. Annals of medical history. rum quae notatudignae in commentariis Galeni in Hip-pocratem exstant (Lyons, 8, 1554);Adnotationes in Dioscoridis factum aJoanne Ruellio interpretationem (Lyons,i6% 1554); and Epistola apologetica adJoannem Cornarium (Lyons, 8, 1554). Laguna died in 1560 and was buried, as Ihave said, in the parish church of SanMiguel, Segovia. It would be interesting toknow whether there is an inscription on the tomb, if so whether it states that he wasphysician to Julius in and Charles v. Pedro Pacheco of Jaen known as PetrusGienensis was one of the Spanish theolo-gians sent to t


. Annals of medical history. rum quae notatudignae in commentariis Galeni in Hip-pocratem exstant (Lyons, 8, 1554);Adnotationes in Dioscoridis factum aJoanne Ruellio interpretationem (Lyons,i6% 1554); and Epistola apologetica adJoannem Cornarium (Lyons, 8, 1554). Laguna died in 1560 and was buried, as Ihave said, in the parish church of SanMiguel, Segovia. It would be interesting toknow whether there is an inscription on the tomb, if so whether it states that he wasphysician to Julius in and Charles v. Pedro Pacheco of Jaen known as PetrusGienensis was one of the Spanish theolo-gians sent to the Council of Trent who dis-tinguished himself in the early sessions. Hewas the son of Conde de Montalban. Pedrowas Bishop of Mondonedo in Spain in1533-7; later he became Bishop of Jaen;subsequently Bishop then Archbishop of aBurgos, the see being raised to an Arch- 1bishoprick during his tenure. He was thencreated a cardinal. He was Bishop of Jaen in1548 when Laguna dedicated the work tohim. D. Fraser Harris, Halifax, N. BOOK REVIEWS History and Bibliography of Anatomic Illus-tration, In Its Relation To Anatomic Scienceand the Graphic Arts. By Ludwig and Edited with Notes and aBiography by Mortimer Frank, , ,Chicago. University of Chicago Press, , 435 pp. Price, The history of the growth of anatomicknowledge has as its natural accompanimentan exposition of the obstinacy with whichtraditional errors were clung to by teachersof anatomy during the first sixteen centu-ries of the Christian era. As anatomy isprimarily an objective science capable ofpositive demonstration it is remarkable thatfor many hundreds of years after, as well asthroughout the thousands of years (duringwhich we know of the intellectual activitiesof man) before the birth of Christ, manremained in such ignorance of his own struc-ture that even the so easily demonstratedcirculation of the blood, and the true func-tions of the lungs were unknown until theseventeent


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