Zustand: very good. Gut/Very good: Buch bzw. Schutzumschlag mit wenigen Gebrauchsspuren an Einband, Schutzumschlag oder Seiten. / Describes a book or dust jacket that does show some signs of wear on either the binding, dust jacket or pages.
blanda. Zustand: New. Zustand des Schutzumschlags: Nuevo.
Verlag: José da Silva da Natividade, 1754
Anbieter: AdLib[[er]], Lisboa, Portugal
Encuadernación de tapa dura. Zustand: Bueno. 2ª Edición. 1754. José da Silva da Natividade. Lisboa. 1 volume. In-8º, 20cm. XXIV+461 páginas .Enc. 2ª edição. Sem a folha de rosto que no presente exemplar é substituída pela folha de rosto facsimilada da 1ª edição, publicada em 1725. Traz ainda uma fotografia original de S. António com data de 1880. Encadernação com lombada em pele. Manchas de água desvanecidas. Folhas escurecidas. Muito bom estado.
Verlag: Joam Antunes, Coimbra, 1726
Anbieter: ERIC CHAIM KLINE, BOOKSELLER (ABAA ILAB), Santa Monica, CA, USA
Erstausgabe
Hardcover. Zustand: Very good. First edition. Folio. [42], 763, [1], 16pp. Text in Portuguese. Speckled calf with gold lettering, tooling and ruling on spine (lightly rubbed at extremities). Raised bands. Title page in red and black lettering. Decorative head-, tailpieces, and initials. Head and tail of spine slightly wormed. Some rubbing on covers with moderate abbrasion on calf. Some leaves lightly browned. Blank lower outer corner of final leaves wormed (not affecting text). Minor and sporadic damp-staining along fore-edge of last pages. Only edition and all published of this wonderfully zany early 18th century attempt at a modern Portuguese Pliny! Although primarily concerned with debunking the false medical practices of his day, exposing charlatans and attacking ineffective and/or dangerous pharmaceutical compounds widely sold as medicine, this volume touches, i.e., on pygmies, eating and drinking customs, cadavers, the mechanical and liberal arts, metals, meteorology, typhoons, chiromancy and androids. Each of the twenty major sections is devoted to a single animal (man, lynx, elephant, wolf, etc.), and Abreu weaves a net of interrelation between the animal's physiology, emblematic value, the diseases it symbolizes and the cures appropriate to them. For instance, the ass opens the door to his opinions on medical ignorance. He doesn't hesitate to name colleagues he feels employ the incorrect or harmful treatments, to snipe at medical astrologers and decry the popularity of mountebanks. He himself, however, contributes a sonnet to each section, frequent notes on the ethical and moral values attached to particular disorders, a lenghty digression on magic including many incantations and a 350-line verse romance. His citations mix classical with contemporary writings, but show a particular emphasis on 17th and 18th century Portuguese physicians. Abreu's attention to the emblematic character of the physical world is quite unusual. Not in Hirsch, Waller or Krieg's "Mehr nicht Erschienen." Blake p.1; Wellcome II: 5.