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15655777<p><b><i>"FOR MANY YEARS THE MOST IMPORTANT WORK ON THE MEDICINAL PLANTS OF THE NEW WORLD"</i></b></p><p>8vo 13.4 x 9.1 cm 132 ff. with woodcut border to title page and woodcut initials. Bound in later stiff vellum title stamped on spine gift inscription on the front flyleaf to a certain 'Carmen Ballina' dated 1922 now covered in paper. Only minor wear and rubbing to binding. 'Tassa' price of 51 maravedis entered in manuscript on title page as issued early signature of a certain 'Henrique Correa' at fol. aiiir the occasional contemporary annotation in the text minor occasional dampstaining very minor occasional marginal worming.<br /></p><p>Very rare first edition 1565 – virtually unacquirable for the past half century or more – of the first printed work devoted to the botanical and medicinal discoveries made in the Americas a treatise which through its later expansions and numerous translations would remain "for many years the most important work on the medicinal plants of the New World" Garrison & Morton. The <i>Dos libros</i> was written by the renowned physician Nicolás Monardes 1493-1588 in Seville then the center of the Spanish printing industry and the only port from which ships were authorized to sail to and from the New World. Born in 1493 in the very year Columbus returned from his first voyage Monardes thus both occupied a front row seat for first decades of the 'Columbian Exchange' and was ideally positioned to disseminate his findings to a wider European indeed global audience.</p><p>Monardes shared much with his contemporary Garcia d'Orta 1501-68 the Portuguese physician stationed in India and famed for his <i>Coloquios dos simples e drogas e consas medicinais da India</i> Goa 1563: "Just as d'Orta gave the learned world of the West the first accurate accounts of various Asian medicinal and commercial plants so did Monardes with those of America … Monardes like Garcia d'Orta has a strong claim to be regarded as one of the fathers of the science of pharmacognosy. Both of them compiled what were virtually complete monographs on many important items of our actual <i>materia medica</i> which were then unknown or only inaccurately known to the Western World Boxer pp. 23-24. Even the diffusion of these two authors throughout the learned world of early modern Europe shared a common source in the Latin versions made of them by the Flemish physician and botanist Charles de L'Ecluse Carolus Clusius 1526-1609 who published them together for the first time at Antwerp by Plantin in 1574 and afterwards.</p><p>Monardes eagerly capitalized on his unique position in Seville to acquire botanical news specimens and seeds from the New World cultivating his own garden of American plants and distributing cuttings to correspondents throughout Spain and Europe. In 1553 he established a transatlantic business partnership with a colleague in Tierra Firme and over the next three decades Monardes' three sons and four daughters emigrated to Tierra Firme and New Spain thus providing him with a network which would prove invaluable in collecting information for the 1565 <i>Dos libros</i> and in expanding the treatise in its 1571 and 1574 editions published as <i>Segunda Parte</i> and <i>Primera y Segunda y Tercera Partes de la Historia Medicinal</i>. In the <i>Dos libros</i> Monardes describes more than two dozen botanical remedies sarsaparilla copal and other aromatic balsams guaiacum lignum vitae etc. their medicinal applications native nomenclature and where they were to be found Mexico City Jalisco Michoacán Cuba Santo Domingo San Juan Cartagena Honduras Peru Nicaragua. Fascinatingly he views this specialized information through the broader lens of early American exploration discussing the voyages of Columbus and Hernán Cortés Monardes' near contemporary the spread of New World diseases among the first conquistadors and assessing the value of America's medicinal riches against her wealth of gold and silver.</p><p>In his first printed work <i>Dialogo llamado pharmacodilosis o declaracion medicinal</i> Seville 1536 Monardes noted that he was skeptical of the therapeutic value of plants from the New World but "his change of heart between 1536 and 1565 about the value of American <i>materia medica</i> was a gradual process and was due to his own experience" Boxer p. 22. Monardes "took great care after about 1536 to examine those plants imported and/or transplanted into Spain – a self-imposed task facilitated by the unrivaled position of Seville as the sole <i>entrepôt</i> for Spanish trade with the New World … just as d'Orta cultivated Asian plants in his gardens and orchards at Goa and Bombay so Monardes had a botanical garden with native and exotic plants at Sevilla" Boxer 22.</p><p>In addition to Clusius' Latin translation of Monardes <i>De simplicibus medicamentis ex Occidentli India delatis</i> 1574 first Latin edition an English translation appeared in 1577 by John Frampton under the title <i>Joyful newes out of the newe found world. </i>Italian French and German translations followed with the work going through 19 editions during Monardes' lifetime and 14 after his death.</p><p>In the present 1565 first edition of the <i>Dos libros</i> Monardes challenged European travelers and residents in the Americas to "'<i>investigate and experiment with the many kinds of medicines that the Indians sell in their markets or Tianguez; it would be a thing of great utility and profit to see and know their properties and to experiment with their varied and great effects which the Indians make public and manifest through the great experiences they make of them among themselves'"</i> Monardes quoted from Bleichmar <i>Visual Voyages</i> p. 51. But tapping into native knowledge of medicinal matters apparently proved more difficult than Monardes had anticipated: In the 1571 <i>Segunda Parte</i> he notes that the increasing Amerindian hostility to the European presence in the Americas was provoking them to keep their medicinal/botanical practices secret to the point of providing misleading information to colonists seeking local remedies and consequently his 1565 <i>Dos Libros</i> had in fact become the primary source for Indian medicinal knowledge even among Europeans stationed and living in the Americas among the native populace see Bleichmar <i>Visual Voyages</i> p. 51.</p><p>Monardes' other published works include the 1539 <i>De secanda vena in pleuriti inter Grecos et Arabes concordia</i> and his 1540 <i>De rosa et partibus eius</i>. His treatise on the medicinal properties of the bezoar stone is appended to the present <i>Dos libros</i>.</p><p>OCLC locates U.S. examples of this 1565 <i>Dos Libros</i> of Monardes at the National Library of Medicine John Carter Brown Wisconsin Hunt Botanical SMU and NYPL.</p><p> Alden European Americana 565/45; Medina BHA 194; JCB vol. 1 no. 240; Palau 175485; Wellcome 4390; USTC 340089; Garrison & Morton 1817; ; Hunt 106 1569 ed.; Sabin 49936 the 2nd ed.; F. Guerra <i>Nicolás Bautista Monardes</i>; D. Bleichmar <i>Visual Voyages: Images of Latin American Nature from Columbus to Darwin</i>; J. Jiménez-Castellanos y Calvo-Rubio <i>Historia medicinal de las cosas</i>… Seville Padilla 1988; D. Bleichmar "Books Bodies and Fields: Sixteenth-Century Transatlantic Encounters with New World <i>Materia Medica</i>" in L. Schiebinger and C. Swan eds. <i>Colonial Botany: Science Commerce and Politics</i> pp. 83–99; J. M. López Piñero "Las 'Nuevas Medicinas' Americanas en la Obra 1565-1574 de Nicolás Monardes" <i>Asclepio</i> vol. 42 no. 1 1990 pp. 3-67; A. Barrera "Local Herbs Global Medicines: Commerce Knowledge and Commodities in Spanish America" in P. Smith and P. Findlen eds. <i>Merchants and Marvels: Commerce Science and Art in Early Modern Europe</i> pp. 163-81; J. D. Sauer "Changing Perception and Exploitation of New World Plants in Europe" in F. Chiappelli ed. <i>First Images of America</i> vol. 2 pp.-813-32; F. Egmond <i>The World of Carolus Clusius: Natural History in the Making 1550-1610</i>; A. Ubrizy and J. Heniger "Carolus Clusius and American Plants" <i>Taxon</i> vol. 32 no 3 1983 pp. 424-35; C. R. Boxer <i>Two Pioneers of Tropical Medicine: Garcia d'Orta and Nicolás Monardes</i> Wellcome Lecture Series No. 1 1963.</p> Sebastian Trugillo hardcover books
1960R320154480Hachette. 1960. In-4. Relié. Etat d'usage, Couv. légèrement passée, Dos satisfaisant, Intérieur frais. 212 pages - nombreuses illustrations en couleurs et en noir et blanc dans et hors texte - rousseurs sur les plats.. . . . Classification Dewey : 580-Botanique
19509781Frankf. a. Main, 1950. Orig. hcloth. 152 pp., textillustr. a. 64 plates.
Frankf. a. Main, 1950. Orig. hcloth. 152 pp., textillustr. a. 64 plates.
1914BF110981914 139 p., 1 folded table, paperbound (back cover missing). Published in: Sitzungsberichte der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Scarce.
175354339Kopenhagen, Franz Christian Mumme, 1753-54. 8vo. 2 contemp. marbled boards. Some scratches to spine-ends and along edges. corners bumped. 53,(11),367"56,536 pp. With 29 (of 30, no. 3 missing) mostly folded engraved plates. Title-page in volume 2 a bit soiled.
Kopenhagen, Franz Christian Mumme, 1753-54. 8vo. 2 contemp. marbled boards. Some scratches to spine-ends and along edges. corners bumped. 53,(11),367 "56,536 pp. With 29 (of 30, no. 3 missing) mostly folded engraved plates. Title-page in volume 2 a bit soiled.
18405615Mit 1 gefalt. grenzkolor. lithogr. Stadtplan von J[ohann Anton] Williard nach W. Jäger u. 3 lithogr. Tafeln mit Linienkolorit. Stolberg am Harz u. Leipzig, B. G. H. Schmidt, 1840. 4to. (28,5 x 21,3 cm). XX, 350 S. Grüner Halblederband d. Zt. mit Romantikerrückenvergoldung, dreiseitigem Goldschnitt, blauen Vorsätzen u. geprägtem Bezugspapier (am Schwanz signiert: BORMANN).
1913BF110971913 63 p., 1 folded table, disbound (unopened, no covers). Published in: Sitzungsberichte der Kaiserlichen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Scarce.
1850BG158471850 13 p., small folio, disbound (no covers). Some slight scattered foxing. Unopened copy. Naturwissenschaftliche Abhandlungen, gesammelt und durch subscription herausgegeben (W. Haidinger ed.). Rare.
4to. Pp. [vi],40,[2], 67 figs. on 1 fold. lithogr. pl. Orig. printed wrs., uncut. - The author, an expert morphologist, was one of the driving forces behind the "Flora brasiliensis". Not in Stafleu-Cowan.
1984BG226901984 293 p., num. distribution maps, 4to, paperbound.
Pagine: 30 . Formato: 16° . Rilegatura: Brossura originale con punto metallico . Stato: Buono . Caratteristiche: Copertina sbiadita. .
1863BE181741863 xii, 256 p., new cloth, front cover (somewhat chipped) bound in. Library stamps (Nederlandsche Entomologische Vereeniging). Uncut and unopened copy. Scarce.Mainly a report on planting coffee and cinnamon in Ceylon. The first 40 pages give a general description of the island, its inhabitants, rice growing, the arak trade, pearl fishing, etc..
1906BG118181906 2 vols bound in one. vi, 261, vi, 446 p., 7, 58 figs, 3 lithographed pls, 1 col. folded map, contemporary hcalf.
(Codice SN/0404) In 8° 560 pp. German (french, italian) text, 10 plates. At the end the members' list of the Swiss Natural Science Society. Soiled paperback, internally fine. ~~~ SPEDIZIONE IN ITALIA SEMPRE TRACCIATA
1887100605BBHalle, Blochmann, 1887. Gr.-4°. 5 Bl., 544 S. mit 46 teils kolor. oder gefalt. lithogr. Tafeln. OHln.
1896ZOOL0195Wien, Hölder 1896. XXIII, 586 S., mit 6 Taf. u. 23 Fig. im Text, HLn. d. Zt., Bibl.-Ex., berieben, zerkratzt, Kanten abgeschabt, Bezugsleinen stark fleckig, am Rü. geblichen, Goldschrift abgerieben, am unt. Kap. stärker eingerissen, an hint. Rückenkante ca. 2 cm. aufgerissen, Gelenke beschäd., Vorsätze u. Spiegel m. abgefärbten Rotspuren u. Schimmelspuren im Falz, etliche Seiten stärker gelockert, eine Seite lose, mehrf. gestemp. u. Buntstiftverm. am Innentit. Abhandlung u.a. von Wasmann, E. Die Ameisen- und Termitengäste von Brasilien; Hormuzaki, C. v., Bemerkungen üb. Varietäten einiger in der Bukowina einheimischer Großschmetterlinge; Maly, G. W., Beiträge zur Diatomeenkunde Böhmens usw.
1903ZOOL0196Wien, Hölder 1903. 2 Bl. Titelei, 622 S., mit 1 Taf. u. 15 Fig. im Text, HLn. d. Zt., Bibl.-Ex., schwach berieben, Kanten etwas abgewetzt, Rü geringf. geblichen, Bibl.-Stemp. u. Buntstiftverm. am Innentit, Vorsätze mit schwachen Lichtspuren, marmor. Schn. Abhandlung u.a. von Rudolf Wagner, Beiträge zur Kenntnis einiger Kompositen; Keissler, Karl v., Über das Plankton des Hallstäter Sees in Oberösterreich usw.
1893ZOOL0203Wien, Hölder 1893. XL, 581 S., mit 9 Taf. u. 28 Fig. im Text, HLdr. d. Zt., geringf. berieben, Lederrü. geblichen m. kl. Abschabungen, Ecken leicht bestoß., marmor. Schn. u. Vorsätze, Innentit. gebr., sonst schönes u. sauberes Exemplar. Abhandlung u.a. v. Gabriel Strobl: Die österr. Arten der Gattung Hilara Meig; Fr. Thomas: Alpine Mückengallen; Carl Bauer: Ein für Österreich neuer Pilz; Joef Boehm:Ueber die Kartoffelkrankheit; R. v. Wettstein: Ueber einige Orchideen des Wiener botanischen Universitätsgartens.
1894ZOOL0204Wien, Hölder 1894. XL, 586 S., mit 7 Taf. u. 19 Fig. im Text, HLdr. d. Zt., geringf. berieben, Lederrü. geblichen m. kl. Abschabungen, Ecken leicht bestoß., marmor. Schn. u. Vorsätze, Innentit. schwach gebr., sonst schönes u. sauberes Exemplar. Abhandlung u.a. v. Em. Pokorny: Beitrag zur Dipteren-Fauna Tirols; Julius Baumgartner: Pflanzengeographische Notiz zur Flora des oberen Donauthales und des Waldviertels in Niederösterreich; M. Heeg: Die Lebermoose Niederösterreichs.
1817BE041831817 37 p., disbound (partly loose, no covers). Published in: Natuurkundige Verhandelingen van de Hollandsche Maatschappij der Wetenschappen te Haarlem.
1876BF066961876 100 p., 6 col. lithographed pls, roy. 4to, disbound (unopened, without covers). Published in: Nova Acta. Abh. der Kaiserl. Leop.-Carol. Deutschen Akademie der Naturforscher.
1884NATW0789aLeipzig, Wilhelm Engelmann, 1884. XVI, 558 S., mit 198 Textillustr., Ln. d. Zt., berieb., bestoß., Rücken zur Hälfte aufgeplatzt, Rückennaht oben etw. aufgegang., vord. Spiegel m. Inventar-Stamp., zwei Vermerke v. alter Hand sowie Bibl.-Stemp. auf Innentit., Buchblock altersbed. gebräunt.