Questo sito usa cookie di analytics per raccogliere dati in forma aggregata e cookie di terze parti per migliorare l'esperienza utente.
Leggi l'Informativa Cookie Policy completa.

Sei in possesso di una Carta del Docente o di un Buono 18App? Scopri come usarli su Maremagnum!

Rare and modern books

DONZELLINI, Girolamo (ca. 1513-1587)

De natura, causis, et legitima curatione febris pestilentis Hieronymi Donzellini Philosophi ac Medici Veronensis, ad Josephum Valdanium Veronensem, Brixiae Medicum, epistola. In qua etiam de Theriacae natura ac viribus latius disputatur

Camillo & Rutilio Borgominieri, 1570

950.00 €

Govi Libreria Antiquaria

(Modena, Italy)

Ask for more info

Payment methods

Details

Year of publication
1570
Place of printing
Venezia
Author
DONZELLINI, Girolamo (ca. 1513-1587)
Publishers
Camillo & Rutilio Borgominieri
Keyword
Quattro-Cinquecento
State of preservation
Good
Languages
Italian
Binding
Hardcover
Condition
Used

Description

In 4to (mm. 191x136 mm). Cc. [4], 18. Segnatura: A-E4 F2. Marca tipografica al titolo. Iniziali istoriate. Mezza tela posteriore, piatti in carta marmorizzata. Al contropiatto timbro dell'Università di Göttingen datato 1963 come duplicato; al titolo firma di appartenenza “Martini Fogeli Hamburg”; al verso del titolo timbro “Ex Bibliotheca Regia Academ. Georgiae Aug.”. Titolo un po' sporco, qualche fioritura marginale, margini sobri.
Prima edizione, dedicata dall'autore a Leonardo Mocenico, di questo trattato sulla teriaca e sul suo uso per curare la peste.
“When Valdagno prescribed theriac to petechial typhus patients in Brescia in 1570, he was criticised by the local College of Physicians; he responded by defending the use of the medicament in a volume entitled De theriacae usu in febribus pestilentialibus (‘On the Use of Theriac in Pestilential Fevers1, Brescia, 1570). Vincenzo Calzaveglia intervened at this point to support the stance of the College, of which he was a member, maintaining that there was a difference between pestilential fever and malignant fever: theriac was useless against the latter, which was the disease afflicting Brescia at the time (his work was entitled De theriaca abusu in febribus pestilentibus [‘On the Abuse of Theriac in Malignant Fevers'], Brescia, 1570). When Donzellini entered the debate, he defended Valdagno by endorsing Galen's theories. Calzaveglia responded with a series of polemical pamphlets and an acrimonious ‘letter in Latin' (‘lettera in latino') which, alongside medical arguments, attempted to discredit his rival by criticising his track record with the Inquisition and his exile for religious reasons. The controversy dragged on for three years with further scathing publications until Donzellini and Valdagno were both banished from Brescia. Girolamo's enemies even made an attempt on his life, and he was only saved when the crowd stepped in to help, as he informed Zwinger in a letter in 1573. The repercussions of the polemic had now spread well beyond the borders of the Republic, and Donzellini was adept at finding support. One of his allies was Marsilio Cagnati, a young Veronese graduate of Padua University; in a letter written to his older friend in 1571, Cagnati described the Hippocratic manuscripts he had found in the Vatican Library and asked if he could read Donzellini's and Valdagno's books about pestilential fever. As Donzellini's enemies had failed to undermine his reputation by drawing on his unorthodox past and had botched their assassination attempt, they decided to denounce him to the Holy Office in Verona […]Girolamo Donzellini became involved in the controversy by publishing some short treatises: De natura, causis et legitima curatione febris pestilentis (‘On the Nature, Causes, and the Legitimate Treatment of Pestilential Fevers', Venice: C. Borgominieri, 1570); Libri de natura, causis et legitima curatione febris pestilentis in quibus etiam de theriacae natura ac viribus disputatur apologia per Eudoxum Philalethem edita adversus Thessali Zoili oppugnationes (‘Books on the Nature, Causes, and the Legitimate Treatment of Pestilential Fevers, which also Discuss the Apology on the Nature and Properties of Theriac by Eudoxus Philalethes Published Against the Attacks by Thessalus Zoilus', Venice: A. Bocchino, 1571; Verona: S. dalle Donne, 1575); Eudoxi Philalethis adversus calumnias et sophismata cuiusdam personati qui se Evandrophilacten nominavit apologia (‘Apology by Eudoxus Philalethes against the Calumnies and Sophism Pronounced against Evandrophilactes', Verona: S. dalle Donne, 1573)” (A. Celati, The world of Girolamo Donzellini. A network of heterodox physicians in Sixteenth-Century Venice, London-New York, 2023, pp. 148-149 and 167-168).
Sulla controversia si veda anche C.L. Redmond, Girolamo Donzellino, Medical Science and Protestantism in the Veneto, Stanford, CT, 1984, pp. 63 e sgg.
Girolamo Donzellini, originario di Orzinuovi vicino a Brescia, rampollo di un'illus
Logo Maremagnum en