First edition of this important work, cf. Krivatsy 588. Garrison-Morton 1673, 5047 and 5085.
Full stiff ivory vellum, spine with four raised bands, the author’s name handwritten in black ink, one defect on the fourth band, blind-tooled rolls on the caps, gilt fillets highlighting the raised bands and framing the boards, small vellum losses on the covers, losses at the corners of the first and last blanks, red sprinkled edges, contemporary binding.
Bound after this work are three other treatises by Guillaume de Baillou, all printed by Quesnel in 1640. Krivatsy, who describes a volume composed in the same manner as ours, suggests that this collection may have been published in this form.
We provide below the description of the other pieces:
- Definitiorum medicarum liber. (Title in red and black, 9 unnumbered ff., 108 pp. and 4 unnumbered ff. The title and preliminary leaves have been bound by mistake after the preliminaries of the first work).
Cf. Krivatsy 587. Garrison-Morton 6796.
First edition published in 1639, with cancel title dated 1640. "A glossary of Hippocratic terms" [Garrison-Morton].
- Commentarius in libellum Theophrasti De vertigine. (Title, 1 unnumbered dedication leaf, 41 pp., 1 unnumbered f.)
Cf. Krivatsy 582. First edition. "Includes Greek and Latin text of Theophrastus's De vertigine" [Krivatsy]
- De convulsionibus libellus. (Title, 7 unnumbered ff., 51 pp., 2 unnumbered ff.) Cf. Krivatsy 585.
First edition of this treatise on convulsions.
A very rare collection preserved in contemporary vellum.