330 AsTER History; RENAISSANCE ANNOTATORS 
1553, Bellonius,—Pierre Belon—the Cenomanian, traveller pried ae Orient to 
recover the plants of the ancients; his ‘* Les Odservations...en Gréc etc., Paris, 
1553; ina Latin translation by Clusius, ‘* Plarimarum...rerum in Grace Antwerp, 
1589; 8vo, 468, 
1556, Casma; Joannes Casma Holzachius, of Basle ; Anmofationes in Dioscoridem, 
Leyden, 1556. 
1557, Guilandini’s De Stirpium ; see pp. 360, 367, 
1559, bared Maranta ; whose Methodus in minicom Ven, 1559, includes 
‘‘innumerable n made from his own ake: Sprenge 
1561, co s Semplici ; see p. 365. 
1561, Antonius Stupanus, on the Pros of Dioscorides’ herbs, 1561. 
1561, Valerius Cordus, Anmotationes in Dioscoridem, Strasburg, 1561; see p. 355- 
1565, Gesner’s edition of Dioscorides’ uporista, Strasburg, 1565; finished by 
Gesner after the death of Moiban his coadjutor,—Jacobus Moibanus Augustanus. 
1581, Caspar Wolft’s A/phabetum Sb m sive Dioscoridis, etc.; see p. 364. 
1586, Camerarius’ Zpitome, from Matthioli’ s Dioscorides ; see p. 3 
s 
1591, Jean Bauhin, whose series of works on the plants of the ancients and finally 
of the whole world, began with his De tare Basle, 1591. 
1592, Antonio Pasini, Aznofazioni on Dioscorides, Bergamo, 1592 
1596, Caspar Bauhin, whose works on the plants of the past and of his own time 
began with his Phytopinax, Basle, 1596, and culminated in his Pinax, 1623, in which 
he formulated the results of his labor of 40 years in establishing the complete synonymy 
of 16th century plant writers, and formed the bridge by which the modern and the 
ancient botany are joined. 
I a0 Saracenus’ notes on Dioscorides, Leyden 
608, Nicolao Marogna, Commentarii on Picea. with emendations of Mat- 
sai. Basle. 
1610, Peter Uffenbach’s German translation of Dioscorides, modified from that of 
von Ast. 
1628, — and Paul Contant, father and son, apothecaries of Poitiers ; Notae 
on Diosco 
1689, ene notes on Dioscorides, Utrecht. 
1829, Sprengel’s notes on Dioscorides, Leipsic. 
LXI. Hieronymus or BRUNSWICK 
In 1500 first appeared the often-reprinted “ Distillerung Buch” 
of Hieronymus Brunsvicensis, Hieronymus Brunsthwygk vo? 
Salern, as Pritzel calls him, 7. ¢., “ Jeronimo the Strasburg physi- 
cian, of a Brunswick family sprung from Salerno,” —if we combine 
his titles. Little is known of him; in his: preface he calls him- 
self “‘ Hieronymus Brunschwyg, des geschlechts Salern, biintig vo" 
Strassburgk.” The printer of 1500, Gruéninger of Strasbuté, 
calls him “ Jeronimo,” and “vvundt Artzot,” physician of wounds, 
or surgeon, and locates him at Strasburg. Sprengel (Gas 
I: 295-6) calls him therefore “ chirurgus Argentinensis,” and notes 
