About This Item
Title
Posteriorem faciem trunci, artuumque ostendit cum penitioribus aliquot musculis, à propria membrana denudatis
            Subject
Musculoskeletal System--anatomy & histology
                    Muscle, Skeletal--anatomy & histology
                    Bone and Bones--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 human figure, posterior view, showing some of the bones and deeper muscles.
                    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.pl34
            Original Format
1 print : copperplate engraving
            Physical Dimensions
29 x 19 cm
            Citation
Eustachi, Bartolomeo, -1574 and Musi, Giulio de, active 1535-1553, “Posteriorem faciem trunci, artuumque ostendit cum penitioribus aliquot musculis, à propria membrana denudatis,” The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Digital Library, accessed October 31, 2025, https://cppdigitallibrary.org/items/show/2229.
    
