Skip to main content
Historical Bibliography Updated: May 18, 2021

De vocis auditusque organis historia anatomica. 2 pts.

Publication Details

Ferrara: V. Baldinus, typ. Cameralis, 1600 CE–1601 CE.

Casseri, originally a servant to Fabrizio, was personally trained by his employer and eventually succeeded to Fabrizio’s chair of anatomy. Like Fabrizio, who studied the development of the chick for clues to human embryology, Casseri endeavored to explain the human larynx and ear by reference to the lower animals. He investigated the structure of the auditory and vocal organs in most of the domestic animals. The book includes a description of the larynx more accurate than that of any previous author, and is also notable for its fine copperplate engravings, masterpieces of anatomical art. The elaborate engraved title page is particularly spectacular. Translation of chap. I-VIII , The larynx, organ of voice by Malcolm H. Hast and Erling B. Holtsmark with preface and anatomical notes in Acta otol. (Stockh.),1969, Suppl. 261.

 

 

Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#1540
Permanent Linkhttps://staging.historyofmedicine.com/entry/2863
Author Bio LinkWikipedia ↗
External URLde-vocis-auditusque-organis-historia-anatomica-2-pts

Geographic Context

Publication place: Ferrara