About This Item
Title
Young man wounded by animals
            Subject
Wounds and Injuries
                    Bites and Stings
                    Physicians
                    Incunabula
                    Book Illustrations
            Description
Woodcut printed by Johann Grüninger, artist unknown.
                    A seated patient with an open wound on one leg, a snake wrapped around the other, and a knife in his hand. One man tends to him while two other figures stand and watch.  Animals surround the man, including the snake, a scorpion, a dog, and an insect, which likely caused the patients wounds and represent the types of bites and stings a surgeon would treat. A landscape and buildings can be seen in the background.--Cf. Schramm.
                    Title supplied by cataloger.
            Source
Original Image in: Brunschwig, Hieronymus, approximately 1450-approximately 1512. Buch der Cirurgia (Strasbourg : Johann (Reinhard) Grüninger, 1497). ZEa 25 (Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia)
                    Buch der Cirurgia, Hieronymus Brunschwig's handbook of surgery, was first printed in 1497 by Johann Grüninger. The work was intended for aspiring barbers and surgeons, and includes compiled knowledge of past surgeons along with the experiences of Brunschwig himself. Many of the woodcut illustrations are only loosely related to the text, consist of composites, and reappear throughout the text and in other works printed by Grüninger.
            Publisher
Digitized by the Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia
            Date
1497
            Contributor
Grüninger, Johann, -1532?
            Language
ger
            Type
StillImage
            Identifier
ZEa_25.35v
            Original Format
1 print : woodcut
            Physical Dimensions
16 x 14 cm
            Citation
“Young man wounded by animals,” The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Digital Library, accessed November 4, 2025, https://cppdigitallibrary.org/items/show/1725.
    
