Tabulae anatomicae clarissimi viri Bartholomaei Eustachii...

Dublin Core

Description

Published nearly 150 years after Eustachius' death, Lancisius tracked down the 39 anatomical plates from the descendants of Pier Matteo Pini, Eustachius' assistant. The plates were probably drawn by Eustachius himself, or Pini.

Eustachius' anatomical skill and investigative policy were best indicated in his study of the most inaccessible anatomical structures of the body, the auditory tube. He was first to accurately describe the chorda tympani as a nerve and outline its course. Though Vesalius identified the tensor tympani, he did not recognize it as a muscle. Eustachius accurately described it. In addition to these structures and the auditory tube, he went on to discover the modiolus and the membranous zone of the spiral lamina of the inner ear. Considering the fact that investigations involving those structures and the auditory tube are timorously undertaken, even today, the inquisitiveness of Eustachius seems astounding.

Title

Tabulae anatomicae clarissimi viri Bartholomaei Eustachii...

Creator

Eustachi, Bartolomeo, -1574
Lancisi, Giovanni Maria, 1654-1720.

Publisher

Amstelaedami : Apud R. & G. Wetstenios

Date

1722

Subject

Anatomy
Anatomy, Comparative

Contributor

Reynolds-Finley Historical Library, UAB Libraries, University of Alabama at Birmingham.

Format

Book: xliv, 115, [13] p. (last page blank), XXXXVII leaves of plates : 47 illustrations (copperplate engravings) ; 37 cm (fol.)

Language

Latin