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Historia animalium (Gessner)

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Originally published
  
1551

Author
  
Conrad Gessner

Historia animalium (Gessner) httpswwwnlmnihgovexhibitionhistoricalanato

Similar
  
Works by Aristotle, Zoology books

Historia animalium ("History of the Animals"), published at Zurich in 1551–58 and 1587, is an encyclopedic "inventory of renaissance zoology" by Conrad Gessner (1516–1565). Gessner was a medical doctor and professor at the Carolinum in Zürich, the precursor of the University of Zurich. The Historia animalium is the first modern zoological work that attempts to describe all the animals known, and the first bibliography of natural history writings. The five volumes of natural history of animals cover more than 4500 pages.

Contents

Context

There was extreme religious tension at the time Historia animalium came out. Under Pope Paul IV it was felt that the religious convictions of an author contaminated all his writings, and as Gessner was a protestant, it was added to the Catholic Church's list of prohibited books.

Overview

The Historia animalium was Gessner's magnum opus, and was the most widely read of all the Renaissance natural histories. The work was so popular that Gessner's abridgement, Thierbuch ("Animal Book"), was published in Zurich in 1563, and in England Edward Topsell translated and condensed it as a Historie of foure-footed beastes (London: William Jaggard, 1607). Gessner’s monumental work attempts to build a connection between the ancient knowledge of the animal world, its title the same as Aristotle's work on animals, and what was known at his time. He then adds his own observations, and those of his correspondents, in an attempt to formulate a comprehensive description of the natural history of animals.

Gessner’s Historia animalium is based on classical sources. It is compiled from ancient and medieval texts, including the inherited knowledge of ancient naturalists like Aristotle, Pliny the Elder, and Aelian. Gessner was known as "the Swiss Pliny." For information he relied heavily on the Physiologus.

In his larger works Gessner sought to distinguish fact from myth, and so his encyclopedic work included both extinct creatures and newly discovered animals of the East Indies, those of the far north and animals brought back from the New World. The work included extensive information on mammals, birds, fish, and reptiles. It described in detail their daily habits and movements. It also included their uses in medicine and nutrition.

Historia animalium showed the animals' places in history, literature and art. Sections of each chapter detailed the animal and its attributes, in the tradition of the emblem book. Gessner's work included facts in different languages such as the names of the animals.

Contents

  • Volume 1 is on live-bearing four-footed animals (1551).
  • Volume 2 is on egg-laying quadrupeds (reptiles and amphibia) (1554).
  • Volume 3 is on birds (1555).
  • Volume 4 is on fish and aquatic animals (1558).
  • Volume 5 is on snakes and scorpions (1587, published posthumously).
  • Illustrations

    The colored woodcut illustrations were the first real attempts to represent animals in their natural environment. It is the first book to illustrate fossils.

    Gessner acknowledges one of his main illustrators was Lucas Schan, an artist from Strasbourg. He likely used other illustrators as well as himself; the book is however famous for copying illustrations from other sources, including Durer's Rhinoceros from a well-known woodcut. Gessner's natural history was unusual for sixteenth century readers in providing illustrations.

    References

    Historia animalium (Gessner) Wikipedia