“Die Schriften des Andreas Vesalius”, Janus, xix (1914) 435–507.
3.
“The passing of Vesalius”, Edinburgh Medical Journal, xiii (1914) 324–339, 588–400.
4.
” ‘Apologia’ from an unfinished bibliography of Vesalius”, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, viii (1940) 390. A certain vagueness respecting the identity of Vesalius, even in Brussels, by the German Governor-General of Belgium in 1915 was told by SchullianD. M., Journal of the History of Medicine, i (1946) 482–483.
5.
Andrea Vesalio nello Studio di Pisa (Siena, 1915).
6.
“Nuovi documenti riguardanti Andrea Vesalio e Realdo Colombo nello Studio Pisano”, Rivista di storia critica delle scienze mediche e naturali, xix (1918) 507–512.
7.
London, 1925.
8.
The evolution of anatomy (London, 1925).
9.
New York and Munich, 1934 [–35].
10.
Vol. V (New York, 1941), passim.
11.
Yale Journal of Biology and Medicine, xvi (1943) 105–150.
12.
A bio-bibliography of Andreas Vesalius (New York, 1943).
13.
[Leipzig, KoehlerVerlag K. F., 1943]. The story is told in the work cited at n. 85 below, p. 229.
14.
A prelude to modern science. Being a discussion of the history, sources and circumstances of the ‘Tabulae anatomicae sex’ of Vesalius (Cambridge, 1946).
“Vesals Reform der anatomischen Nomenklatur”, Zeitschrift für Anatomie und EntwicklungsGeschichte, cxii (1943) 675–681.
17.
“The Hebrew-Aramaic element in Vesalius' Tabulae anatomicae sex. A critical analysis”, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, xviii (1945) 514–524, xx (1946) 36–57.
18.
Die Osteologie Vesals. Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der anatomischen Nomenklatur (Hannover, 1951).
19.
Brussels, 1947. Produced under the auspices of the Koninklijke Vlaamse Academie voor Geneeskunde van Belgie.
20.
New York, 1949.
21.
Sandoz A.G., Basel, 1954.
22.
London, 1959.
23.
The illustrations from the works of Andreas Vesalius of Brussels (Cleveland and New York, 1950).
“A propos of the Fabrica of Vesalius”, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, xiv (1943) 576–593.
26.
“What about the ‘Fabrica’ of Vesalius”, pp. 43–99 in Three Vesalian essays to accompany the Icones anatomicae of 1934 (New York, 1952).
27.
“Jan Stephen van Calcar: A little known self-portrait”, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, xxxiii (1959) 466–469.
28.
“Jan Stephan van Calcar—portraits of the artist”, Journal of the History of Medicine, xiv (1959) 519–522.
29.
“Some Vesalian problems”, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, xvii (1945) 425–438.
30.
“Review of Three Vesalian essays to accompany the Icones anatomicae of 1934”, Journal of the History of Medicine, viii (1953) 113–124.
31.
“Neglected contemporary sources relating to Michelangelo and Titian”, Art Bulletin, xxv (1943) 154–159.
32.
“To Vesalius on the fourth centenary of his De humani corporis fabrica”, Journal of Anatomy, lxxvii (1943) 261–265.
33.
“Das Titelbild zur ‘Fabrica’ Vesals und seine kunstgeschichtlichen Voraussetzungen”, Centaurus, i (1950) 66–77.
34.
“The title-page to the ‘Fabrica’”, Archivo Iberoamericano de Historia de la Medicina, viii (1956) 433–439.
35.
“The portrait of Vesalius from the Fabrica”, Journal of the History of Medicine, xii (1957) 393–394.
36.
BenjaminJ. A., “A discussion of the twenty-first illustration of the fifth book of De humani corporis fabrica (1543)”, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, xiv (1943) 634–651; StraussW. L.Jr.TemkinO., “Vesalius and the problem of variability”, ibid., 609–633; ElzeC., “Vesal's Deutung des Processus vermiformis”, Zeitschrift für Anatomie und EntwicklungsGeschichte, cxii (1943) 475–478; KernerF., “Andreas Vesalius und das Os vesalianum”, Zentralblatt für Chirurgie, lxxxii (1957) 217–221; RosenbergJ. C., “A Vesalian woodcut of the esophagus and stomach”, Surgery, xlvi (1959) 469–474.
37.
“As letras capitulares do tratado de anatomia de Vesalio ‘De humani corporis fabrica’ (Basileia, 1543)”, Archivo de Anatomia e Antropologia (Lisboa), xxii (1942–43) 433–476.
38.
“Anatomical tabulae and initial letters in Vesalius' Fabrica and in imitative works”, Surgery, Gynecology and Obstetrics, lxxxix (1949) 97–120.
39.
“The initial letters of 1555 edition of Vesalius's Fabrica”, Quarterly Bulletin of the Northwestern University Medical School, xix (1945) 326–335.
40.
“Die Initialen in Vesals anatomischen Lehrbuch”, Aerztliche Praxis (Bad Wörishofen), ii (1950) no. 16.
41.
“Die Initialen in Vesals ‘Fabrica’”, Index zur Geschichte der Medizin, i (1953) 1–11.
42.
“Marginal notes by the printer of the Icones”, pp. 25–42, in Three Vesalian essays to accompany the Icones anatomicae of 1934 (New York, 1952).
43.
“Das Schicksal der hölzernen Druckstöcke zu Vesals anatomischen Lehrbuch”, Münch. Med. Wschr., xciii (1951) 614–616.
44.
“Oporinus and the publication of the Fabrica”, pp. 129–134 in No. 11; “Johann Oporin, printer, publisher, and scholar: 1507–58”, Library Quarterly, xiv (1944) 207–213.
45.
“The printer of Vesalius' Fabrica”, Bulletin of the Medical Libraries Association, xxxi (1943) 240–259.
46.
“The preface of Andreas Vesalius to De fabrica corporis humani [sic] 1543”, Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, xxv (1932) 1357–1366.
47.
“A propos du quatrième centenaire de la publication du célèbre traité d'André Vésale: De humani corporis fabrica”, Bulletin de l'Académie Royale de Médecine de Belgique, viii (1943) 287–297.
48.
“Zur 400 jährigen Wiederkehr der Begrundung der anatomischen Forschung durch Andreas Vesalius”, Klinische Wochenschrift, xxii (1943) 495–499.
49.
Préface d'André Vésale à ses livres sur l'anatomie, suivie d'une lettre à Jean Oporinus, son imprimeur (Brussels, 1961).
50.
The bloodletting letter of 1539 (New York, 1947).
51.
Vesalius on the human brain (London, 1952).
52.
Moscow, 1950–1954, 2 vols.
53.
“Andreas Vesalius, Count Palatine. Some further information on Vesalius and his ancestors”, Journal of the History of Medicine, ix (1954) 196–223.
54.
“Généalogie de la famille d'André Vésale (Wijtinck, dictus van Wesele)”, Intermédiaire des Généalogistes, xvi (1961) 64–75.
55.
“Le rôle de Jean de Vésale, médecin de la ville de Bruxelles, dans la propagande de Charles le Téméraire”, Cahiers Bruxellois, i (1956) 41–86.
56.
Louvain, 1951–1955.
57.
“The anatomical sketches of Vitus Tritonius Athesinus and their relationship to Vesalius' ‘Tabulae anatomicae’,”Journal of the History of Medicine, xiii (1958) 395–397.
58.
Journal of the History of Medicine, i (1946) 173–174, 335–337.
59.
“Chrestien Wechel and Vesalius. Twelve unique medical broadsides from the sixteenth century”, Lychnos (1953) 50–74.
60.
“Ricerche su Lazaro ebreo de Frigeis medico insigne e amico intimo di André Vésal”, Rassegna Mensile di Israel, xv (1949) 495–515.
61.
Andreas Vesalius' first public anatomy at Bologna, 1540. An eyewitness report (Uppsala and Stockholm, 1959).
62.
“Eighteen years of Vesalian studies”, Medical History, v (1961) 210–220.
63.
“Ein bischer unbekanntes Konsilium Andreas Vesals über die Behandlung einer Nierensteinerkrankung”, Sudhoffs Archiv, xxxix (1955) 97–112.
64.
“Vesals Basler Skeletpräparat aus dem Jahre 1543”, Verhandlungen der Naturforschenden Gesellschaft in Basel, lv (1944) 211–234.
65.
“Ueber Vesals Aufenhalt in Basel im Jahre 1547”, Gesnerus, ii (1945) 207–212.
66.
“Vesalius in English state papers”, Bulletin of the Medical Libraries Association, xxxiii (1945) 231–253.
67.
“Deux lettres inédites d'André Vésale”, Archives, Bibliothèques et Musées de Belgique, xxviii (1957) 197–214.
68.
Journal of the History of Medicine, viii (1953) 448.
69.
O'MalleySaunders, “The relation of Andreas Vesalius on the death of Henry II of France”, Journal of the History of Medicine, iii (1948) 197–213.
70.
Archives Internationales d'Histoire des Sciences, iii (1950) 663.
71.
“Postille alla biografia del Vesalio. Andrea Vesalio in Terrasanta (1564)”, Physis, iv (1962) 219–226. This publication answered the objection of SartonG., Isis, xlv (1954) 135, that there was no evidence for a visit to the Holy Land by Vesalius.
72.
“The place in Zante where Vesalius died and was buried [in Greek]”, Proceedings of the Academy of Athens, xxvii (1952) 193–196; Andreas Vesalius the father of anatomy, and Zante [in Greek] (Athens, 1962).
73.
André Vésale (Brussels, 1941 and 1944).
74.
Bulletin of the History of Medicine, xiv (1943) 547–561.
75.
Andreas Vesalius der Begründer des anatomischnaturwissenschaftlichen Denkens in der abendländischen Medizin (Bonn, 1943).
76.
Pp. 135–138 in the work cited above, n. 11.
77.
Die Verwandlung des Vesals (Vienna, 1943); Dutch translation Het tweede leven van Vesalius (The Hague, n.d.)
78.
André Vésale mystique & expériences (Brussels, 1947).
79.
“La anatomia de Vesalio”, Archivo Iberoamericano de Historia de la Medicina, iii (1951) 85–147.
80.
“Pre-Vesalian anatomy in the light of modern research”, Bulletin of the History of Medicine, xxxv (1961) 142–148; this theme was given more extensive treatment by Rath in Andreas Vesal in Lichte neuer Forschungen (Wiesbaden, 1963).
81.
“Perino del Vaga et les illustrations pour l'anatomie d'Estienne”, Aesculape, xxxvii (1955) 74–89; “A note on Rosso and the illustrations to Charles Estienne's De dissectione”, Journal of the History of Medicine, xii (1957) 325–336; “Sylvius and the reform of anatomy”, Medical History, v (1961) 101–116.
82.
“De tweede druk van Vesalius' Fabrica (1555)”, Nederlandsch Tijdschrift voor Geneeskunde, xcix (1955) 2213–2227.
83.
Andres Vesalio y la anatomia (Buenos Aires, 1955).
84.
Nacimiento de la moderna medicine—Vesalio (Buenos Aires, 1956).
85.
Hamden, Conn., 1962.
86.
“Vesal beim Tode Heinrichs II. von Frankreich”, Sudhoffs Archiv, xlvi (1962) 333–349.
87.
Janus, 1 (1963) 258–263.
88.
Andreas Vesalius of Brussels 1514–1564 (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1964).
89.
Culture et Civilisation, Brussels, 1964.
90.
The program was as follows: O'MalleyC. D., “The influence of Vesalius in English anatomy”; PazziniA., “Aspetti artistici nell'opera vesaliana”; SondervorstF. A., “L'influence de Vésale et son oeuvre sur le développement de la science médicale au XVI siècle”; MuratoriG., “Andrea Vesalio, Giovan Battista Canano e la rivoluzione rinascimentale dell'anatomia e della medicina”; HerrlingerR., “Forschungen über die initialen in der ‘Fabrica’ von Andreas Vesal”; PremudaL., “Il significato del soggiorno padovano di Andrea Vesalio”.
91.
Andrea Vesalio. Prefazione all ‘Fabrica’ e lettera a G. Oporino (Testo e versione) a cura di Loris Premuda (Padova, 1964).
92.
The program was as follows: BoeynaemsP., “Vesalius, keerpunt in de evolutie der geneeskunde”; SchulteB. P. M., “De hersenanatomie van Vesalius”; SondervorstF. A., “L'influence de Vésale sur le développement de la science médicale au 16e siècle”; Vander ElstE.BaertenJ., “Documents peu connus sur Vesale”.
93.
After the opening addresses the inaugural session continued with the following Vesalian presentations: FlorkinM., “Pour saluer Vésale”; Van der SchuerenG., “Vesalius, de Hervormer”; BrabantH., “Vésale et l'humanisme de la renaissance”; DankmeijerJ., “Vesalius' betekenis voor de hedendaagse wetenschap”; Wolf-HeideggerG., “André Vésale et Bale”. The following two “Sessions humanistes” included: BelloniL., “Johannes de Vesalia, Docteur en Médecine à Pavia (1427) et son traité de la peste à Francois Sforza, duc de Milan (env. 1454)”; KellettC. E., “Vesalius in Paris (1533–1536)”; BoeynaemsP., “Vesalius te Leuven”; O'MalleyC. D., “Vesalius in Padua”; SteudelJ., “Vesal als Reformator der anatomischen Nomenklatur”; CanguilhemG., “L'homme de Vésale dans le monde de Copernic”; AugerP. V., “Evolution des liaisons science-technique”; FlorkinM., “La renaissance des études Vésaliennes au XXe siècle”.
94.
Scientiarum historia“Vesaliusnummer”, vi (1964) no. 3: O'MalleyC. D., “Some remarks on the significance of Andreas Vesalius”; HerrlingerR., “Der Sphincter der Harnblase bei Vesal”; ElautL., “De derde en de vierde druk van Vesalius' Fabrica: 1568, 1604”; BakelantsL., “Inleiding van Andreas Vesalius tot zijn boeken over de anatomie”; BoeynaemsP., “De brief van Vesalius aan Johannes Gast (1564)”.
95.
Medical History, viii (1964) no. 4: O'MalleyC. D., “Andreas Vesalius 1514–1564. In memoriam”; PagelW.RattansiP., “Vesalius and Paracelsus”; BelloniL., “On the life and work of Johannes de Vesalia—great-grandfather of Andreas Vesalius”; HerrlingerR.FeinerE., “Why did Vesalius not discover the Fallopian tubes?”KellettC. E., “Two anatomies”; RathG., “Charles Estienne: Contemporary of Vesalius”; KeeleK. D., “Leonardo da Vinci's influence on renaissance anatomy”.
96.
Journal of the History of Medicine, xix (1964) no. 4; “A renaissance issue commemorating the death of Andreas Vesalius, 1564”: PoynterF. N. L., “Andreas Vesalius of Brussels—1514–1564: A brief survey of recent work”; PagelW., “Vesalius and the pulmonary transit of venous blood”; SchullianD. M., “Jacopo Bonacossa and his regimen for diseases of the joints”; WightmanW. P. D., “Quid sit methodus? ‘Method’ in sixteenth century teaching and ‘discovery’”; RosenG., “The mentally ill and the community in western and central Europe during the late middle ages and the renaissance”; DebusA. G., “Robert Fludd and the use of Gilbert's De magnete in the weapon-salve controversy”.
97.
Reichsregister Karl V, Bd. 22, fol. 272v-273r, 1555 VIII 11, Brüssel.
98.
Actually the only copy of this edition available for examination, in the library of the Hispanic Society of America, lacks the pages that would contain the “permission to publish”; nevertheless, in view of the dates involved it seems likely that the intact book did contain the permission, which, at any rate, is to be found in the edition of Salamanca, 1570, of which there is a copy in the National Library of Medicine, Bethesda, Maryland.