Narāqī, Muḥammad Mahdī ibn Abī Z̲arr , -1794 or 1795et al
az Mahdī ibn Abī Z̲arr al-Narāqī maʻrūf bih Mullā Mahdī Narāqī ; bi-ihtimām-i Mahdī Muḥaqqiq. Part of the Arabic Collections Online (ACO... Show moreaz Mahdī ibn Abī Z̲arr al-Narāqī maʻrūf bih Mullā Mahdī Narāqī ; bi-ihtimām-i Mahdī Muḥaqqiq. Part of the Arabic Collections Online (ACO) project, contributed by Columbia University Libraries. Title on added t.p.: Sharh al-Ilâhiyyat min kitâb al-Shifâʼ = A commentary on Metaphysics of Avicenna's kitâb al-Shifâʼ. Includes bibliographical references and indexes. Electronic reproduction. New York, N.Y. : New York University, 2016. NNU Introd. in Persian; text in Arabic. Show less
Avicenna , 980-1037, Medicine, Arab, Medicine, Medicine--Early works to 1800, R125.3.A8 F75 1530
Laurentio Frisio authore. Title within ornamental woodcut border. Place of publication and printer's name from colophon on leaf b5v. Colophon reads:... Show moreLaurentio Frisio authore. Title within ornamental woodcut border. Place of publication and printer's name from colophon on leaf b5v. Colophon reads: Argentorati apud Ioannem Knoblouchum iuniorem. xxiiij. Augusti Anno Christi M.D.XXX. Signatures: a⁴ b⁶ (b6 blank). First edition of this polemic in defence of Avicenna, whose achievement the author ranks higher than anything in Western medicine. Probably the final work of the Alsace-born (and possibly Vienna-trained) physician, astrologer and geographer Fries (also known as Frisius or Phryes; d. 1530/32): his literary legacy, in which he "avows himself as an unconditional disciple of Arabism" (cf. NDB). - Slight waterstaining to gutter; one double-leaf loosened; final blank shows tear to edge. Exceedingly rare; no copy in auction records since 1950. Main Heritage Compact General R125.3.A8 F75 1530 Book Item-ID: i16598659 BIB-ID: 1494584 Show less
At head of title: A.-M. Goichon. French and Arabic in parallel columns. "Errata" ([2] p.) inserted between p. [446] and [447]. Indexes in Latin and... Show moreAt head of title: A.-M. Goichon. French and Arabic in parallel columns. "Errata" ([2] p.) inserted between p. [446] and [447]. Indexes in Latin and French. Main Heritage Compact General B751.Z7 G6 1938 Book Item-ID: i26262708 BIB-ID: 2804791 Show less
Ibn Ṭufayl (Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn ʻAbd al-Mālik) ; nueva traducción española por Angel González Palencia. Main Heritage Compact General B753.I53 R57... Show moreIbn Ṭufayl (Abū Bakr Muḥammad ibn ʻAbd al-Mālik) ; nueva traducción española por Angel González Palencia. Main Heritage Compact General B753.I53 R57 1948 Book Item-ID: i26206365 BIB-ID: 2799706 Show less
Iano Matthaeo Durastante, medico, ac philosopho; Sanctoiustano; oculatissimo, ac diligentissimo; censore. (AVICENNA). MONTE, Giovanni Battista da,... Show moreIano Matthaeo Durastante, medico, ac philosopho; Sanctoiustano; oculatissimo, ac diligentissimo; censore. (AVICENNA). MONTE, Giovanni Battista da, commentator. In primi lib. canonis primam fen, profundissima commentaria. Adiecto ... de membris capite. Iano Matthaeo Durastante ... censore. Venice, Vincenzo Valgrisi and Balthassar Constantini, 1557. Small 8vo, 2l + 1t + 1 + 9 (preface) + 21 (index) + 651 + 1 + 2l, with printer's device on title, repeated at colophon, three attractive woodcut intials at the beginning; some contemporary marginalia and underlining; a fine copy of contemporary limp vellum; inner hinge broken. Second edition (first 1554) of Da Monte's commentaries on Booke one, fen 1, of the Cannon of Avicenna, edited by Gian Matteo Durastante with the addition of De membris (mentioned on the title), De facultatibus and De virtutibus naturalibus ministrantibus (not mentioned on the title). These additions in fact complete the first fen, the whole comprising the philosophical foundation of Avicenna's entire system of medicine. Da Monte was professor of medicine at the university of Padua, where in 1465 a statue was passed mandating the teaching of the whole of Book I of the Canon. During 3273 (imperfect); NUC records four other locations, New York Academy of Medicine, Cornell, and two at Yale; the earliest edition in the Wellcome Library is 1558; this edition not in the British Library. May have been issued with the editions of Monte's commentaries on other parts of the Canon published in Venice under the same imprint between 1556 and 1557. The newly added chapter De membris (p. 553-605) is followed by 2 others: De facultatibus and De virtutibus naturalibus ministrantibus. Corrected and enlarged edition of the work previously edited by W. Lublin and published in Venice in 1554. Printer's device with inscription "Vincent" on t.p. and repeated on leaf 2S6v. Signatures: *-2*⁸ A-2S⁸ (2S7-8 blank). Includes index. Woodcut initials. Main Heritage Shelves General R128.3 .M66 1557 Book Item-ID: i10106674 BIB-ID: 1012303 Show less
Avicenna , 980-1037, Qānūn fī al-ṭibb, Criticism and interpretationAvicenna , 980-1037, Medicine, Medicine--Early works to 1500, R128.3 .B46 1498
(Avicenna). Hugo Senensis [Ugo Benzi], commentator. Super I et II fen primi canonis Avicenna unacum Antonii Faventini quaestione de febre. Venice,... Show more(Avicenna). Hugo Senensis [Ugo Benzi], commentator. Super I et II fen primi canonis Avicenna unacum Antonii Faventini quaestione de febre. Venice, Bonetus Locatellus for Octaviano Scoto, 27 April, 1498. Folio, 2l (bin.) + 249 + 1l + 1l + 1l (bin.), printed in Gothic type in double columns, woodcut printer's device on final leaf, woodcut initials, the first larger initial with an armorial device drawn in ink into the central space; extensive contemporary marginalia in the first quarter of the book, occasionally elsewhere; recased in old limp vellum. This is the first edition of Hugo da Siena's commentary on Book I, fens 1 and 2, to mention both fens in the title; previous editions had mentioned only fen one though including both, which has led some bibliographers to call this the first edition of the commentary of fen 2. Ugo Benzi, as he is most commonly called, was born in Siena about 1370. He taught medicine in Pavia in 1399, thereafter in Bologna, Padua and Florence, and Padua again in 1430. "In accordance with the Arabist tradition Ugo set the seal of proficiency on his academic career by composing Commentaries on most of the fundamental medical texts studied in the universities. [As well as Hippocrates and Galen] Ugo treated the most important sections of Avicenna's encyclopaedic masterpiece, namely I, 1-2, dealing with the fundamental concepts of medicine and general symptoms of disease" (D.P. Lockwood, Ugo Benzi, medieval philosopher and physician, 1951, p. 35). H *9017; Goff H545; Lockwood 12; Klebs 998.2. Imprint supplied by colophon, l. 124. Printer's device, last leaf, recto. Includes Gerardus Cremonensis's Latin translation of Avicenna's text for his Canon, Bk. 1, Fen 1-2. Main Heritage Vault R128.3 .B46 1498 Book Item-ID: i10182664 BIB-ID: 1019902 Show less