No. 100158093

Sold
William Harvey - Anatomical Exercitations, Concerning the Generation of Living Creatures: To which are added - 1653
Final bid
€ 4,400
2 h ago

William Harvey - Anatomical Exercitations, Concerning the Generation of Living Creatures: To which are added - 1653

HARVEY, William. Anatomical Exercitations, Concerning the Generation of Living Creatures: To which are added Particular Discources, of Births and of Conceptions &c. Pub. LONDON: Printed by James Young, for Octavian Pulleyn, and are to be sold at his shop at the sign of the Rose in St Paul's Churchyard. 1653. 'Harvey's excellent work on generation first appeared in Latin in 1651 printed in London. The English translation is very rare. 'Harvey was among the first to disbelieve the erroneous doctrine of the 'preformation' of the foetus; he maintained that the organism dervies from the ovum by the gradual building up and aggregation of its parts. The chapter on midwifery in this book is the first work on that subject to be written by an Englishman. This book also demonstrates Harvey's intimate knowledge of the existing literature on the subject. He corrected many of the errors of Fabricius. Harvey considered this to be the culminating work of his life and more significant then De motu cordis.' (Russell) The chapter on labour, De Partu, is the first original work on obstetrics to be published by an Englishman. Brief collation; Portrait (bound in; a lithograph!), title, [22]leaves, 566pp, [1]leaf (errata) [1]. Stub of original still between A7 and A8. The Faithorne bust of Harvey is missing in the majority of copies, being eagerly sought after by print collectors. Older rebinding in ruled full leather is in very good condition, spine a little sunned. Title is soiled with an old, small, foredge repair. Text block dusted to the top. Greater bulk of the text is very clean and straight. Final Erata leaf is present. It is notable that this is a copy which is NOT -- as often -- closely trimmed, with text missing. Owner details William Simpson, Surgeon, Knaresbro (Yorkshire), bookplate and his signature on title. Bookplates: Simpson, William Surgeon, Knaresbro. The bookplate appears to be 17th century, the date 1696 is added in pencil, also, Ex Libris Anatomica K.F. Russell. "Many copies of the book lack the engraving and may never have contained it." William Harvey "was among the first to disbelieve the erroneous doctrine of the "preformation" of the fetus; he maintained that the organism derives from the ovum by the gradual building up and aggregation of its parts. The chapter on on labor ("De partu") in this book is the first work on that subject to be written by an Englishman, and the first original work on obstetrics by an English author. This book also demonstrates Harvey's intimate knowledge of the existing literature on the embryology. He corrected many of the errors of Fabricius. Harvey considered this to be the culminating work of his life, and more significant than De motu cordis. " Garrison & Morton See - The analysis of the Degeneratione animalium of William Harvey by A. W. Meyer, Stanford Univ. Press, 1936. Heirs of Hippocrates, 389; Cushing H140; Keynes 43; Osler 714; Russell 384; Waller 4126; Wellcome III, p.220.

No. 100158093

Sold
William Harvey - Anatomical Exercitations, Concerning the Generation of Living Creatures: To which are added - 1653

William Harvey - Anatomical Exercitations, Concerning the Generation of Living Creatures: To which are added - 1653

HARVEY, William. Anatomical Exercitations, Concerning the Generation of Living Creatures: To which are added Particular Discources, of Births and of Conceptions &c.
Pub. LONDON: Printed by James Young, for Octavian Pulleyn, and are to be sold at his shop at the sign of the Rose in St Paul's Churchyard. 1653.

'Harvey's excellent work on generation first appeared in Latin in 1651 printed in London. The English translation is very rare.

'Harvey was among the first to disbelieve the erroneous doctrine of the 'preformation' of the foetus; he maintained that the organism dervies from the ovum by the gradual building up and aggregation of its parts. The chapter on midwifery in this book is the first work on that subject to be written by an Englishman. This book also demonstrates Harvey's intimate knowledge of the existing literature on the subject. He corrected many of the errors of Fabricius. Harvey considered this to be the culminating work of his life and more significant then De motu cordis.' (Russell)

The chapter on labour, De Partu, is the first original work on obstetrics to be published by an Englishman.

Brief collation; Portrait (bound in; a lithograph!), title, [22]leaves, 566pp, [1]leaf (errata) [1].

Stub of original still between A7 and A8. The Faithorne bust of Harvey is missing in the majority of copies, being eagerly sought after by print collectors.

Older rebinding in ruled full leather is in very good condition, spine a little sunned. Title is soiled with an old, small, foredge repair. Text block dusted to the top. Greater bulk of the text is very clean and straight. Final Erata leaf is present.

It is notable that this is a copy which is NOT -- as often -- closely trimmed, with text missing.

Owner details William Simpson, Surgeon, Knaresbro (Yorkshire), bookplate and his signature on title. Bookplates: Simpson, William Surgeon, Knaresbro. The bookplate appears to be 17th century, the date 1696 is added in pencil, also, Ex Libris Anatomica K.F. Russell.

"Many copies of the book lack the engraving and may never have contained it." William Harvey "was among the first to disbelieve the erroneous doctrine of the "preformation" of the fetus; he maintained that the organism derives from the ovum by the gradual building up and aggregation of its parts. The chapter on on labor ("De partu") in this book is the first work on that subject to be written by an Englishman, and the first original work on obstetrics by an English author. This book also demonstrates Harvey's intimate knowledge of the existing literature on the embryology. He corrected many of the errors of Fabricius. Harvey considered this to be the culminating work of his life, and more significant than De motu cordis. " Garrison & Morton See - The analysis of the Degeneratione animalium of William Harvey by A. W. Meyer, Stanford Univ. Press, 1936. Heirs of Hippocrates, 389; Cushing H140; Keynes 43; Osler 714; Russell 384; Waller 4126; Wellcome III, p.220.

Final bid
€ 4,400
Volker Riepenhausen
Expert
Estimate  € 4,900 - € 5,400

Similar objects

For you in

Books

Set a search alert
Set a search alert to get notified when new matches are available.

This object was featured in

                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    
                                        
                                                                                                    
                    

How to buy on Catawiki

Learn more about our Buyer Protection

      1. Discover something special

      Browse through thousands of special objects selected by experts. View the photos, details and estimated value of each special object. 

      2. Place the top bid

      Find something you love and place the top bid. You can follow the auction to the end or let our system do the bidding for you. All you have to do is set a bid for the maximum amount you want to pay. 

      3. Make a secure payment

      Pay for your special object and we’ll keep your payment secure until it arrives safe and sound. We use a trusted payment system to handle all transactions. 

Have something similar to sell?

Whether you're new to online auctions or sell professionally, we can help you earn more for your special objects.

Sell your object