was secular not monastic. : 
1350? THE AGGREGATOR PRACTICUS (q. v.); based largely on Circa instans. 
_ 1390? La Force pes HERBES, a French translation from Macer, etc., probably 
Wnitten by a sojourner in Italy ; begins 
she 
she 
de 
Ci comence li livres que 
Maycirs et Ypocras firent. 
gg occ eae ene 
‘ aes his Urbis Salernitanae historia, Naples, 1681, and in Graevit thesaurus anti- 
Mmilatum Italiae, 
