CASSERIO, Guillio (1552-1616). De Vocis Auditusque Organis Historia Anatomica, Ferrara: Victor Baldinus, 1601, 2 parts in one volume, 2°, FIRST EDITION, engraved title (margins cut down and possibly from another copy, 2 crude repairs, one with loss, discreet accession number on a2), 2 engraved portraits, 34 full-page engraved illustrations (a few offset onto text), later vellum (inner joints weak). [Garrison & Morton 286; Norman 410] Provenance: Robert Sonnenschein (signature and bookplate); JCL

Details
CASSERIO, Guillio (1552-1616). De Vocis Auditusque Organis Historia Anatomica, Ferrara: Victor Baldinus, 1601, 2 parts in one volume, 2°, FIRST EDITION, engraved title (margins cut down and possibly from another copy, 2 crude repairs, one with loss, discreet accession number on a2), 2 engraved portraits, 34 full-page engraved illustrations (a few offset onto text), later vellum (inner joints weak). [Garrison & Morton 286; Norman 410] Provenance: Robert Sonnenschein (signature and bookplate); JCL

Lot Essay

"Casserius 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 illustrations" (Garrison & Morton 286). Casserio was the manservant of Girolamo Fabrici who taught him the art of dissection and encouraged his medical studies. Norman describes the work as "one of the sixteenth century's most ambitious and detailed investigations in comparative anatomy."

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