A skeleton, seen from the front, with labels giving the latin names of the bones. Photograph after a woodcut, 1501.

Date:
1900-1999
Reference:
26786i
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view A skeleton, seen from the front, with labels giving the latin names of the bones. Photograph after a woodcut, 1501.

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Credit

A skeleton, seen from the front, with labels giving the latin names of the bones. Photograph after a woodcut, 1501. Wellcome Collection. Public Domain Mark. Source: Wellcome Collection.

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About this work

Description

This impression was published by Wolfgang Stoeckel, whose printer's mark appears at the upper left with lettering that enumerates the bones

Publication/Creation

1900-1999

Physical description

1 photograph ; image 32.2 x 23 cm

Contributors

Lettering

Anathomia ossium totius humani corporis...

References note

L. Crummer, "Early anatomical fugitive sheets," Annals of Medical History, v, no. 3, 1923, p. 203
J. G. de Lint, "Fugitive anatomical sheets," Janus, xxviii, 1928, p. 80, fig. 1
L. Choulant, History and bibliography of anatomic illustration, tr. and ed. M. Frank, Chicago 1920, revd ed. 1945, p. 163
R. Herrlinger, History of medical illustration from antiquity to A. D. 1600, tr. G. Fulton Smith, Nijkerk 1970, p. 59, fig. 77
A. Carlino, "Kǹowe thyself'. Anatomical figures in early modern Europe," Res, 27, Spring 1995, p. 60, fig. 12

Reference

Wellcome Collection 26786i

Reproduction note

This wooduct was first published in Paris in 1493 by Ricardus Helain and is usually considered the earliest known fugitive sheet. Helain's name and the date which appeared in a rectangle at the upper right is replaced by a scroll, crediting "Helandt" and giving the date of the impression as 1501. Another difference between the two editions is that in the later copy, the skeleton has only four toes on each foot

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