About This Item
Title
Apertis insimo, & medio ventre usque ad jugulum, necnon detractis communibus tegumentis ab universo corpore, proponit observanda majora vasa sanguinea, quae undequaque suos abeunt in ramos
Subject
Blood Vessels--anatomy & histology
Book Illustrations
Description
Engraving by Giulio de' Musi from a drawing likely by Eustachi.--Cf. Choulant, L. Anatomic illustration, p. 200.
Anatomical diagram of a male figure, anterior view, showing the major blood vessels throughout the body.
Title from caption.
Creator
Eustachi, Bartolomeo, -1574
Musi, Giulio de, active 1535-1553
Source
Original image in: Eustachi, Bartolomeo, -1574. Tabulae anatomicae (Romae : Ex officina typographica Francisci Gonzagae, 1714). ZAd 16 (Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia)
Tabulae anatomicae, a collection of Bartolomeo Eustachi's anatomical engravings, was first published over one hundred years after Eustachi’s death. Eustachi was known for his strong defense of the Galenic tradition. His plates introduced numbered rulers on the edges of images (instead of marking the image itself with small letters and numbers) to help readers locate relevant text in the book.
Publisher
Digitized by the Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia
Date
1714
Language
lat
Type
StillImage
Identifier
ZAd_16.pl25
Original Format
1 print : copperplate engraving
Physical Dimensions
29 x 19 cm
Citation
Eustachi, Bartolomeo, -1574 and Musi, Giulio de, active 1535-1553, “Apertis insimo, & medio ventre usque ad jugulum, necnon detractis communibus tegumentis ab universo corpore, proponit observanda majora vasa sanguinea, quae undequaque suos abeunt in ramos,” The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Digital Library, accessed November 30, 2024, https://cppdigitallibrary.org/items/show/2221.