PMID: 11623774Oct 20, 2001Paper

The English vernacular afterlife of Benvenutus Grassus, opthalmologist

Early Science and Medicine
L M Eldredge

Abstract

This paper traces the history in print of a treatise on ophthalmology by Benvenutus Grassus, De probatissima arte oculorum, originally written in Latin in the late thirteenth century and translated into English in the fifteenth century. It presents evidence of the appearance in print of the English translation as a section of Philip Barrough's The Method of Phisicke in 1583, a book that went through ten subsequent reprintings, the last appearing in 1652. Other evidence is presented on the influence of Benvenutus treatise in ophthalmological works published in the earlier half of the seventeenth century, and both greater and lesser traces are shown to exist. The last appearance of the treatise is in an auctioneer's catalogue of 1713, where apparently the book failed to find a buyer.

Citations

Oct 14, 2005·Biological Reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society·Peter A Parsons
Sep 22, 2012·Journal of Evolutionary Biology·Melanie J Monroe
Nov 14, 2002·Annual Review of Genetics·Wolf-Ekkehard Lonnig, Heinz Saedler
Mar 27, 2009·Child: Care, Health and Development·P MoesG Schilmoeller
May 17, 2008·Knee Surgery, Sports Traumatology, Arthroscopy : Official Journal of the ESSKA·Zoran Sarcević
Oct 6, 2009·Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools·Ramonda Horton-Ikard
Jul 21, 2010·Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research : JSLHR·April W Garrity, Janna B Oetting
Jun 25, 2014·The Open Ophthalmology Journal·Christopher T LefflerTamer Hadi

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