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Historical Bibliography Updated: August 31, 2022

Orang-outang, sive homo sylvestris: Or, the anatomy of a pygmie compared with that of a monkey, an ape, and a man.

Publication Details

London: T. Bennet, D. Brown, 1699 CE.

The earliest work of importance in comparative morphology. Tyson compared the anatomy of man and monkeys and between the two he placed the chimpanzee, which he regarded as the typical pygmy. This was the origin of the idea of a “missing link” in the ascent of man from the apes. Facsimile reprint with introduction, 1966. Biography of Tyson by Ashley Montagu, Philadelphia, 1943.

 

Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#153
Permanent Linkhttps://staging.historyofmedicine.com/entry/2767
Author Bio LinkWikipedia ↗
External URLorangoutang-sive-homo-sylvestris-or-the-anatomy-of-a-pygmie-compared-with-that-of-a-monkey-an-ape-and-a-man

Geographic Context

Publication place: London

Mentioned in annotation: Philadelphia