{"id":5695,"date":"2014-12-16T14:00:29","date_gmt":"2014-12-16T19:00:29","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/?p=5695"},"modified":"2022-07-25T15:26:38","modified_gmt":"2022-07-25T19:26:38","slug":"nlms-unique-de-fabrica","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/circulatingnow.nlm.nih.gov\/2014\/12\/16\/nlms-unique-de-fabrica\/","title":{"rendered":"NLM\u2019s Unique De Fabrica"},"content":{"rendered":"

By Michael J. North and Laura Hartman ~
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\"A<\/a>
Portrait of Andreas Vesalius performing a dissection from his De Humani Corporis Fabrica<\/em>, 1543
NLM #2295005<\/em><\/a><\/figcaption><\/figure>\n

This year we commemorate<\/a> the 500th anniversary of the birth of Andreas Vesalius (1514\u20131564) who is best known for changing how we do medical research with his groundbreaking book, De Humani Corporis Fabrica Libri Septem (Seven Chapters on the Structure of the Human Body)<\/em><\/a>, published in 1543 and generally known as De Fabrica<\/em>.<\/p>\n

The National Library of Medicine is fortunate enough to own a first edition of De Fabrica<\/em><\/a> printed in Basel in 1543. While every copy of De Fabrica<\/em> is unique and important, NLM\u2019s has some special traits relating to its history before arriving at the Library of the Surgeon General in the late 19th-century, including passing through the hands of a famous Protestant German theologian, a Poet Laureate, a botanist, and at least two practicing physicians.<\/p>\n

One of the most striking features of NLM\u2019s De Fabrica<\/em> is a handwritten poem on the volume\u2019s front flyleaf by Philipp Melanchthon (1497\u20131560) which appears to be a personal reflection upon Vesalius\u2019s famous work. Philipp Melanchthon was a German theologian, working with Martin Luther as one of the primary intellectual leaders of the Protestant Reformation. Written in Latin in Nuremberg, Germany, on \u201cthe Day of St. Paul\u2019s Conversion [January 25], 1552,\u201d in what is indisputably his hand, the poem is entitled, \u201cOn Contemplation of the Human Body,\u201d a clear reference to the book\u2019s own title, \u201cOn the Structure of the Human Body.\u201d In fact, it is known that Melanchthon was in Nuremberg from January 22 to March 10, 1552, on his way to the Council of Trent in Northern Italy. We do not know if Melanchthon owned the copy himself\u2014more likely it was owned by a colleague\u2014but it nonetheless appears that he studied this exact copy; he later promoted the book as an essential tool to understanding the arts and the study of man. A line from the poem reads, in translation by Dorothy Schullian<\/a> who was curator of the rare book collections at this library in the 1940s, \u201cWith purpose God assigned to each its own allotted task, And ordered that man’s body be a temple to Himself.\u201d For more on how Melanchthon\u2019s enthusiasm for Vesalius revolutionized the teaching of anatomy at the University of Wittenberg, see Vivian Nutton\u2019s essay \u201cWittenberg Anatomy\u201d in Medicine and the Reformation<\/a><\/em>.<\/p>\n