A survey of the microcosme. Or the anatomie of the bodies of man and woman: wherein the skin, veins, nerves, muscles, bones, sinews and ligaments thereof are accurately delineated, and so disposed by pasting, as that each part of the said bodies both inward and outward are exactly represented. Useful for all doctors, chyryrgeons, statuaries, painters, &c. By Michael Spaher of Tyrol, and Remilinus. Englished by John Ireton Chyrurgeon.

About this Item

Title
A survey of the microcosme. Or the anatomie of the bodies of man and woman: wherein the skin, veins, nerves, muscles, bones, sinews and ligaments thereof are accurately delineated, and so disposed by pasting, as that each part of the said bodies both inward and outward are exactly represented. Useful for all doctors, chyryrgeons, statuaries, painters, &c. By Michael Spaher of Tyrol, and Remilinus. Englished by John Ireton Chyrurgeon.
Author
Remmelin, Johann, 1583-1632.
Publication
London :: printed by Joseph Moxon, and are to be sold at his shop at the sign of the Atlas on Ludgate-hill,
MDCLXXV. [1675]
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Subject terms
Human anatomy
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A93594.0001.001
Cite this Item
"A survey of the microcosme. Or the anatomie of the bodies of man and woman: wherein the skin, veins, nerves, muscles, bones, sinews and ligaments thereof are accurately delineated, and so disposed by pasting, as that each part of the said bodies both inward and outward are exactly represented. Useful for all doctors, chyryrgeons, statuaries, painters, &c. By Michael Spaher of Tyrol, and Remilinus. Englished by John Ireton Chyrurgeon." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A93594.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 12, 2024.

Pages

Of the Arteries. Fig. C. 2.
  • o l r The great Arterie.
  • n The orifice of the great Ar∣terie with the crown arte∣rie gaping into the left Ventricle of the Heart.
  • n o The ascending trunk.
  • o The division of this trunk in∣to subelavian branches.
  • * * The upper Chest arterie from which the upper inter∣costal Arteries proceed.
  • o p p The Mammary descending unto the Navil.
  • q q Muscula, or a branch attain∣ing to the backward muscles of the neck.
  • * The Scapular Arteries.
  • d The lower Chest Artery be∣tween * and l, its inward bran∣ches reaching to the arm-pits but its outward is the shoul∣der-artery.
  • * u The Axillary artery.
  • aa Two branches of the axilary artery
  • These branches go to the hand
  • c The neck artery which attain∣eth the skull through the pro∣cesses of the rack-bone.
  • b The Carotis, or sleepy artery
  • s g The division of the sleepy arteries.
  • k k The wonderful net in the formest ventricles of the brain.
  • k t The trunk of the great ar∣tery descending.
  • m m m The lower intercostal arteries.
  • l The original of the Caeliacal branches which is divided into right and left branches
  • n Certain Circles of the left branches, chiefly about the upper part of the Stomack
  • o Circles of the same branch to the Milt.
  • 4 Circles of the right branch to the hollow part of the Liver and the neighbouring parts.
  • p r r The right and left Sto∣mack and Kall artery.
  • s s s The mesenterical arteries.
  • * The arteries of the midrif.
  • ss The fatty arteries.
  • gm The arteries of the kidnies
  • n n Certain branches of arte∣ries in the Kidnies.
  • o The Sperma••••••••
  • r The bifurcation of the great artery into two il••••ck trunks
  • s The arteries called Sacra, or Holy.
  • t t The subdivision of the iliack trunk, where the les∣ser inner branch makes the Muscula inferiour: but the outward runneth towards the foot and sprinkleth its branches therein.
  • x x The Epigastrick arterie climbing upward joynt it branches about the region of the Navil, with the ar∣terie of the papps.
  • zag The utter iliack or crural branch &c. The other bran∣ches not marked in this Fig. retain the names of the veins set out in the former figure.
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