Abstract
THESE two stately volumes, which form an abiding memorial of Dr. Singer's scholarship and research, will appeal alike to the medical historian, the antiquarian, and the artist.
Monumenta Medica.
Under the General Editorship of Henry E. Sigerist. Vol. 2: The Fasciculo di Medicina, Venice, 1493. With an Introduction, etc., by Charles Singer. Part 1: Description of the Fasciculo; Discussion of its Editions, Art, Language, Sources, and Influence; Translation of the "Anathomia" of Mondino da Luzzi; An Account of Medieval Anatomy and Physiology; and an Atlas of Illustrative Figures from Manuscript and Printed Sources. Pp. 112 + 73 (Atlas). Part 2: Facsimile. Pp. 108. (Florence: R. Lier and Co.; London: D. Stanton, 90 North Road, Highgate, 1925.) Half-linen, 66s.; half-leather, 80s.
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Monumenta Medica. Nature 116, 811–812 (1925). https://doi.org/10.1038/116811a0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/116811a0