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{{short description|Book by Conrad Gessner}}
{{Short description|16th century book by Conrad Gessner}}
{{Italic title}}
{{Italic title}}
[[File:Illustrations de Icones animalium quadrupedum viviparorum et oviparorum, Tigre et léopard.jpg|thumb|Tiger and leopard, Book 1:''Viviparous Quadrupeds'']]
[[File:Illustrations de Icones animalium quadrupedum viviparorum et oviparorum, Tigre et léopard.jpg|thumb|Tiger and leopard, Book 1:''Viviparous Quadrupeds'']]
'''''Historia animalium''''' ("History of the Animals"), published at [[Zurich]] in 1551–1558 and 1587, is an encyclopedic "inventory of renaissance zoology" by [[Conrad Gessner]] (1516–1565). Gessner was a medical doctor and professor at the [[Carolinum, Zürich|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.<ref name="cambridge1">{{cite web|url=http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/old_site/deptserv/rarebooks/gesner.html|title=Featured book archive: Historia animalium libri I-IV. Cum iconibus. Lib. I. De quadrupedibus uiuiparis. Zurich: C. Froschauer, 1551. N*.1.19(A)|publisher=Cambridge University Library|accessdate=29 November 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190113232118/http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/old_site/deptserv/rarebooks/gesner.html|archive-date=13 January 2019|url-status=dead}}</ref>
'''{{Lang|la|Historia animalium}}''' ("History of the Animals"), published in [[Zurich]] in 1551–1558 and 1587, is an encyclopedic "inventory of renaissance zoology" by [[Conrad Gessner]] (1516–1565). Gessner was a medical doctor and professor at the [[Carolinum, Zürich|Carolinum in Zürich]], the precursor of the [[University of Zurich]]. The {{Lang|la|Historia animalium}}, after [[History of Animals|Aristotle's work]] of the same name, 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.<ref name="cambridge1">{{cite web|url=http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/old_site/deptserv/rarebooks/gesner.html|title=Featured book archive: Historia animalium libri I-IV. Cum iconibus. Lib. I. De quadrupedibus uiuiparis. Zurich: C. Froschauer, 1551. N*.1.19(A)|publisher=Cambridge University Library|access-date=29 November 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190113232118/http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/old_site/deptserv/rarebooks/gesner.html|archive-date=13 January 2019|url-status=dead}}</ref> The animals are presented in [[alphabetical order]], marking the change from Middle Ages encyclopedias, or "mirrors" to a modern view of a consultation work.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Flanders |first=Judith |title=A place for everything: the curious history of alphabetical order |date=2020 |publisher=Basic Books |isbn=978-1-5416-7507-0 |edition=1st |location=New York |page=}}</ref>{{pn|date=June 2024}}


==Overview==
== Overview ==


[[File:Historiae animalium 1551 De Monocerote.jpg|thumb|[[Unicorn]] ]]
[[File:Viviparous Quadropeds - Book 1.jpg|thumb|right|Hunting dogs, Book 1]]
[[File:Viviparous Quadropeds - Book 1.jpg|thumb|right|Hunting dogs, Book 1]]The ''Historia animalium'' was Gessner's [[Masterpiece|magnum opus]], and was the most widely read of all the Renaissance natural histories. The generously illustrated 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).<ref name ="cambridge1"/> 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.<ref name=Huxley>Huxley, 2007. Pages 71–75</ref>


The {{Lang|la|Historia animalium}} was Gessner's [[Masterpiece|magnum opus]], and was the most widely read of all the Renaissance natural histories. The generously illustrated 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).<ref name ="cambridge1"/> 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.<ref name=Huxley>Huxley, 2007. Pages 71–75</ref>
Gessner’s ''Historia animalium'' is based on [[Classical Literature|classical sources]]. It is compiled from ancient and medieval texts, including the inherited knowledge of ancient naturalists like [[Aristotle]], [[Pliny the Elder]],<ref name ="cambridge1"/> and [[Claudius Aelianus|Aelian]].<ref name=Huxley/> Gessner was known as "the Swiss Pliny."<ref name="Gessner2">{{cite web|url= http://www.strangescience.net/Gessner.htm|title= Conran Gessner biography|accessdate= 2008-09-17}}{{dead link|date=November 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> For information he relied heavily on the ''[[Physiologus]]''.<ref name ="Gessner2"/>


Gessner's {{Lang|la|Historia animalium}} is based on [[Classical Literature|classical sources]]. It is compiled from ancient and medieval texts, including the inherited knowledge of ancient naturalists like [[Aristotle]], [[Pliny the Elder]],<ref name ="cambridge1"/> and [[Claudius Aelianus|Aelian]].<ref name=Huxley/> Gessner was known as "the Swiss Pliny."<ref name="Gessner2">{{cite web|url= http://www.strangescience.net/Gessner.htm|title= Conran Gessner biography|access-date= 2008-09-17}}{{dead link|date=November 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> For information he relied heavily on the ''[[Physiologus]]''.<ref name ="Gessner2"/>
In his larger works Gessner sought to distinguish fact from myth and popular misconceptions,{{sfn|Pettitt|2014}} and so his encyclopedic work included both extinct creatures and newly discovered animals of the [[East Indies]], those of the [[Northern Europe|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]].<ref name ="cambridge1"/>


In his larger works Gessner sought to distinguish fact from myth and popular misconceptions,{{sfn|Pettitt|2014}} and so his encyclopedic work included both extinct creatures and newly discovered animals of the [[East Indies]], those of the [[Northern Europe|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]].<ref name ="cambridge1"/>
''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.<ref name=Anzovin/>

{{Lang|la|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.<ref name=Anzovin/>


== Fantastical creatures ==
== Fantastical creatures ==


[[File:Historiae animalium 1551 De Monocerote.jpg|thumb|[[Unicorn]] ]]
There have been various academic studies relating to Gessner's inclusion of some fantastical-looking creatures in the volumes, such as [[sea monk]], [[sea bishop]], or [[ichthyocentaur]].<ref name=hendrikx/><ref name=wehner/>

[[File:Historiae Animalium at The Portico Library.jpg|alt=Fantastical creatures in a historic book, Historiae Animalium by Conrad Gessner|thumb|Fantastical creatures in Historiae Animalium at [[The Portico Library]], United Kingdom. ]]
There have been various academic studies relating to Gessner's inclusion of fantastical creatures in the volumes, such as the [[sea monk]], [[sea bishop]], or [[ichthyocentaur]].<ref name=hendrikx/><ref name=wehner/>
Gessner was aware of fakery in the curio shops market, where dried rays were manipulated to look like dragons ([[Jenny Hanivers]]).{{sfnp|Gudger|1934|pp=516–517}} There may have also been fake mermaid-like creatures being imported from China by the Dutch.{{sfnp|Gudger|1934|p=512}}

Gessner was aware of fakery in the curio shops market, where dried rays were manipulated to look like dragons (for example [[Jenny Haniver]]s).{{sfnp|Gudger|1934|pp=516–517}} There may have also been fake mermaid-like creatures being imported from China by the Dutch.{{sfnp|Gudger|1934|p=512}}


Also, commercial interests may also have motivated publishers or authors such as Gessner to include such creatures to boost sales.<ref name="hendrikx" /> But Gessner was known for meticulously checking facts, and it has been suggested that publishers may have interpolated material when Gessner was in no condition to gainsay them, since the author was already morbidly ill by the time of these publications.<ref name="wehner" /> In fact there is the example of the Su of Patagonia, posthumously inserted in the 1603 Frankfurt edition.<ref name="wehner" />
Also, commercial interests may also have motivated publishers or authors such as Gessner to include such creatures to boost sales.<ref name="hendrikx" /> But Gessner was known for meticulously checking facts, and it has been suggested that publishers may have interpolated material when Gessner was in no condition to gainsay them, since the author was already morbidly ill by the time of these publications.<ref name="wehner" /> In fact there is the example of the Su of Patagonia, posthumously inserted in the 1603 Frankfurt edition.<ref name="wehner" />
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* Volume 1: [[Live-bearing]] [[four-footed animals]] (viviparous quadrupeds) (1551).
* Volume 1: [[Live-bearing]] [[four-footed animals]] (viviparous quadrupeds) (1551).
* Volume 2: [[Egg-laying]] (oviparous) quadrupeds ([[reptiles]] and [[amphibia]]) (1554).
* Volume 2: [[Egg-laying]] (oviparous) quadrupeds ([[reptiles]] and [[amphibia]]) (1554).
* Volume 3 [[Birds]] (1555).
* Volume 3: [[Birds]] (1555).
* Volume 4 [[Fish]] and [[aquatic animals]] (1558).
* Volume 4: [[Fish]] and [[aquatic animals]] (1558).
* Volume 5 [[Snake]]s and [[scorpion]]s (incomplete, published [[posthumous book|posthumously]] 1587).{{sfn|Pettitt|2014}}
* Volume 5: [[Snake]]s and [[scorpion]]s (incomplete, published [[posthumous book|posthumously]] 1587).{{sfn|Pettitt|2014}}


==Illustrations==
==Illustrations==
[[File:Rhinoceros in Gesner's 1551 Historiae animalium.jpg|thumb|Gessner's copy of ''[[Dürer's Rhinoceros]]'']]
[[File:Rhinoceros in Gesner's 1551 Historiae animalium.jpg|thumb|Gessner's copy of ''[[Dürer's Rhinoceros]]'']]
The colored [[woodcut]] illustrations were the first real attempts to represent animals in their natural environment. It is the first book to illustrate [[fossil]]s.<ref name=Anzovin>Anzovin, p. 366 item 5210 ''The first fossil illustrations were contained in the Historia animalium, published in 1551 by Swiss physician and naturalist Conrad von Gessner.''</ref><ref>Tallack, Peter, ''The Science Book'', Sterling Publishing Company, 2006, {{ISBN|1-84188-254-2}}, p. 46 ''Gessner’s classical training taught him to give pride of place to naming and classifying the fossils he described. Most importantly, he was concerned with precise identification. His book was the first to present fossil illustrations so students may more easily recognize objects that cannot be very clearly described in words.''</ref>
The colored [[woodcut]] illustrations were the first real attempts to represent animals in their natural environment. It is the first book to illustrate [[fossil]]s.<ref name=Anzovin>Anzovin, p. 366 item 5210 ''The first fossil illustrations were contained in the Historia animalium, published in 1551 by Swiss physician and naturalist Conrad von Gessner.''</ref><ref>Tallack, Peter, ''The Science Book'', Sterling Publishing Company, 2006, {{ISBN|1-84188-254-2}}, p. 46 ''Gessner’s classical training taught him to give pride of place to naming and classifying the fossils he described. Most importantly, he was concerned with precise identification. His book was the first to present fossil illustrations so students may more easily recognize objects that cannot be very clearly described in words.''</ref>


Gessner acknowledges one of his main illustrators was [[Lucas Schan]],<ref name=Kusukawa2010>{{cite journal |last1=Kusukawa |first1=S. |title=The sources of Gessner's pictures for the Historia animalium |journal=Annals of Science |date=July 2010 |volume=67 |issue=3 |pages=303–328 |url=http://www.rhinoresourcecenter.com/pdf_files/128/1286404337.pdf |doi=10.1080/00033790.2010.488899|pmid=20853813 }}</ref> an artist from [[Strasbourg]]. He likely used other illustrators as well as himself;<ref name ="Gessner2"/> the book is however famous for copying illustrations from other sources, including ''[[Durer's Rhinoceros]]'' from a well-known 1515 [[woodcut]].<ref name=Huxley/> Gessner's natural history was unusual for sixteenth century readers in providing illustrations.<ref name ="Gessner2"/>
Gessner acknowledges one of his main illustrators was [[Lucas Schan]],<ref name=Kusukawa2010>{{cite journal |last1=Kusukawa |first1=S. |title=The sources of Gessner's pictures for the Historia animalium |journal=Annals of Science |date=July 2010 |volume=67 |issue=3 |pages=303–328 |url=http://www.rhinoresourcecenter.com/pdf_files/128/1286404337.pdf |doi=10.1080/00033790.2010.488899|pmid=20853813 |s2cid=27904499 }}</ref> an artist from [[Strasbourg]]. He likely used other illustrators as well as himself;<ref name ="Gessner2"/> the book is however famous for copying illustrations from other sources, including ''[[Durer's Rhinoceros]]'' from a well-known 1515 [[woodcut]].<ref name=Huxley/> Gessner's natural history was unusual for sixteenth century readers in providing illustrations.<ref name ="Gessner2"/>


== Censorship ==
== Censorship ==


There was [[Reformation|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,<ref>Schmitt, p. 46,</ref> and as Gessner was a [[Protestant]], it was added to the Catholic Church's [[Index Librorum Prohibitorum|list of prohibited books]].<ref name ="Gessner2"/>
There was [[Reformation|extreme religious tension]] at the time {{Lang|la|Historia animalium}} came out. Under [[Pope Paul IV]] it was felt that the religious convictions of an author contaminated all his writings,<ref>Schmitt, p. 46,</ref> and as Gessner was a [[Protestant]], it was added to the Catholic Church's [[Index Librorum Prohibitorum|list of prohibited books]].<ref name ="Gessner2"/>


==References==
==References==


{{reflist|30em|refs=
{{reflist|30em|refs=
<ref name=hendrikx>{{cite journal|ref=harv|last=Hendrikx |first=Sophia |authorlink=<!-- Sophia Hendrikx --> |title=Monstrosities from the Sea. Taxonomy and tradition in Conrad Gessner’s (1516-1565) discussion of cetaceans and sea-monsters |journal=Anthropozoologica |volume=53 |issue=11 |year= |url=http://sciencepress.mnhn.fr/en/periodiques/anthropozoologica/53/11 |pages=133–134<!--125–137-->}}</ref>
<ref name=hendrikx>{{cite journal|last=Hendrikx |first=Sophia |author-link=<!-- Sophia Hendrikx --> |title=Monstrosities from the Sea. Taxonomy and tradition in Conrad Gessner's (1516-1565) discussion of cetaceans and sea-monsters |journal=Anthropozoologica |year=2018 |volume=53 |issue=11 |url=http://sciencepress.mnhn.fr/en/periodiques/anthropozoologica/53/11 |pages=133–134<!--125–137-->|doi=10.5252/anthropozoologica2018v53a11 |s2cid=54212091 |hdl=1887/67726 |hdl-access=free }}</ref>


<ref name=wehner>{{cite book|ref=harv|last1=Ursula Wehner |first1=Peggy |author-link1=<!--Ursula Wehner--> |last2=Zierau |first2=Wolfgang |author-link2=<!--Wolfgang Zierau--> |last3=Arditti |first3=Joseph |author-link3=<!--Joseph Arditti--> |title=Germanicus and Plinius Indicus: Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Descriptions and Illustrations of Orchid "Trash Baskets", Resupination, Seeds, Floral Segments and Flower Senescence in the European Botanical Literature in Orchid Biology: Reviews and Perspectives |work=Orchid Biology VIII: Reviews and Perspectives |publisher=Springer Science & Business Media |year=2013 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kyLtCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA43 |pages=42–44 |isbn=978-9-401-72500-2}}</ref>
<ref name=wehner>{{cite book|last1=Ursula Wehner |first1=Peggy |author-link1=<!--Ursula Wehner--> |last2=Zierau |first2=Wolfgang |author-link2=<!--Wolfgang Zierau--> |last3=Arditti |first3=Joseph |author-link3=<!--Joseph Arditti--> |title=Germanicus and Plinius Indicus: Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Descriptions and Illustrations of Orchid "Trash Baskets", Resupination, Seeds, Floral Segments and Flower Senescence in the European Botanical Literature in Orchid Biology: Reviews and Perspectives |work=Orchid Biology VIII: Reviews and Perspectives |publisher=Springer Science & Business Media |year=2013 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=kyLtCAAAQBAJ&pg=PA43 |pages=42–44 |isbn=978-9-401-72500-2}}</ref>
}}
}}


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{{refbegin|30em}}
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* {{cite book |last=Fudge |first=Erica |title=Renaissance Beasts: Of Animals, Humans, and Other Wonderful Creatures |publisher=University of Illinois Press |year=2004 |isbn=0-252-02880-5}}
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* {{cite book |last=Gmelig-Nijboer |first=Caroline Aleid |title=Conrad Gessner's 'Historia animalium': an inventory of renaissance zoology|publisher=Meppel |year=1977 |isbn=}}
* {{cite book |last=Gmelig-Nijboer |first=Caroline Aleid |title=Conrad Gessner's 'Historia animalium': an inventory of renaissance zoology|publisher=Meppel |year=1977 }}
* {{cite book |last=Gessner |first=Conrad |authorlink=Conrad Gessner |title=Curious Woodcuts of Fanciful and Real Beasts - A Selection of 190 Sixteenth-century Woodcuts from Gessner's and Topsell's Natural Histories |publisher=Dover Publications |year=1971 |isbn=04862270-1-4 |display-authors=etal}}
* {{cite book |last=Gessner |first=Conrad |author-link=Conrad Gessner |title=Curious Woodcuts of Fanciful and Real Beasts - A Selection of 190 Sixteenth-century Woodcuts from Gessner's and Topsell's Natural Histories |publisher=Dover Publications |year=1971 |isbn=04862270-1-4 |display-authors=etal}}
*{{cite journal|ref=harv|last=Gudger |first=E. W. |authorlink=<!-- Eugene Willis Gudger --> |title=Jenny Hanivers, Dragons and Basilisks in the Old Natural History Books and in Modern Times |journal=The Scientific Monthly |volume=38 |issue=6 |year=<!--Jun.-->1934 |pages=511–523}} {{jstor|15490}}
*{{cite journal|last=Gudger |first=E. W. |author-link=<!-- Eugene Willis Gudger --> |title=Jenny Hanivers, Dragons and Basilisks in the Old Natural History Books and in Modern Times |journal=The Scientific Monthly |volume=38 |issue=6 |year=<!--Jun.-->1934 |pages=511–523}} {{JSTOR|15490}}
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==External links==
==External links==
{{Commonscat|Historiae Animalium}}
{{Commons category|Historiae Animalium}}
*[https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/136746#page/7/mode/1up ''Historia Animalium Liber Primum'']
*[https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/136746#page/7/mode/1up ''Conradi Gesneri Medici Tigurini Historiae Animalium liber primus. De Quadrupedibus viviparis'']
*[https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/210109#page/3/mode/1up ''Historia Animalium Liver IV'']
*[https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/210109#page/5/mode/1up ''Historiae Animalium Liber IV. Qui est de Piscium et Aquatilium animantium natura'']


{{History of biology}}
{{History of biology}}
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[[Category:1551 in science]]
[[Category:1551 in science]]
[[Category:1587 in science]]
[[Category:1587 in science]]
[[Category:16th century in science]]
[[Category:16th century in biology]]
[[Category:16th-century encyclopedias]]
[[Category:16th-century encyclopedias]]
[[Category:16th-century Latin books]]
[[Category:16th-century books in Latin]]
[[Category:Books by Conrad Gessner]]

Latest revision as of 18:53, 1 July 2024

Tiger and leopard, Book 1:Viviparous Quadrupeds

Historia animalium ("History of the Animals"), published in Zurich in 1551–1558 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, after Aristotle's work of the same name, 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.[1] The animals are presented in alphabetical order, marking the change from Middle Ages encyclopedias, or "mirrors" to a modern view of a consultation work.[2][page needed]

Overview[edit]

Hunting dogs, Book 1

The Historia animalium was Gessner's magnum opus, and was the most widely read of all the Renaissance natural histories. The generously illustrated 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).[1] 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.[3]

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,[1] and Aelian.[3] Gessner was known as "the Swiss Pliny."[4] For information he relied heavily on the Physiologus.[4]

In his larger works Gessner sought to distinguish fact from myth and popular misconceptions,[5] 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.[1]

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.[6]

Fantastical creatures[edit]

Unicorn

There have been various academic studies relating to Gessner's inclusion of fantastical creatures in the volumes, such as the sea monk, sea bishop, or ichthyocentaur.[7][8]

Gessner was aware of fakery in the curio shops market, where dried rays were manipulated to look like dragons (for example Jenny Hanivers).[9] There may have also been fake mermaid-like creatures being imported from China by the Dutch.[10]

Also, commercial interests may also have motivated publishers or authors such as Gessner to include such creatures to boost sales.[7] But Gessner was known for meticulously checking facts, and it has been suggested that publishers may have interpolated material when Gessner was in no condition to gainsay them, since the author was already morbidly ill by the time of these publications.[8] In fact there is the example of the Su of Patagonia, posthumously inserted in the 1603 Frankfurt edition.[8]

Contents[edit]

Illustrations[edit]

Gessner's copy of Dürer's Rhinoceros

The colored woodcut illustrations were the first real attempts to represent animals in their natural environment. It is the first book to illustrate fossils.[6][11]

Gessner acknowledges one of his main illustrators was Lucas Schan,[12] an artist from Strasbourg. He likely used other illustrators as well as himself;[4] the book is however famous for copying illustrations from other sources, including Durer's Rhinoceros from a well-known 1515 woodcut.[3] Gessner's natural history was unusual for sixteenth century readers in providing illustrations.[4]

Censorship[edit]

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,[13] and as Gessner was a Protestant, it was added to the Catholic Church's list of prohibited books.[4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d "Featured book archive: Historia animalium libri I-IV. Cum iconibus. Lib. I. De quadrupedibus uiuiparis. Zurich: C. Froschauer, 1551. N*.1.19(A)". Cambridge University Library. Archived from the original on 13 January 2019. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
  2. ^ Flanders, Judith (2020). A place for everything: the curious history of alphabetical order (1st ed.). New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-1-5416-7507-0.
  3. ^ a b c Huxley, 2007. Pages 71–75
  4. ^ a b c d e "Conran Gessner biography". Retrieved 2008-09-17.[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ a b Pettitt 2014.
  6. ^ a b Anzovin, p. 366 item 5210 The first fossil illustrations were contained in the Historia animalium, published in 1551 by Swiss physician and naturalist Conrad von Gessner.
  7. ^ a b Hendrikx, Sophia (2018). "Monstrosities from the Sea. Taxonomy and tradition in Conrad Gessner's (1516-1565) discussion of cetaceans and sea-monsters". Anthropozoologica. 53 (11): 133–134. doi:10.5252/anthropozoologica2018v53a11. hdl:1887/67726. S2CID 54212091.
  8. ^ a b c Ursula Wehner, Peggy; Zierau, Wolfgang; Arditti, Joseph (2013). Germanicus and Plinius Indicus: Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Descriptions and Illustrations of Orchid "Trash Baskets", Resupination, Seeds, Floral Segments and Flower Senescence in the European Botanical Literature in Orchid Biology: Reviews and Perspectives. Springer Science & Business Media. pp. 42–44. ISBN 978-9-401-72500-2. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  9. ^ Gudger (1934), pp. 516–517.
  10. ^ Gudger (1934), p. 512.
  11. ^ Tallack, Peter, The Science Book, Sterling Publishing Company, 2006, ISBN 1-84188-254-2, p. 46 Gessner’s classical training taught him to give pride of place to naming and classifying the fossils he described. Most importantly, he was concerned with precise identification. His book was the first to present fossil illustrations so students may more easily recognize objects that cannot be very clearly described in words.
  12. ^ Kusukawa, S. (July 2010). "The sources of Gessner's pictures for the Historia animalium" (PDF). Annals of Science. 67 (3): 303–328. doi:10.1080/00033790.2010.488899. PMID 20853813. S2CID 27904499.
  13. ^ Schmitt, p. 46,

Bibliography[edit]

External links[edit]