Darrera modificació: 2016-04-11 Bases de dades: Sciència.cat
Stannard, Jerry, Herbs and Herbalism in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, edited by Katherine E. Stannard and Richard Kay, Aldershot, Ashgate Variorum (Variorum Collected Studies Series, CS650), 1999, 342 pp.
- Resum
- Jerry Stannard assembled a legendary collection of materials on the history of botany from Homer to Linnaeus, and his mastery of the field was acknowledged as incomparable. However, his work was sadly cut short by his death, and so did not result in the ultimate synthesis he envisioned; this volume, and its companion, Pristina Medicamenta, bring together his important output in articles and studies.
Contents:
* I: Medieval reception of classical plant names
* II: The herbal as a medical document
* III: Medieval herbals and their development
* IV: The theoretical bases of medieval herbalism
* V: Magiferous plants and magic in medieval medical botany
* VI: Late Medieval Rezeptliteratur: Botanical data and late medieval Rezeptliteratur
* VII: Rezeptliteratur as Fachliteratur = Stannard (1982), "Rezeptliteratur as Fachliteratur"
* VIII: “...findet man in den apotecken”: notices concerning the availability of medicamenta in medieval Fachliteratur
* IX: Renaissance Italy and Germany: Dioscorides and Renaissance materia medica
* X: The botanico-medical background of Baptista Fiera's Coena de herbarum virtutibus
* XI: Hans von Gersdorff and some anonymous Strassburg apothecaries
* XII: Camerarius' contributions to medicine and pharmacy observations on his De theriacis et mithridateis commentariolus
* XIII: P. A. Mattioli and some Renaissance editions of Dioscorides
* XIV: P. A. Mattioli: sixteenth-century commentator on Dioscorides
* XV: The plant called Moly
* XVI: Squill in ancient and medieval materia medica with special reference to its employment for dropsy
* XVII: The multiple uses of dill (Anethum graveolens L.) in medieval medicine
- Matèries
- Medicina - Farmacologia
Història natural - Vegetals Lèxic
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