About This Item
Title
Human fetus and fetal heart
            Subject
Fetus--anatomy & histology
                    Placenta--anatomy & histology
                    Umbilical Cord--anatomy & histology
                    Fetal Heart--anatomy & histology
                    Fetal Development
                    Book Illustrations
            Description
Artist unknown.
                    Anatomical diagram of a fetus and placenta with the umbilical cord wrapped around it (fig. 12); the fetus without the placenta (fig. 13); and the fetal heart (fig. 14-15).
                    Title supplied by cataloger.
            Source
Original Image in: Fabricius, ab Aquapendente, approximately 1533-1619. De formato foetu (Venetiis : Per Franciscum Bolzettam, 1600), plate 6. ZGGc 4 (Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia)
                    De formato foetu, first published in 1600, is one of the most extensive early modern medical works on fetal anatomy. Written by Hieronymus Fabricius, a professor at the University of Padua, it features one of the more accurate descriptions of the human placenta and umbilical cord, as well as detailed descriptions of animal fetal anatomy. Its 34 engraved plates, by an unknown artist, illustrate fetal anatomy in various animals, ranging from humans to sheep, horses, and sharks.
            Publisher
Digitized by the Historical Medical Library of The College of Physicians of Philadelphia
            Date
1600
            Language
lat
            Type
StillImage
            Identifier
ZGGc_4.pl6
            Original Format
1 print : engraving
            Physical Dimensions
40 x 27 cm
            Citation
“Human fetus and fetal heart,” The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Digital Library, accessed October 31, 2025, https://cppdigitallibrary.org/items/show/2382.
    
