- Herbarium Apuleii Platonici
Herbarium Apuleii Platonici depicts 131 plants with their synonymy and instructions for their use in medicines and was first published in 1481 at
Monte Cassino nearRome byJohannes Philippus de Lignamine , a Sicilian courtier and physician toPope Sixtus IV . This was the first printed work on plants having numerous illustrations and is generally termed the first printed illustratedherbal . The history of the work has been lost with the passage of time, leading to endless speculation on the identity of the author. In all probability 'Apuleius Platonicus' was a pseudonym ofLucius Apuleius ofMadaura inNumidia born AD124. A study of the book shows some of the plants beingendemic toNorth Africa and lends support to the idea that the author was African. [ [http://plantaardigheden.nl/aardig/aardigheden/kruidenboeken07.htm Plantaardigheden] ]The images are controversial and while crude in appearance, have been seen by some critics as sophisticated though stylised Roman art. The diverse textures of the images led some scholars to claim that they are woodcuts, while others see evidence of metal cuts. The plates figure snakes and scorpions beside the plants when they are regarded as a cure for poisonous bites or stings. [ [http://members.aol.com/arbexhibit/erlhrb96.htm Early Printed Herbals] ]
The publication of this work inspired the zealous
Mainz printerPeter Schöffer to produce a similar work. He finished his illustratedLatin herbal which he called "Herbarius Moguntinus" in 1484, in time for the Easter Fair inFrankfurt . It sold well, prompting a second herbal, the "Gart der Gesundheit", twelve months later. [Medieval Gardens: History of Landscape Architecture Colloquium by Elisabeth B. MacDougall]References
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