Title
Aquatilium animalium historiae, liber primus : cum eorumdem formis, aere excusis
Title Variants
Alternative:
Aqvatilium animalivm historiae, liber primvs
Alternative:
Hippolytus Saluianus De historia aquatilium animalium
By
Salviani, Ippolito, 1514-1572
Bernard, of Arezzo active 14th century-
, illustrator
Lafréry, Antoine, 1512-1577
, engraver
Beatrizet, Nicolas, 1507?-1570?
, engraver
Type
Book
Material
Published material
Publication info
Romae, Apud eundem Hippolytum Saluianum, mense Ianuario, MDLVIII [i.e. 1554-1558]
Notes
Engraved title page with architectural border and a portrait of the author inset in a central cartouche.
Publisher from colophon, which is dated January 1558.
Signatures: [cross]⁸, A-Z⁶, AA-II⁸.
Imprint from colophon.
No other parts were published for this edition.
In numbering, the figure 54 was omitted; there are 98 figures on 81 plates.
Latin with some Greek.
This is the second state of the first edition. The first state of this edition has a colophon dated October 1557.
Leaves printed on both sides.
Woodcut publisher's device on leaf 2I8 verso.
With 98 numbered illustrations on 81 full pages, engraved in copperplate (the illustrations are misnumbered as 99; but 54 was omitted from the sequence).
The engravings are attributed to the illustrator Bernardus Aretinus and the engravers Lafrery and Beatrizet.
Each illustration provides the animal's name in Greek, Latin and Italian.
The first part of the book is composed of double-page synoptic tables of fish species, giving their names in Greek, Latin, and Italian (sometimes distinguishing between the different regional variants, for example names used in Rome, Veneto, or Liguria), the most distinctive properties of each species, and references to the works of classical authors in which the animals are described. The main part of the volume contains the illustrations and in-depth descriptions of aquatic animals (mostly fishes, plus a few cephalopods). Each chapter begins with an illustration of a fish, and a description of its physical appearance and habitat, as well as its nutritional value and culinary preparation, frequently referring to Aristotle, Pliny and Galen, and, in the gastronomic parts, to Athenaeus, Oppianus, and Giovio. Salviani deals with cephalopods at length and distinguishes among five species of octopus. He also describes cuttlefish, the way they procreate, and how to catch them.
Initials; side-notes.
Signatures: [cross]⁸, A-2I⁸.
Mortimer, R. Italian 16th cent., | 454
Wood, C.A. Lit. of vertebrate zoology, | p. 549
Nissen, C. Schöne Fischbücher, | 112
Nissen, C. Zoologische Buchillustration, | Bd. 1, no. 3555
Adams | S190
In Latin, with some Greek.
Subjects
Aquatic animals
,
Cephalopoda
,
Cooking (Seafood)
,
Early works to 1800
,
Fishes
,
Ichthyology
BHL Collections
Under the Sea: World Oceans Day
Call Number
QL615 .S26
Language
Latin
Identifiers
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.82337
LCCN:
https://lccn.loc.gov/a18001687
OCLC:
64755237
Wikidata:
https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q51443176
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