LANCISI, Giovanni Maria (1654-1720). De subitaneis mortibus libri duo, Venice: Andrea Poletici, 1708, 4°, third edition, title with engraving of Papal arms after Isabella Piccini (later leaves dampstained at inner margins), contemporary limp boards (stitching weak) [Blake p. 254; GM 2731; Waller 5542].

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LANCISI, Giovanni Maria (1654-1720). De subitaneis mortibus libri duo, Venice: Andrea Poletici, 1708, 4°, third edition, title with engraving of Papal arms after Isabella Piccini (later leaves dampstained at inner margins), contemporary limp boards (stitching weak) [Blake p. 254; GM 2731; Waller 5542].

Lot Essay

First published at Rome a year earlier, this study of sudden deaths was made under Papal directive, a series of autopsies revealing that many of the deaths were owing to "cardiac hypertrophy and dilation." In it, Lancisi, who was physician to Clement XI, became "the first to describe valvular vegetation" and "laid the foundation for a true understanding of cardiac pathology" [GM]

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