Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n lung_n right_a vein_n 2,059 5 10.1719 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A03467 The historie of man sucked from the sappe of the most approued anathomistes, in this present age, compiled in most compendious fourme, and now published in English, for the vtilitie of all godly chirurgians, within this realme, by Iohn Banister, Master in Chirurgerie, and practitioner in phisicke. Banister, John, 1540-1610. 1578 (1578) STC 1359; ESTC S106942 423,377 248

There are 24 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the office to conuert any thyng doth transmute chaunge it into his owne colour as is to be noted by the testicles and womens brestes Also the Uentricle sheweth it playne for whether the meates that we eate be white red yellow gréene or other colours all those notwithstandyng it conuerteth to white the colour of his owne substaunce Here also the testicles c. BUt now in the Gibbous part of the liuer where the substaunce thereof séemeth greater and thicker springeth a veyne called Concaua Chilis or Magna beyng the mother of all other veynes in our body To this are diuers thicke and great rootes which are inserted in the substaunce therof from the toppe to the bottome and do all at length constitute that large veyne which is extended and ramified both vp to the head and downe to the foote This veyne is rightly compared vnto a great riuer For from thence as there be many dikes issuyng so very many braunches are deriued from this veyne like litle brookes and runnyng dikes which are spre●… abroad throughout the whole body transposing bloud to euery Membran of late made and laboured in the liuer This Vena Concaua in ascending vpward from the liuer toward the head perforateth the midrief in what place it is distaunt from the bodyes of the Vertebres and in that place putteth forth two veynes whiche agayne deuided into braunches are distributed throughout the same Diaphragma Which done this Uena Caua runnyng almost immediately to the right care of the hart is set vpon the Orifice of the right ventricle of the hart connect and knit therewith complectyng it euery where on the outside not beyng caryed into it IN this place it bringeth forth a veyne whiche compasseth and embraceth the hart like vnto a crowne wherfore accordyngly it is called Coronalis Vena FUrthermore this hollow veyne ascendyng vp towardes the head is caried vp aboue the lunges there distaunt from the Vertebres And aboue the hart no small space thrusteth forth the veyne without a mate called by the Gréekes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whiche although it be in the right side yet hath his begynnyng from the middest or as it were the centre of the hollow veyne which is reflected neare the bodyes of the Vertebres and downe to the extreme part of the brest descendeth sendyng braūches both on the right and left side to the spaces betwene the ribbes for the nourishmēt of those partes And although this stocke lye in the right side yet neuerthelesse vnder the lunges Aesophagus and great Arterie are braūches thence scattered to cherish and feede the left side FRom the same right trunke or stocke whilest it begynneth to be reflected breaketh of an other braunch which ascendyng vpwardes dedicateth braunches to the superiour spaces of the vpper ribbes and not onely in the right side but in the left also except in some and those very few in which a litle braunch is deriued on the left side from Vena Axillaris and caryed now to two now to thrée and sometyme to one of the spaces betwene the ribbes onely FRom all these veynes nourishyng the spaces of the ribbes as is sayd there spryng yet other veines which go in betwene the Vertebres where the holes be for the production of Nerues These veynes nourish the sayd Vertebres and Spinall marey and enter in at the holes sited behynd the bodyes of the Vertebres From these further before they enter in the Spinall marey to nourishe it veynes are also sent to the Muscles of the skinne and backe MOreouer aboue the veyne without a fellow the hollow veyne ascēdeth lyeng a loft the rough Arterie straight vp the height of the Cannell bone there putting forth ij great veynes called Axillaris because they go vnder the armehole which betwene the Cannell bone first ribbe do passe by the cauitie of the brest THen after from him stretcheth the humerall veyne called also Capitalis or Cephalica which neuerthelesse ascendeth not to the toppe of the shoulder but rather is caried after the inner region and passing forth betwene the first and second Muscle of the shoulder stretcheth to the outer partes and there lyeth euident aloft For when it is passed through the fleshy Membran it goeth betwene it and the skinne to the cubite and is caried outwardly neare to the first Muscle that boweth the cubit at which bought it deuideth in two braunches wherof one goeth to the inside of the cubite and in departyng from the bought therof it is vnited with an other like braunch of Basilica of which two is made the true common veyne But the other bow of the aforesayd veyne in the outside of the cubit both aboue outward produceth many braūches but at length the chief braunch stretcheth aboue the wrest and extreme part of the hand betwene the litle finger and the ryng finger and this diuision is caryed to the extremities of either of those fingers And this is the veyne commonly called of ech Practisioner Saluatella the opening of which they beleue to profit much in the effectes of the splene To which of truth me séemeth no reason can consent After that this Vena Axillaris is gone from out of the hollow of the brest and hath committed from him this veyne lately described it plungeth it selfe déepely vnder the Cannell bone at the Processe of the scaple called Anchiroïdes in which place it obtaineth very many braunches whiche nourish the first Muscle of the arme and not onely it but also the second of the scapple bone and the second of the brest and the fourth and seuenth of the shoulder and the scapple it selfe and all the space euen to Abdomen Besides these in women you must vnderstand that other braunches are conuenient to the nourishyng of the brestes FUrthermore this Axillaris Vena beyng caryed to the shoulder vnder the first Muscle bowing the cubite is deuided into iij. and those notable great veynes Wherof one is called Basilica or Hepatica the inner veynes after Hypocrates of the cubitte This veyne which we haue said to pearse so déepe cōmeth alost by litle litle to the extreme end of the shoulder bone where the cubite boweth like to Cephalica it is deuided in two wherof the one is vnited in the inside of the cubite with a braunch of Cephalica in whiche place is made the common veyne That is to say cōmon because it is partaker of both the veynes Which braunches constitutyng the same are called Medianae most cōmonly opened of euery Practitioner But here is to be noted that neare to Cephalica his Mediana lyeth no nerue so as there doth to Basilica An other braunch is poured forth by the exteriour part and diuersly conioyned for now with a braunch of Cephalica now with the common veyne Per Anastomosin at length it sendeth braunches aboue the wrest and backe of the hand as also
comprehendeth all the veynes of the body within the number of iiij as the rootes of all the rest That is one procéedyng from the hollow seat of the liuer and runneth into the vessicle of choler into to the ventricle into the splene Mesenterium and Omentum The second of the Gibbous part of the liuer into the rest of the body the lunges onely excepted and is dispersed with an innumerable part of braunches The thyrd from the right ventricle of the hart is spread into the lunges onely that veyne maketh this peculiar chalenge because it consisteth of the body of Arteries to be called Arterialis The fourth is produced from the Nauell into the liuer and onely serueth to the nourishment of the infant From these all other veynes that wander vp and downe in mans body are mutually deriued and take their begynnynges And this is the end of Ueynes THe bleddar that is the receptacle of yellow choler and called of some Cislis Fellis of others though more rudely the Gall or purse of citrin choler hath his seate in the h●…llow side of the liuer For on what side the liuer amplecteth the right side of the ventricle there is a cauitie engrauen exquisitely agréeyng to the middle portiō of the gall And to that cauitie the middle superiour portion of the same vessicle after the length therof groweth but the inferiour part of it without the substaunce of the liuer hangeth downward It is in fourme long and round by litle and litle downe to the point of the bottome therof like a certaine lōg fashioned peare enlargyng so that with a narrow mouth more ample bottom it cōsisteth For it being required that the rest of the body therof should be large capable because it could not be made exactly round as a globe the cauitie is after the lōgitude therof augmēted therfore nether asfected with any incōmoditie by the stomach nor ouermuch insinuated in the liuer But that being emptied it might flat or shrinke in like as by filling extend it is constitute of Membranous and sinewy substaunce consistyng of one simple and peculiar coate thinne but hard and firme enterwouen with three fold maner of Fibres The straight be inmost the next are the oblique but fewer then the straight the outmost are the orbicular or transuerse Fibres To this tunicle of the gall is lent an other from the coate of the liuer not to the whole vessicle but to that part onely that hangeth without the body of the liuer whiche alone néedeth it for an inuolucre and propugnacle This vessicle although it growe in déede to the liuer the shoppe of sanguification notwithstandyng it taketh vnto it ij very small veynes from the stocke of Uena porta in that order diffused into his coate as we sée the litle veynes scattered into the adherent or white tunicle of the eye Also from the Arterie reached out to the hollow of the liuer a very smal braunch is offred out to the same wandryng ēuen to the very extreme part of the bottome therof Neither is the same destitute of sinewy relief lest likewise of sense it should be frustrate For the Nerue of the liuer beyng lead by the lower Membran of Omētum and brought from the right side or stocke of the vj. payre of sinewes of the brayne reached out to the rootes of the ribbes deliuereth forth a surcle to this vessicle in leane bodyes almost no lesse euident then the Arterie The wayes of this vessicle made to receiue and put forth are thus The necke of the vessicle somewhat harder then the bottome endeth by litle and litle at a streete porie passage at that part of the liuer whence Uena porta taketh his begynnyng Whether when it is come it deuideth into two Processes one reachyng vpward the other downeward That which is caried vpward lyeng to the Anteriour side of Vena porta ascendeth into the liuer and therein beyng in two partes dissected reacheth one to the right side the other to the left Euery of these also in the liuer are digested into other surcles and those agayne into others vntill they haue constituted an innumerable order of braunches through the body of the liuer betwene the armes of Vena porta and Caua diffused And these are the surcles or braunches by whose labour choler is drawne into this vessicle But the Processe of that way of the vessicle which reacheth downward vnderset with the inferiour Membran of Omentum hasteneth downe somewhat obliquely and is implanted to Duodenum not farre from the begynnyng of Ieiunum nay to the begynnyng of Ieiunum sayth Collumbus This Processe wherof before is made mention carieth choler expulsed from the vessicle into the intrels in the meane tyme neither admittyng any of their iuyce or windyncs nor any of the choler to regurgitate backe agayne because they haue into the intrell not onely a writhyng entraūce but it is brought to passe by the benefite of two Membrans stackly set to the sides of the Orifice lightly yeldyng way to the waight of choler rushyng in as also wholly inhibityng the returne therof into the passage ag●…yne But the same passage inserted to the gutte is for the most part 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and in very few two or deuided Wherefore there is ouer playne 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mūdinus Ualescus Carpus with others of that Arabia se●… were exce●…gly 〈◊〉 deceiued who affirmed that nature cōtinually had assigned y. wayes for the vomittyng forth of choler from his vessicle as one to the intrels an other to the veutricle For if choler should so haue recourse vnto the ventricle the same should by the bityng therof as Gal. 5. vs partium affirmeth perpetually prouoke or rather compell the ventricle to auoyde the meate nether should it so much vse the retentiue facultie as whilest the meat were concosted Vesalius confesseth he neuer saw it in all his tyme but in one onely man who in diuers other organs and specially about the ribbes and Muscles of the brest as he varied from the workemanshyp of other bodyes so had he one passage also of choler that visited the ventricle beyng a man of state and temperature of body hoate and dry Realdus Collumbus neuer foūd it although he protesreth him very often diligently to haue searched for the same But he denieth not whē there is great aboūdaunce of the same yellow choler that it accustometh to regurgitate belche vp to the Uentricle albeit the same is agaynst nature not accordyng to Nature Contrariwise nothyng resisteth the incourse therof into the intrels since there the gift therof is notable cuttyng purgyng and wipyng away all grosse flegme or vnprofitable humours heaped in those small passages Furthermore by styrring and bittyng prouoketh their proppertie to a finall extrusion of the excrementes And it selfe also together with the excrementes yeldyng no hurt when as in
partes but about the middest of Os pubis the right begynnyng with the left is vnited and ioyneth together then beyng inflected downward are implanted to the borders of Glans whiche Glans is harder then the other partes of the yard The right Ligament with the left after the length of the yard is vnited But because the substaūce of the yard did then consist but of a rare and porie ioyning or settyng together and for that it could be litle apt to the necessary erection in coiture since scarse sufficient helpe was purchaced by the onely benefite of the Ligamentes prouident Nature poured forth two Arteries through these aforesayd bodyes which are from the roote of the yard caryed euen to the extreme end of Glans but so as that by the way almost an infinite number of braunches are dispersed When lust therefore styrreth to the generation of a new man she poureth forth great force of spirites throughout those Arteries hearie braunchynges by whose helpe the same substaunce before wrinkled weake and bendyng is now lifted vp erected made stiffe and hardned But the Ligamentes aforesayd do as it were propper and vnderset the same beyng of them selues thicke both for this sayd cause as also least the spirites should ouer hastely vanish away beyng wasted These Arteries and their offices Collumbus boasteth no man before hym to haue rightly knowne by whiche also sayth he nourishment is brought vnto the yard whilest elles in the yard is no Ueyne nor any Nerue notwithstandyng that Uesalius is of cleane contrary opinion Beside these partes hetherto decided which Nature deuised for the framyng of this instrument there are also foure Muscles which in the second booke of this History are sufficiently spoken of There is besides that common way or passage destined both to séede and 〈◊〉 which vnder these two bodyes is conuayed nether is it any thyng els sayth Collumbus if it be rightly wayed saue the substaūce of the bleddar lengthned out to the end of the yard All these are couered ouer and clothed with Cuticula Cutis and Carnea 〈◊〉 without fatnes altogether which here for motion sake is wantyng lest supernaturally therewith encreasing it might be greuous to the matrice The extreme part of the yard is called Praeputium beyng that skinne wherewith Glans is couered so in the acte of venerie now vpward now downeward to the exceedyng delectation of the Female moue●… this is that whiche the Hebrues in tyme of Circumcision lose The lyne vnder the yard marchyng after the length therof is called in Latin Sutura for so it represeuteth the fashion of a seame As the part betwene the inuolucre of the Testicles or purpose of the stones and the fundament is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is Interfoeminium But because I am from the begynnyng perswaded that by liftyng vp the vayle of Natures secretes in womens shapes I shall commit more indecencie agaynst the office of Decorum then yeld needefull instruction to the profite of the common sort I do here ordaine the vi rest of these my labours ❧ An ende of the Historie of the Generatiue partes ¶ Of the History of Man the vij Booke of the makyng of the hart and of the Instrumentes ministryng to his function commonly called The Vitall or Spirituall partes BEfore you all whosoeuer you are most attentiue Readers I fréely protest that hetherto my penne hath not wauered in the doubtfull balaunce of ambiguitie but passed the playne pathe of truth guided by the footesteppes of my forerunners till now at length beyng come to a place somewhat ascendyng as they that will attayne to the scope of their desire must not refuse the hill with the dale I finde the steppes of some willingly yeldyng to so tedious a iourney others with senses vnappalled to haue plowed a path directly ouer the moūtaine here I see one willingly walking a contrary way and there an other praysing their endeuours but protestyng him selfe onely to haue light in the nearest way So that here no maruell though I should stand amased and as one plunged in the depth of contrary streames For Galen Vesalius diuers others as touchyng the instrumentes that restore the ayrie substaunce whiche continually waste and refreshe the innated heate are contented to affirme that of the ayre drawen in by the lunges part is receiued by the surcles and braunches of the veniall Arterie and there hence beyng prepared by the elaboration of the lunges is by the same vessell caryed into the left ventricle of the hart where metyng with the bloud lately strayned through the hedge betwene the ij ventricles it doth together by the workyng of the hart ordaine that famous composition the vitall spirite Contrariwise Realdus Collumbus sayth that the bloud sent from the right ventricle of the hart by the arteriall Ueyne into the lunges there takyng the mixture of ayre is drawne by the veniall arterie into the left ventricle of the hart whereas beyng almost made before it is now perfected vitall spirite Albeit I am not ignoraunt how lately both these assertions are denyed Leonardus Botallus prouyng that bloud is brought into the left Uentricle an other way that is by a propper Ueyne that is found somewhat aboue the coronall Ueyne neare adioyning to the right auricle thence with direct tract marchyng to the left which contrarietie notwithstandyng lest I should séeme to confound the History of the vital members I haue thought good to describe the partes after the best approued and that in such wise as there shall appeare therein great perspicuitie and likehode of truth Yet not that I meane to reiect Botallus although he hath neither distinctly set downe the deriuation of that Ueyne neither apertly the insertion therof but because the labour of him shal be lesse that endeuoureth alone to stoppe the runnyng streame accomptyng any duety none right curteous Reader in describing the partes to haue forewarned thée of this late inuention To the which description that I may briefly come I will omit further circūstaūces onely to do away obscuritie I meane that the whole be not maymed by wantyng part it behoueth to begyn at the pannicle coueryng the ribbes thence to the other partes conteined within the capacitie of the brest THe coate therefore or Membran to all the ribbes beside the xij on ech side occupyed with the implantation of the midreif and to the whole brest bone vnderreached and coueryng the bodyes of the Vertebres of the brest and the vp per part of the midreif towardes the ampiitude of the brest is named in Latin Succingens and commonly called Pleara In the posteriour part it toucheth along from the first Vertebre of the brest downe to the xj out of which region consisteth that part of the midreif that transmitteth the great arterie but in the forepart it des●…udeth from the cannell bone to the lower
brayne neither that in vayne but beyng there holden to moysten those partes whose motions are perpetuall Neither doth it meanly auayle to the vtterauuce of voyce and pronounciatiō as apparauntly we are taught by the example of such as long haue laboured in the Spanish dissease to the vtter ruine and vastation of this part how afterward I say they speake rather after the maner of crowes then men A thyrd vtilitie also hath this same Gargarion and that is lest the dust which s●…yme meeteth vs at vnwares our mouthes beyng open should infeste and trouble the rough arterie whiche this rather incercepteth by the way ●…eynes into the middest therof it re●…ueth from those bra●…ches sent to the coate of the palate but with Nerues doth participate litle It is euident also that to what persons this Gargareon is wantyng to such the cold ayre is much more gre●…us then to other men as testifieth Gal. Lib. 11. de vs partium ON both sides of the iawes are two Glandules one on the right side of Gargareon and the other on the left and they haue to name Paris●…miae tonsillae amigdala fauces these also beyng of Glandulous substaunce were made to the receiuyng of the humiditie of the brayne therfore were they placed thus in the iawes called of the Grecians Pharynx of the Latins Fauces to minister vnto them moysture But the iawe is conteined within these borders the foundation of the head and palate the anteriour bodyes of the Vertebtes of the necke in which place sundry and many organs appeare as the toppe of Trac●…ea Arteria called Larinx the bone called Hyoïdes and his Muscles the roote of the toūg his Muscles the vj. payre of sinewes the inner veynes called Iugulares the arteries Carwtides Gargareon the neither iawe and a portion of his Muscle●… the Pr●…cesses Styloïdes and the stomach or Aesophagus Therfore these same Glandules beyng vsed in so strete a place are from the elders called Parisihimiae Enwrapped they are in the same Membran wherewith we haue sayd the mouth and palate to be clothed which further descendyng runneth to Aesophagus constitutyng his interiour coate as also the inner clothyng of the Uentricle and intrels and yet more downward behind the toung inuesteth the Epiglotte Larinx and the rough arterie euen to the extreme partes of his braūches dispersed throughout the lunges But the outside of this rough arterie is shrouded vnder the succingent Membrā called Pleura And thus much beyng exactly wayed is sufficient for these partes THe lunges are sited in the brest wherof the greater part they occupy beyng bound to the bodyes of Vertebres to the hart and to the rough arterie into two partes this agayne is deuided a right and a left wherefore some infer that there be two lunges The figure of it outwardly is round inwardly hollow that necessarily since so it beho●…d it to yeld vnto the hart and Pericardion But besides that diuision this instrument the lunges is deuided to the end it might both be more agile and easie to moue as also more aptly to embrace the hart into foure lobes not into fiue as in beastes Galen approued Which diuersitie is thought to happē because in them the liuer is much distaunt frō the hart Wherfore when the hollow Ueyne so long way from the Vertebres is distaunced it required a boulster wherewith to be vnderlayd so that prudent Nature then willed that the lunges in beastes should by one lobe surmount the same instrument in the body of mā which lobe in those creatures is strewed vnder the hollow Ueyne but it is hollow as Galen most excellently hath sayd because it giueth place to the roundnes of the hollow veyne But since that in man betwene the hart and liuer onely the midreiflyeth there was no néede at all of the v. lobe The substaunce of the lunges is rare light and porie as a sponge in colour somewhat red which kynde of substaunce the elders haue named Parenchyma i. A●…usio It is inuolued of the Membran pleura lately described beyng there very porie Through this instrument the lunges these vessels are disseminated so wit the rough arterie the veniall arterie and the arteriall Ueyne The rough arterie is caried in through the longitude of the necke in the fore part vnder Larinx consisting of gristelly ringes but not perfect ringes as in the History of Cartilages appeareth where the rough arterie is at large described which deuidyng into a right left first and those by litle and litle into many others is wasted in braunches to the extreme partes of the lunges The office seruice which it oweth to nature is to carie ayre both in and out and from the vpper partes procéedyng goeth downe to the lower The veniall arterie from beneath is caryed almost straight vpward beying first also deuided into a right and left part then diuers wayes ra●…ed and approchyng to the braunches of the rough arterie The same likewise doth the arteriall veyne Thus these thrée vessels are embraced of a substaunce rare light and porie thus beyng the lunges ●…dred Whose vse is as the Anathomistes rightly write for the coolyng and refrigeration of the hart this effect beyng wrought by the bringyng of cold ayre vnto it And who likewise knoweth not that the same both serueth to inspiration expiration and voyce All which offices of right appertainyng to the lunges I cā proue by the testimony of euery Anathomist since herein as with one co●…sent they accord 〈◊〉 together but seuerally Collumbus addeth one of great effect and nothyng touched heretofore of any other For it is sayth he the preparation yea almost the generatiō of vitall spirites which after are perfected in the hart That is to say the inspired ayre it receiueth through the mo●…th nostreles it beyng brought by the conueiance of the rough arterie through the substaūce of the lunges the which instrumēt ceasseth not to mixe the same ayre with that bloud which is brought vnto it by the arteriall veyne from the right ventricle of the hart For this same arteriall veyne besides that it bringeth bloud for nourishment is so large as that it may serue for other vse also And this bloud by styrring through the continuall mouyng of the lunges is made thinne and together with the ayre mixed which thus by the same refraction and beatyng together is prepared so that the ayre bloud together mixed are receiued by the braunches of the veniall Arterie at length by the trunke of the same veyne sent into the left ventricle of the hart but so wel mixed and attenuated together as that to the hart small labour at all is left after which small elaboratiō the hart as it were laying to the last hād to the makyng of the vitall spirites that by meanes of the great arterie they might be distributed to all
in dead and liuing bodies doth testifie it selfe THe hart within this inuolucre closed beyng the fountaine of vitall heate and perfector of vitall spirites after they are laboured in the lunges as before is touched is also the originall roote of all Arteries but not of Nerues neither Ueynes as fondly some haue fabled THe figure of the hart is not much vnlike the pine nutte but somewhat depressed that is to say hauyng a broader foundation but endyng by litle and litle at a poynt somewhat sharper then the pine nutte is much more long then thicke All the exteriour face therof from the foundation or seate to the extreme part of the poynt is very euen and smooth growyng to no part at all Notwithstandyng the braunches of the coronall Ueyne runnyng from the seate to the poynt of the hart with the fellowshyp of their Arteries which swellyng with bloud do cause a litle inequalitie but not much because the greatest portiō of their bodyes is impressed within the substaunce of the hart so likewise doth the fat wherewith mans hart aboundeth enduce some inequalitie but the foundation of the hart for the goyng forth of the vessels is euery where vnequall For to the right side therof the right auricle together with Vena caua the arteriall veyne is committed But it hath on the left side the left auricle and besides the veniall arterie the begynnyng of the great arterie Of which more at large hereafter THe hart although it was of sapient nature situated in the brest yet not in the middest of the body for the centre is onely occupyed of the nauell nor in the middest of the brest as Aristotle supposed and the common people at this day do thinke For onely the seate of the hart which since it is the originall of the vessels is supposed the most noble part exactly obtaineth the middest of the right and left side of the brest both beholdyng the anteriour posteriour partes For so farre it is distaunt from the brest bone as it is in space from the bodyes of the Vertebres Of the longitude of the brest which is constituted of xij ribbes it respecteth the body of the fift Verteb●…e But in the anteriour region of the brest which is ended by the longitude of the brest Bone it obtaineth truly the middest beyng so much remoued from the Cannell bone as distaunt from that part of the brest bone whereto the midreif is inserted And thus in his seate this noble part is safely situated beyng much remoued frō the iniuries which outwardly might happen From which part the rest of the body of the hart by litle and litle is so reached forth towardes the anteriour partes and into the left side as that the posteriour part of his point bendeth more to the brest and forwardes then the centre or ●…ddest of the foūdation and the right part of the poynt beyng more to the left side thē the middest of the same seate excéedeth the middest of the brest bone into the left side and the centre or pricke of the poynt respecteth the Cartilages of the vj. or vij ribbes on the lest side where they are bound vnto the brest bone Furthermore it lyeth so apt for the embracing of the lobes of the lung●…s as most readely the vessels might from the one to the other be conuayed THe chief substaunce of the hart doth consist of flesh not altogether so red as the flesh of the Muscles but in hardnes thicknes interwearyng of Fibres much varyeng from it For the flesh of the hart is much harder and thicker to beare out iniuries farre more able for so it was expedient consideryng his motion and finally with diuers kyndes of most strōg Fibres endewed whereas the flesh of Museles is not so firme but contented with foure Fibres that is for the most part one kynde and those more strewyngly set accordyng to their required actiō as in the history of Muscles whence the errour of those is detected who soeuer they are that affirme the hart to be of Musculous substaunce THrée sortes therfore of Fibres are cōteined in the flesh of the hart that is to say straight oblique and transuerse The straight we call those which from the foundation are caried to the poynt of the hart Those transuerse which in crosse or compassing wise goe about the hart and those oblique that choose their course more slopewise then the others The flesh of the hart auayleth to the principall functions therof which especially consist in the makyng of vitall spirite or in makyng perfect the same after the labour of the lunges as Collumbus assureth vs. The Fibres serue to an other function for by them the hart whilest the creature liueth is dilated and contrahed and somewhiles resteth betwene contractiō and dilation Moreouer they serue to the mouyng of the hart which is naturall and nothyng subiect to our will as thus the straight for attraction the trásuerse for expulsion and the oblique for retention And these motiōs of the hart are called Diastole and Sistole and Diastole when the hart in his dilatation receiueth in of spirite like as Sistole is when the hart by constriction putteth forth the same THe seate of the hart is compassed round about which the Ueyne called Coronalis that so the hart might be nourished by his bloud to the which Ueyne also is ioyned in felowship the arterie called Coronalis which is yet to describe and which sometyme are ij to the end that by meanes and helpe therof the substaūce of vitall heat might be quickned Wherefore sayth Collumbus some man may doubt yea by the premisses frame a sufficient argument to proue that the vitall spirites are not begottē in the hart but in the lunges Albeit he referreth the case to the more sapient Philosophers to discufse And so it shal be sufficient here truly to describe the partes of the body how they are to what vse created least I meddle ouer farre in such misteries To the seate moreouer of the hart is offred a litle Nerue procéedyng from the left sinew of the v●… payre from the brayne whereas it constituteth the left recurrent Nerue For this pearsing through the seate of the hart his inuolucre and reached forth to the left side and posteriour part of the arteriall Ueyne créepeth very obscurely into the foundation of the hart and that onely for the féelyng of annoyaunces THe coate that groweth closse vnto the substaūce of the hart is altogether aunswerable to that Membran whiche fo firmely groweth to the bellyes of the Muscles I meane that most thinne Membran which from the substaunce of the Muscles may not be plucked Upon which coate in mā chiefly groweth plenty of hard fat but that most commōly about the seate of the hart though sometyme it be effused euen downe to
obserueth from the seate down to the point No otherwise then as the figure of the hart is made also from his seate narrower The left Uentricle also begynneth with a large seate but by litle and litle becommeth streter towardes the poynt of the hart obtaining as touching the whole Superfice a round cauitie like a Pincapple For the hedge that is betwene the Uentricles of the hart on the left side wherewith it maketh the right of the left Uentricle is hollow contrary to the other side which bouncheth into the right Uentricle and hath equall thickenes and nature with the substaunce of the hart constitutyng the anteriour and posteriour partes of the left Uentricle But the whole substaunce of the hart beside of the hedge of the Uentricles constitutyng the amplitude of the right Uentricle is very thinne But that which effourmeth and compasseth about the left Uentricle surmounteth much in thicknes the substaunce of the right Uentricle and is euery where a like thicke sauyng the seate onely where for the insertion of the vessels so much substaunce must needes wāt as the amplitude of the Orifices do occupy space The Superfice or inside of both the Uentricles is very vnequall and beset as it were with many causes déepely impressed into the fleshy substaunce Neither do these consist onely in the sides where the right ventricle respecteth the left but round about throughout the whole Superfice of the ventricle and that not onely in new dissected bodies but perpetually apparaūt as oft as you lust to behold the hart neither at any tyme not appearyng in a dryed hart besides this inequalitie which in the left ventricle is something greater both of them haue inwardly certaine fleshy explantations or Processes which are round and slender and ceasse into Membranous Fibres continuall or ioyned to the lower seate of the Membrans in their borders reposed These Processes are chiefly discerned fleshy at the poynt or lower part of the Uentricles which make to the strength of the Fibres which they conteyne That through the hedge situated betwene these two Uentricles bloud should passe as it were by resudation from the right into the left Uentricle almost all Anathomistes hetherto haue affirmed And that the same in passage also should be made thinner for the more easie generation of vitall spirites But very wyde they wander sayth Collumbus For the bloud through the arteriall Ueyne is caried to the lunges whence beyng attenuated it is caried by the veniall arterie into the left Uentricle of the hart together with ayre which no man before his tyme noted or at least haue left extant MOreouer about the seate or foundation of the hart foure vessels are apparaunt two to the right Uentricle and two to the left in the right the hollow Ueyne and arteriall Ueyne but in the left the great arterie Aorta and the veniall arterie Notwithstandyng estéeme not as many suppose that the hollow veyne doth spryng from thence for it goeth not into the hart as falsely they imagine but beyng deuided or cleft a sunder in that place cleaueth onely to the Orifice of the right Uentricle The arteriall veyne neither springeth from the hart but from the liuer For note if we behold the same whilest the infant as yet is shrouded within the mothers wombe we shall finde the hollow veyne to be continuall with the arteriall Ueyne In somuch therfore as it is a Ueyne it fetcheth the begynnyng from the liuer but as touchyng that it is arteriall frō the hart For of all artcries the hart is the fountaine It goeth to the lunges to carie bloud for the nourishment of the instrument and to the end that the same may be altered for the hart Sufficient great is this arteriall Ueyne yea much greater then was néedfull if the bloud had bene onely to be caried to the lunges in so small spáce aboue the hart It is deuided into two trunkes or notable braunches both to the right and to the left lunges thence forth into sundry braunches as before is sayd in the lunges The arterie named Aorta which of all other arteries is the mother springeth from the left Uentricle of the hart and riseth vpward But before we prosecute the description of this arterie it séemeth méete to speake of the veniall arterie set to the left ventricle of the hart it is called an arterie in that it serueth to spirites and arteriall bloud but a veyne because it hath the body or substaūce of a veyne It is a vessel sufficient large which also through the lunges is deuided like the arteriall veyne The opinion of other Anathomistes is that the vse of these diuisions of this vessell into the lunges is to cary vnto the lunges the altered ayre which are as a fanwynde to the hart to coole the same they supposing also that then the lunges do receiue certaine I know not what fumes frō the left ventricle And this inuētion doth meruailously delight them because they imagine that in the hart surely the like is accustomed to be done as in chimneyes as though in the hart were gréene stickes which whilest they burne do make a smoke or fume Thus much Collumbus writeth accordyng to the sentence of other Anathomistes But he him selfe iudgeth cleane an other way as thus that this veniall arterie is made to cary from the lunges bloud mixt with ayre into the left Uentricle of the hart Which thyng sayth he is as true as that which is most true not onely beyng apparant to euery inspection of dissected bodyes but manifest also in quicke diffections of creatures how full of bloud this Ueyne is alway founde which could not be so if it had bene made onely for ayre and vapours It is to be noted that in the Orifices of the iiij vessels at the seate of the hart xi Membrās do stand called Trisulcae or iij. edged that is to say iii. to Vena caua 〈◊〉 to the arteriall veyne iij. to the arterie Aorta ii to the veniall arterie which are not all in figure alike For those which are put to the hollow veyne veniall arterie are diuerse in fourme from the Membrans of the great arterie and arteriall veyne For the Membrans of these are like iij. of those letters which the Latins call C but the others are like arrowes The vse of these is meruailous and by their meanes we learne and perceiue many thynges that appertaine to the knowledge of the functions both of the hart and lunges Know therfore that as they are in figure diuers so their vtilitie not all a like The wickettes therfore for so they may not much vnaptly be termed of the hollow veyne and veniall arterie are sited from within forth as seruyng to the emission of bloud but the wickettes of the other ii vessels contrariwise from without forth or inward that so they might séeme vnto vs to be made for the conteining of included bloud This also note that those litle wickets which from within forth
are opened abound here and there with certaine filmentes or threedes dispersed through the ventricles made so to hold and strengthen them By which filmentes peraduenture Aristotle was deluded supposing them to be Nerues so therfore he assigned the hart to be the roote of Nerues and consequently of féelyng and mouyng But to returne to the foure vessels two of them are made to carie into the hart whilest that hart is dilated but the other ii to beare forth in the time of constriction When the hart therfore is dilated it receiueth bloud from the hollow ●…eyne into the right ventricle as also from the veniall arterie prepared bloud and spirite into the left ventricle Therfore those Membrans lye downe and yeld to goyng in For whilest the hart is coarcted these are shut left any thyng they haue receiued should returne or go backe agayne the same wayes and at the same instaunt the Membrans of the great arterie and arteriall veyne are opened and giue way to the goyng forth of the ayerie bloud which throughout the whole body is dispersed and to the naturall bloud caried forth to the lunges The matter therfore is alway so that when the hart is dilated the Membrans first mentioned are opened and the rest shut So that you shall finde the bloud which is now gone into the right ventricle not able any more to go backe agayne into the hollow veyne By which sense we gather that the hart by no meanes is that member wherein bloud is engendred as Aristotle sayth when as the bloud is from Vena caua distributed This moreouer know for a suretie that in the hart of man is no bone to be found although in Oxen Horses and such great creatures it may be shewed but in man no such thyng except it chaunce that in very aged persons the like be inuented as in the History of bones I haue protested my selfe once to haue found Onely a Cartilaginous substaunce at the roote of the great arterie towardes the arteriall veyne is sene whiche a Bone in no wise may be called although Galen him selfe would haue it so whose sentence partly I haue set forth in the place afore cited Suppose this assertiō most approued in Anathomie that all arteries procéede from the hart euen as all ●…eynes from the liuer all Nerues from the brayne From the left Uentricle of the hart therefore springeth that arterie named Aorta of all other arteries in the body the mother In quantitie it is sufficient large and in substaunce thicke and white The cause of the thicknes is first least the bloud with filled spirite should easely vanishe and wast and secondly least it in mouyng should be broken For the Arterie moueth continually yet not by it selfe but through spirites AFter that Aorta is gone forth from the hart immediately it bringeth forth a small arterie called the coronall because it compasseth about the seate of the hart to quicken and refresh his substaunce in which it is diuersly disseminated albeit you haue to note by the way that in some bodyes this coronall arterie is not onely one but ij and so Vesalius describeth it but further ascendyng it is deuided into ij trunkes or stockes one greater the other lesser the greater descēdeth the lesser ascendeth that trunke is made the greater which I say doth descend for that the great portion of the body was to be reuiued therewith The trunke ascending putteth forth an arterie from the left side which is called the Axillaris arteria which stretcheth forth obliquely towardes the armehole and sendeth braunches to the superiour ribbes and goyng forth to the arme choseth his iourney after the inside to mate himselfe with the inner Basilica but sendyng a braunche vpwardes commaundeth others to all those Muscles which are about the shoulder the scapple bone and his cauitie not faylyng the anteriour partes of the brest nor the Glandules vnder the armehole But the trunke of Arteria axillaris descendeth straight through the inner region of the shoulder downe to the boughte of the cubite and before it passe this part it giueth out a litle Arterie to accompany the fourth Nerue of the arme whiche Arterie is among the Muscles distributed that serue to extend the cubite but so soone as it hath passed the bought of the cubite it is deuided into two sometyme into thrée arteries yet first it leuyeth litle arteries to those Musc●…es that are in the shoulder and cubite and one braunche goeth neare to that Ligament that is set betwene Cubitus and Radius and being gone forth marcheth to the externe Muscles The remnant foloweth the longitude of the cubite which after it hath flowed beyond vnder the inner transuerse Ligament of the wrest in the palme of the hand it is diuers wayes deuided and to the extremities of the fingers deuided but an other braunch tendeth towardes Radius after his conductyng and so soone as it is past the mid●…est of the cubite it ariseth betwene two Muscles and goeth vnder the skinne by the inner part of Radius This is that braunch whose mouyng Phisitions are accustomed to féele when they lay hold of the wrest to take counsell at the pulse By the way notwithstandyng I wish thée this to note that in some persons this braunch is diuersly placed so that to be the same whiche hetherto we haue spoken of thou mayest take occasion to doubt in that it is sometyme caried on that outside So that what Phisition soeuer vnexpert in Anathomie shall in the accustomed place chiefly in a sicke body onely séeke for the pulse and can not finde it he will iudge vntruly death to be neare that person and so prognosticate falsely Albeit no man may deny but that very seldome it is otherwise situated for in déede for the most part it doth occupy the inside This moreouer so soone as it departeth from the wrest it procéedeth through the outside to the extremities of the fingers An other braunch neare to the Ligament is caried This trunke afterwardes ascendyng this Axillaris arteria beyng now dispersed it is cut into ij arteries called Car●…tidas or Seporarias which through the laterall partes of the necke are straight caried to the seate of the scull cleauyng to Aspera arteria fixed to the inner veynes called Iugulares But before they enter into the Scull they send ij arteries to the face beyng deuided vnder the neither iawe they impart of the smaller sort to the Muscles of the necke of the head of Larinx of Hyoides and of the toung But the two braunches which are the greater caried to the toung are caried throughout his lōgitude to the extremitie therof which iourney beyng atchieued they ascend vnder the eare and both before beside the same are to the temporall Muscles eleuated so then beyng to the forehead to the skinne of the head and to the Muscles of the face distributed The other arme or bowe therof which to be caried backwardes we haue affirmed is
the partes of the body it was most requisite The which ●…w assertion or late inuention of Collumbus because it was like to be much spurned at and by all meanes possible especially of those that had sworne them selues to the decrées of Galen and Vesalius confuted and reiected the same Auth●…ur hath as it were entreated vs willyngly to contemplate first the magnitude and largenes of the lunges which without vitall bloud could not endure when as there is not the least particle in all the body that is destitute therof But if this vitall bloud be not begotten in the lunges from what part might it thether haue bene seut but from the great arterie and thence sayth he not one braunch great nor litle is conuayed to the lunges For to this purpose as touching the veniall arterie or arteriall veyne he demaundeth how by them vitall bloud should be brought vnto the lūges whilest nether of them doth beate but serue for other speciall offices as shortly more largely shall appeare There are litle small Nerues which touch onely the coate of the lunges but pearse not within which maketh that the lunges are with very small sense endewed notwithstandyng that it is a member greatly néedefull and so necessary The coate wherof since it is porie no maruel that in time of the Pleurisie inflamation of the lunges it receiue bloud into it which spettle outwardly declareth In conclude the lunges so needefull to the refreshyng of the hart nature did not onely deuise as also lest it should be serued at any tyme with vnprepared ayre but many creatures she would haue breth for the cause of voyce also so requisite to their life and naturall beyng That therfore which is giuen out from the lunges in the tyme of expiration is the excellent notable matter of voyce THe Membran enuoluyng the whole hart with his auricles begynnynges of the vessels like a certaine casket or case thereto is called of the Greekes Pericardion in Latin Cordis inuolucrum some Casula cordis for that it is as a certaine house vnto the hart the barbarous number by the addition of one letter pronounce it Capsula But we will vse here to say the inuolucre of the hart The image or portraiture wherof is very like vnto the fourme of a Pine nut hauyng a round orbiculer foundation and a blunt poynt But the foundation of the hart is not continuall with the inuolucre therof but at least pearsed through with v. holcs whereof two yeld way to the hollow Ueyne That is to say one where the same doth perforate the midreif But the second hole is that where the same Ueyne rising vpwardes from the foundation of the hart goeth to the Cannell bone The thyrd letteth in the veniall arterie The fourth is prepared for the great arterie And the fift yeldeth way to the arteriall Ueyne To the partes of these vessels distaunt a notable space from the vpper face of the hart this inuolucre groweth after a sort fetchyng his begynnyng from them The rest of the inuolucre transmittyng no vessell is whole and côtinuall and euery where alike saue that from the foundation downwardes as is sayd it stretcheth into a blunt poynt after the fashion of the hart The foundation or scate is meant to be the toppe and highest part therof which in man is placed somewhat higher then the body of the fift Vertebre of the brest yet lyeng not close thereto but ouer agaynst it Besides this inuolucre in the progresse or descēse therof varieth as touchyng situatiō For in mā whose fore part of the brest nature hath made shorter is 〈◊〉 so crooked towardes the left side agayne forwardes as that the poynt after a certaine maner reacheth more downward thē that part of the brest bone wher●… to the vpper part of Septū trāsuersum groweth And againe so much appertaineth to the left side as that the right part of his poynt scarse attaineth to the middest of the brest Also to the fore partes the poynt so procéedeth as that it may touch the left side of the brest bone and Cartilages coarticulated or knit thereto It consisteth of Membranous substaunce and with the other Membrans ther fore numbred amōgest the similar partes of the body For it is enterwouen with no Fibres but is a simple Membran euery where thicke very hard and constitutyng a concauitie wherein the hart may both vse his dilatation and constriction casely For the hart in it selfe containeth no portion growyng thereto but is distaunt euery where equally from it This cauitie is altogether smooth wette with a certaine thinne humor and destitute of all fatnes And so is the outer face of this inuoluere although Aristotle farre otherwise supposed affirmyng the inuolucre of the hart to be fat deluded peraduenture with the intersepient Membrans which growyng to this inuolucre are very fat especially in man But the exteriour face of this inuolucre for the Fibrous knittyngs as Mēbrans growing together is rough To the anteriour part of the inuolucre of the hart whereto those Membrans are not knit Mēbranous Fibres fulfillyng or supplyeng the roome of these Membrans do grow But to the whole posteriour part the intersepient Membrās are fréely growyng All the poynt and egregious portion of the right side of this inuolucre groweth very strongly and in most ample space to the sinewy circle of Septum transuersum whiche thyng in déede is peculiar to man since in Dogges Apes and Swine it is much distaunt from the midreif Also in man onely the anteriour part of the poynt cleaueth to Pleura with Fibrous knittynges in that part I meane on the left side where the Cartilages of the vj. and vij ribbes are bound vnto the brest But that knittyng of the inuolucre is brought to passe among the Membrans that deuide the brest in the middest for no where the inuolucre of the hart excéedeth the middest of them nether in any part toucheth the lunges but by their interuenture Moreouer there are no arteries dispersed in this inuolucre neither veines vnlesse it be some small ones springyng from those whiche are deriued to the intersepient Membrans as others to Omentum For when it transmitteth Vena 〈◊〉 it boroweth of it scarse any thing but where it groweth to the midreif it chalengeth to it the vessels cōmonto the midreif Nerues also it purchaceth though very obscure procéedyng from those out of which there current nerues do braūch Thus this Membranous inuolucre beyng as a fine boxe or case vnto the hart susteineth the same by the ayde and benefite of the intersepient Membrans In the space or distaunce conteined betwene this inuolucre Pericardion and the hart a certaine watrie humor is conteined lest the hart by perpetuall mouynges might be dryed whiche although Matheus Curtius doubted to be true the truth notwithstandyng both
the poynt of the hart by the sides of the Ueynes and Arteries sprinckled about the body therof Which fat was for the continuall mouyng of the hart very necessary For to that end we finde fatnes also in very many partes of the body and chiefly about the eyes and ●…ēporall Muscles least they should be dryed by labour BEside fatnes the hart hath litle eares or auricles For so the authors of dissections do call those two Appendaūces growyng to the seate of the hart They are called by the name of eares not for their vse nor any action but for 〈◊〉 sake which they obtaine in situation like vnto the proper eares The right eare is set to the right side of the seate of the hart coueryng all the fore part of the insertion of Vena caua after his longitude and with his poynt departyng from the body of the Ueyne rayseth it selfe vpwardes somewhat higher then the seate of the hart The figure of this auricle is like a poynted stéeple pillour or other buildyng whose brodest part is the bottome and thēce the nearer to the top the narrower For so it begynneth but at a lōg fashioned foūdation goeth forth into a sharpe albeit not very sharpe nor long The exteriour face of the auricle varieth accordyng to the fulnes or emptines therof For whē in the constriction of the hart it swelleth being filled then it is Gibbous euery where equall as with a wa●…rie humor annoynted But beyng fallen and emptied appeareth wrinkled and set with foldes Sometymes also though very seldome it chaunceth that the outside of the distended auricle appeareth vnequall but that is through fatnes then that groweth vpō it The inside or interiour Superfice of the eare 〈◊〉 a cauitie is wholly aunswerable to the same side of the Uentricles of the hart For like as that where the vessels are inserted educed is smooth but 〈◊〉 where els rough and full of caues euen so that eare where it groweth to the insertion of the hollow Ueyne is smooth but in all the other rowme beside so full of Fibrous foldynges as that it surmounteth the ventricle of the hart in inequalitie The substaūce of the auricle is litle but that very hard and skinny flesh wherin it much differeth from the hart but in that it conteineth the thrée sortes of Fibres it is therein aunswerable to the flesh of the hart The settyng to of the auricle is much after this sort The left side of his seate groweth to the extreme part of the substaunce of the hart where the anteriour region of the Orifice of the hollow Ueyne consisteth in the right Uentricle of the hart or more truly the auricle goeth forth from that same extreme part But the right side of his seate groweth to the body of the hollow Ueyne after the longitude of his insertion into the hart and in the anteriour part therof beyng made as it were one body with the veyne The rest of the auricle is frée frō the knittyng to of any part beyng conteined also within the inuolucre of the hart though with no Fibrous knittyng committed thereto The left auricle of the hart is in very many poyntes like vnto the right For it consisteth in the anteriour seate of the rising of the veniall arterie accordyng to the longitude therof And so from his seate also ceasseth at his poynt as is sayd of the other Which poynt beyng sharper then the poynt of the right auricle but is reached more toward the left side Besides the left in more aged persons giueth place to halfe the largenes of the right auricle like as the Orifice of the veniall arterie is much lesse then the Orifice of the hollow Ueyne As touchyng the inside and outside the auricles are euery where one like an other Although the exteriour Supersice of the left is alway more wrinkled and vnequall In substaunce also they are agreable but the left is much harder and in constriction and distention is lesse obedient And if it be compared to the right auricle it appeareth féeble and dryed and on the outside alway aboundyng more with fat then the right In knitting they agrée altogether For as the right groweth to the right side of the hart Vena caua nigh the insertion therof so in like sort the left in the right side of his seate groweth to the substaunce of the hart where the veniall arterie goeth forth but on the left side to the same body of the veniall arterie In vse notwithstandyng they differ although very litle For when as the 〈◊〉 with great force doth receiue his bloud into the right Uentricle from 〈◊〉 and as it were in snatchyng wise doth swallow it the same Vena caua not consistyng of any strong or arterious body should greatly haue bene daungered I meane for breakyng in that strong attraction of the hart saue onely that therfore nature created the right auricle of the hart which beyng obedient to the mouyng of the hart and full with bloud should poure forth the same bloud which it conteineth into the right ventricle whē the hart is dilated and that the same should be after a sort rowled into that ventricle to dispence with the force of attraction and to be to the hart as a ready hand or storehouse Aunswerable to which vse is the cuticular construction of the auricle which is light and to the sufferyng of iniuries resistaunt Hollow it is to conteine the matter and construct with Fibres as a thyng subiect to attraction retention and expulsion Likewise the left auricle of the hart growyng to the veniall arterie beareth altogether the like seruice vnto it and to the left ventricle of the hart as we haue sayd the right eare to be in vse to the right Uentricle And so much the lesse is the cauitie of the right eare by how much the Orifice of the veniall arterie is narrower then the orifice of Uena caua In mouyng also ayre is more ready to folow then bloud so that for this occasiō also the left auricle is made lesse thē the right THe hart of mā obtaineth within two notable and large cauities called of the Latins Ventriculi or Sinus sited after the sides of the hart one on the right the other on the left Wherof the right excéedeth the other in largenes and both of them in fourme varie much one from an other For the right descendyng more downwardes to the poynt of the hart then the left hath his cauitie made like the Moone encreasing As in the right side anteriour and posteriour part like the inside of a halfe circle there aunsweryng to the exteriour Superfice which is Gibbous But on the left side of it it is Gibbous like the outside of a halfe circle by meanes of the hedge betwene the Uentricles which as a thyng halfe round bouncheth into the amplitude of the right Uentricle And this fourme the right Uentricle of the hart
the brayne then in placyng the hart The fourth reason is to consider the marueilous vse of the brayne since it is the author of sense and mouyng without which the body were no otherwise but a stocke or dead Image altogether destitute of sense and motion So is it also the seate of the mynde endewed with the vertue of reason which is the greatest signe in déede to discerne the difference betwene man and beast which saith Galen is an Arte before all Artes. From whēce are obtayned séeyng hearyng smellyng tast and speach To the which actions what great vtilitie the brayne profereth it is well to be perceiued by Idiotes and foolish bodyes who hauyng defect in this are lame in all the rest The fift Argument he proueth by the partes and considerations of this Arte wherof we entreate as thus In the generation of man the liuer is engendred by the meanes and helpe of the vmbellicall veynes but the hart by the meanes of the vmbellicall Arterie and these both the veyne and Arterie spryng from the vessell of the matrice but the Nerues which to be the instrumentes of sense and motion no man doubteth spryng from the brayne of the infant which is engendred of the séede it selfe Therfore of right the brayne is to be estéemed more noble then all other members and as one may safely say the kyng of all the principall partes Wherein is framed by a subtill kynde of operation the most precious daynty iewell which adourneth man with the greatest ornament aboue all other creatures that is the spirite animall not sparingly reserued to some principall part but accordyng to custome of Nature who in her giftes is buntifull yea euen to the basest part is fruitefully distributed and poured vpon euery part of the body to the end they should not liue destitute of sensible action But before we speake fully of the function princely propertie of the brayne I thinke good to speake vpon the thrée Membrans whiche first appeare vnto vs enwrapping the same the one of them being without the compasse and enclosure of the Scull and the other two within the same But secondly I will speake of that without the Scull because it is produced from one of them within THe vttermost therfore of these inner Pannicles which in déede with in forth is next vnto the Scull in respect of all other Membrans either of the brayne or other partes of the body thickest is of the Grecians called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Latin Crassa and for the excellent hardnes therof Dura the hard or thicke Membrans the barbarous sort call it Dura Mater which in compassing the brayne about doth not gather the same straightly and closely together but in slacker sort and remisse order no otherwise then after the maner that Pericardium inuolueth the hart prouided or rather forecasted so by Nature lest otherwise the straightnes therof might yeld cause of impediment or depriuation of his motion in Diastole and Sistole For though it séeme marueilous yet it is most certaine that not onely to the hart belongeth the same Diastole and Sistole but likewise to the brayne As all such diligent Anathomistes as haue employed any trauell to the search of liuely dissections or if fewe such yet at the least if they haue but giuē a litle héede to the mouyng therof in woūdes of the head that haue pearsed Cranium they shall cōfesse it no obscure mystery but an euident playne truth This hard Membran sayth Realdus Collumbus albeit no man euer before his tyme did finde it is double not in respect of the thickenes therof towardes all other Membrans in the body but two distinct Membrans Whereof the one inward beholdyng the brayne and the other outward next to the Scull whiche worthely is endewed with lesse sense then the other for because it is the next and fittest to touch the hardnes of the bones But the other agayne inwardly excelleth in perfect sense Therefore these Membrans redoubled in the toppe of the head vnder the straight Suture discendyng seperate the right part of the head from the left Notwithstandyng not so euen downe to the bottome or lowest part but to the halfe of the brayne as one should say to the centre pricke or halfe way of any rounde fashion or fourme where the callous body is This doubling of the Membrās wherof I haue made mention in the hynder part therof towardes the brayne is more large thē before towardes the forehead The figure therof is after the fashion of a sickle But agayne in the hynder part of the head these Membranes are 〈◊〉 or to say playnly Dura Membrana is in this place foure double that not in vayne for asmuch as very properly in that part it deuideth the brayne from Cerebellum Betwene whiche are foure corners or rather cauities filled with bloud into which the inner Ueynes called Iugulares make entraunce of whiche ingresse Uesalius as one in this poynt iudged litle diligent was ignoraunt and go foreward euen to the extreme part For that cause there is in this place no bloud without the proper vessels which if it should be as in déede Vesalius déemed Dura Mater might be called the begynnyng or originall of Ueynes then which what to be more absurdely sayd or thought can not be deuised But to returne to the foresayd hollowes or cauities Of these the two first are placed at the seate or foūdation of the brayne where a way is made for the inner Ueynes called Iugulares whose entraunces are nigh the Bone of the head called Occipitium and do arise vpwardes to the poynt of the seame called of some Lambdoides and here ioyne together that is the right with the left and make the thyrd hollower which marcheth foreward after the whole length of the head and endeth in the hole which is in the toppe of the nose betwixt the forehead and Os Ithmoides But this thyrd hollow is not round beneath for the sides therof are in triāgled wise framed the vpper part resembleth a halfe circle to whose eminence and roundnes the fore part of the head geueth place for so doth the same cauitie lye iust vnder the straight seame or Suture From this hollow or rather from the veyne which we sayd to be reposed therin very many other Ueynes both from the sides and also beneath spryng forth which wander here and there dispersed throughout the thinne Membran which we will speake vpon by and by Those aforenamed are cut into an innumerable sorte of Ueynes by which company the whole brayne is nourished Aboue this hollow cauitie small Ueynes also arise whiche to the end the Bones might be nourished do passe through by the Sutures The fourth cauitie or corner of the hard Membran quadruplified is iust betwene Cerebrum and Cerebellum whiche place the Anathomistes call a
bodies which also in very few yeares though to my cost yet for the very zeale I haue had thereto I haue dissected I haue found some of Galens Sceletons in sundry pointes It may fall out to be no new saying that almost in all bodies some varietie is to be sene Much meruailous shall it be to him that vseth dissection to see such sundry and often varieties yea settyng aside monstrous shewes the Anathomist shall see in his own region and in few yeares sundry notes of new shapes in nature not so straunge now as worthy the notyng To praetermitte those whiche Vesalius obserued because they are confused let vs come to the most notable by others descriued and set in order Collūbus that Anathomist of worthy fame beginning at the head runneth through the whole body notyng what new thyng he hath in any particle obserued So that first he excuseth not the head but that he hath sene it sometime without seames somtime with sundry seames and those keepyng diuers orders to haue bene compact together The teeth in diuers numbers and the neither iawe growne to the vpper Of the necke the first Vertebre inseparably growne to Occiput the number of the Vertebres of the necke sometyme sixe and sometyme eight with the like varietie at sundry tymes of the other Vertebres Of ribbes xxij xxv and xxvj Os Sternon consistyng of two three and iiij Bones The thigh to haue ouergrowne the legge into an incredible tumor But aboue all these it is notable that he reporteth of a Sceleton whose Bones all from the head to the toes were ioyned together so that the partie in his lyfe tyme beyng old could moue no part saue his eyes toung brest bellye and yard I passe with silence the aboundaunce or want of Muscles whereof he remembreth and the sundry trases of Veynes with their want or extraordinarie diuisions Of the kidneys he sawe the singular number although that a greate one and Splenes so large as that eche one in waight peised twenty pound beyng outwardly ouercouered with a Cartilage So vlcers and tumours in the hart So the hedge that distinguisheth the Ventricles of the hart Cartilaginous It was straunge to behold Pericardium the enclosure of the hart wantyng What then he obserued stones in the lunges liuer Vena Porta vrinarie wayes in the bleddar Hemorroidall Veynes and in the nauell of sundry straunge abscesses in diuers bodies obserued the same authour also remembreth But among all thynges that he hath noted this one seemeth most notable whiche he reporteth of a woman who had outwardly a perfect shape onely the necke of the matrice but no matrice seminarie vessels or Testicles at all and so oft as ●…he vsed the company of man which she did often she in meruailous sorte moued her selfe But why stand I so long vpon the obseruations of Columbus an Anathomist of such yeared experience come we to them that scarse dissected two for his twentie for it is more rare that they haue inuented such nouelties Iacobus Siluius in his tyme sawe sundry illusions of Nature both in men women and children in the liuer splene kidneys ventricle midreif intrels veynes and matrice All which to penne particularly I omit together with the straunge or rather monstrous kidneys which Botallus mentioneth and hath openly depainted as also his obseruation of the foure Ossicles or litle Bones in the diuisiō of the brayne since it hath bene my happe to see much in few dissections And first touchyng the Sceleton in the number of Vertebres as sometyme sixe in the loynes sometyme foure sometyme fiue in Os sacrum and sometyme three sometyme one in Cauda Among the inner partes I haue obserued the liuer twise deuided into lobes To the outside and bottome of the matrice I haue found a certaine mole or masse white in colour and hard or in substaunce Cartilaginous in fashion like the Testicles as yet within their purse enuolued saue that it wayed almost ij poūd This bieng cut cōteined aboundaunce of slimie matter which at the first brust forth thinner though at last very thicke and slimie in deede Once in an aged Gentlewoman I searched in vayne for the right vētricle of the hart And once in the hart of man I foūd a thing notable and which these before named haue made no mention of that is a bone in the hart situated at the endes of the vessels inserted thereinto as in the History of Bones I haue more copiously handled Besides in the same old mā forso he was in deede a man prest to the groūd with dayes I saw one of the vrinarie vessels which for the space of an intche or more in length had wholly possessed a Cartilaginous substaunce which seemed still to encrease But here perhappes some are ready to obiect and say why what then do you intend to reiect those authorities which fo oft you haue here alledged nay not alledged but rather out of whose mynes all this treasure is digged no but I could wishe with Siluius that euery one might be more zealous to searche the truth then busie seekers to finde oportunitie agaynst their elders And those in deede the parentes of all Phisicke For if in any thyng they disagree from the bodyes of other regions surely these rehearsed Argumentes are sufficient to proue the same farre more worthy to be imputed to the varieties of regions and chaunge of tymes then otherwise with foule obloquie to spurte our elders whilest we ourselues in the meane tyme as maleuolent detractours are publiquely denounced Siluius therfore wisheth him that findeth any thyng otherwise then Galen hath written it to ascribe the same as a certaine addition to Galens Anathomie els frendly to admonish the reader therof As for my selfe I confesse I haue in sundry places cited and as it were enrolled Galen in sundry errours yet not by halfe so oft as my authours haue prouoked me for Vesalius chiefly and Collumbus as I suppose haue spared him in no place Which hath excited me frēdly Reader familiarly thus to warne therof in the begynnyng that when thou readest them thou mayest rightly know from whence they come In the meane tyme to come to the matter proposed I commit to thy diligence in the begynnyng the History of Bones the frame of the body wherein of truth attentiuenes ought to be vsed both to carie in mynde together with thy eye the direct sense of the present described part or rather if it may be to conferre the same with the Sceleton it selfe as also because it is an introduction to the whole History of Man and may be called the keye of knowledge to Anathomie without the perfectiō wherof the rest is not onely obscure but almost vayne at all to read After the Bones ensue the Cartilages then the Ligamēts after those the Muscles next the Muscles the nutritiue partes and next the nutritiue the generatiue partes Then at length the spirituall members and finally the animall To these
bone should be made whereto all the rest should be established for whiche purpose this bone beyng in the middest of the body collocated and most excellently setled none s●…eemeth more commodious nor any so fitte beyng to the motions both of the superiour and inferiour partes no lesse then as a ground or seate assistaūt Neyther doth Os sacrum obscurely reclude but playne and largely open and discouer the passages on eche syde deseruient to the transmitting of Sinewes as it behoued from the Spinall marey conteined in the concauitie hereof as is sene in other Uertebres But here that is beyng in Os sacrū it is of thicke and like a hard substaunce as that it séemeth to tast more of a Sinew substaunce then of the nature of marey Wherefore in the end degeneratyng into many braunches of Nerues goyng backewardes from the borders of Os sacrum it is strowed diuersly in the haunches dissemi●…ated amōg the Muscles of the thighes as largely is set forth in the History of Nerues their holes are round excaued asmuch in the substaūce of one side as an other like as before I sayd of the Uertebres of the Loynes and the vppermost two greatest but the further from them the lesser so likewise behynd for the holes of O●… sacrum do penetrate cleane through the substaunce thereof aswell as into the concauitie of the marey they are nothyng so large as in the inside before To describe of Os sacrum the fashion note that the vpper part of the body therof is playne where it meteth with the v. Uertebre of the Loynes but on eche side it stretcheth forth with a great thicknes to the méetyng of Os Ilium and goyng downeward it tendeth backwardes to the middle Commissure and so forward agayne becommyng more narrow and sharpe the further from the toppe descendyng to the end whereby it is made hollow before boūched forth behynd in which hollow part of it the bowels is notably cōtained the posteriour Processes are short together committed as the sides At the sides of the thrée vppermost bones of Os sacrum beyng broad sufficient Solid and hallowed are affixed and knit the prominent partes of Os Ilium one ech syde which by the interuenture of Cartilages and Ligamentes are so safe connected and boūd together as very hardly they may be deuided Yea and that which is more they are somtyme founde growne together so that no instrument may disseuer them which is an euident token and playne proofe in déede that neither Os Ilium nor Sacrum may moue by any meanes The fift and last portion of the backe which heartofore we haue nominated called Coccix is construed and made of iij. Ossicles or litle bones which dependyng vpon the extremitie and neithermost part of Os sacrum like a tayle is therfore of the latter writers named Os caudae whiche the Greclans call Coccix because it somuch resembleth the beke of a Cuckowe being also towardes the end euermore sharpe and narrower together with the crookednes The first bone of Coccix beyng broader then the rest hath in the vpper part therof a cauitie sufficient to receiue the extreme end of Os sacrum and so is coupled with a Cartilage the other iij. likewise beyng more round are after such sorte commited together as that when néed requireth they might shew a certaine kynde of mouing which Collumbus affirmeth to bowe though not without great payne in womē at the commyng forth of the byrth Foure Processes apperteine to the first bone as two laterall or on the sides and other two behynd sharpe and vpwardes reclinyng these bones haue no place within them for the Spinall marey wherfore neither haue they holes for the transmission of Sinewes their substaunce is hollow and light like as the Uertebres of the brest their colour is red and in Children as soft as grystels Galens description of the last two partes séemeth wholly reiected in notyng thrée bones to Os sacrum and iij to Os Coccix so much that no m●… beleueth he euer dissected the body of man but who is so ignoraunt that knoweth not how euen in one region great differēce and sundry alterations in natures shapes are found since I haue to shew in my house a scleton which were the bones sometyme of a tall man whereby I am able to approue asmuch to the admiration of all Anathomistes as Galen affirmed as touchyng the backe for whereas the most famous dissectors and princes of Anathomy haue vowed fiue Uertebres to the Loynes v. but most commonly vj. to Os sacrum and foure to Os Coccix myne hath neither of all those true but contrarywise vj. to the Loynes iiij to Os sacrum and onely one to the taylebone I write not this to the defense of any errour but that ech one dewly waying the alterations of natures and nations should be more studious them selues to write the truth then gréedy to reproue whose actes they neuer saw Thus with a sufficient prolixitie we haue entreated of the Vertebres whiche forbecause xij of them are sayd to constitute the brest which is the mansion of the heart and spirituall partes or as Fuchsius sayth a certayne strong enclosure so circundated and compassed for the safe kéeping of the hart and Lunges it is fitte to describe now in what order IT semeth nothyng at all disagréeyng to truth by the Assertions of sundry authors inferred on this behalfe that the cōstruction of the brest cōsisteth of iij. thynges that is to say of the Vertebres or Spondils of the brest bone of ribes in which creation the diligēce of nature was meruaylous as Galen declareth in his 7. De Usupart in not making it altogether bonnye or fleshy but by the mixture of both for if of bones onely the brest had bene vtterly destitute of mouing And contrarywise if of Muscles without bones it could not be but by contractiō to fall vpon the heart and lunges hauing nothing to sustaine and hold them vp but by this meanes both the brest moueth by the benefite of the Muscles interfited among the bones and the Muscles are susteyned also the strength of the bones which are extended with such ample scope and conuexitie are most expedrent for the secure beyng of the heart and Lunges otherwise all the members must haue yelded to voyce and respiration which by this meanes are most no tably atchieued together with competent compasse and méete roome for the magnitude of the heart lunges which as testifieth Fuchsius imitateth the fourme of the brest but not the brest of the Lunges Wherfore to the constitutyng of the frame of the brest as the ribbes are the principall partes so Collumbus proueth the aforesayd Vertebres that is from the last of the necke to the first of the Loynes to be of more
as a stabiliment vnto the ribbes which Orbicularly effourme fashion the amplitude largenes of the brest But Mucronata Cartilago sayth Realdus is principally a propugnacle vnto Septum transuersum which in that place is much of sinewye or tendinous substaunce whereby it commeth to passe that by the vicinitie it hath with Septum transuersum and the same Diaphragma with Pericardon whiche is the Inuolucre of the hart and so consequently with the hart a wound that penetrateth the same Cartilage and hurteth the midrefe induceth death most commonly as more at large we haue declared other where AS touchyng the Ossicle or litle bone conteined within the hart although it pleaseth Collumbus vtterly to disdayne the description therof and lesse to beleue any such matter deridyng the authoritie of Galen somuch in that behalfe yet as tract of tyme the naturall nourse experiēce teacheth the paynfull Artiste y ready way out of the doores of darknes euē so truth like vnto the flames of fire beyng neuer so couered damped for a space findeth yssue at length on one side or other so is clearely apparaunt to all beholders I meane not hereby to repugne altogether the doctrine of so worthy a man whose knowledge rare experiēce as I ought so I honour but rather with such cōiecture as standeth both with experiēce sufficiēt probabilitie to stand forth in the middest Galen sayth in his vij De Vsu partium that in the foundation of the hart about the rootes of Arteria aorta the Arteriall Veines of their Membrans is found a certaine Ossicle which is not playnly a bone but like a Cartilage but the greater that the creature is the more also doth that Cartilage degenerate into Ossie substaunce Hereby is signified that Galen meant not in the hart onely of Man that a bone might be founde who is nothyng neare the quantitie of such creatures as he dissected for that purpose after the inuention therof as at Rome he foūd it in an Elephāt he forbiddeth vs to call it simply a bone or an Ossie Cartilage but a Cartilaginous bone And notwitstandyng that he sought the same in other creatures then man yet I cannot thinke that he simply ascribed the same vnto the body of Man onely of imagination But as he sayd as touchyng beastes the greater they be of bodyes the more also c. so I vnderstand his meanyng as touchyng men not so much as their bodyes differ in quantitie but rather thus the elder that the body is especially after the ripenes of yeares the more manifestly also doth the same Cartilage become harder of substaūce so that in men full of dayes such decrepittes as old age hath long arrested we may finde as Galen sayth this Cartilaginous bone at the rootes and Membrans of the sayd Arteries and Arteriall Veyne as it were a staffe or stay vnto them and a stabiliment to the whole body of the hart in the debilitie of yeares and that with great perspicuitie Doth not Collumbus himselfe in his vij booke entreatyng of the hart and Arteries confesse that in the place before mentioned doth grow a Cartilaginous substaunce Whiche by his wordes in his xxj chapiter of bones he graunteth to be a firmament and ground to the rootes of the same Arterie and Arteriall Veyne And who doubteth but as age taketh away Appendances driueth out Seames hydeth Commissures and in diuers places of the body transformeth Gristels vnto bones soft substaunce into harder so likewise this in the hart degenerateth from the nature of a simple Cartilage into a Cartilaginous bone And that I séeme not to runne altogether headlōg vpon coniecture I make it knowne vnto you that the sight of myne owne eyes haue testified in dissectyng the body of an old Gentleman of great worshyp and famous autiquitie in Lincolneshyre Anno Do. 1574. Whilest imitatyng the mynde of Galen I opened the least Vētricle of the hart searched to the roote of Aorta I easely discouered the thyng wherfore I sought findyng there the Cartilage fastened to the Mēbrans of the aforesayd vessels become vpwardes playnly of Ossie substaunce the length of iij. Barley cornes at the neither end gristelly the lēgth of one whereto was fastened the rootes of the great Arterie named Aorta the Arteriall Veyne with their Membrās And this Cartilaginous bone I willyngly separated frō the body of the hart in opē sight of the worshipfull the old Gentleman his aliaūce frendes who I suppose haue as yet reserued it Thus gentle Reader thou hast to determine of the bone in the hart not that I will haue it found as generally as other bones in euery age but that I would not neglect the description therof for thy easier vnderstanding wheresoeuer thou shalt happen to inuent the like NOw it followeth to speake of the shoulder blades which the Gréekes call 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and somewhiles simple 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the Latins most commonly Scapulae are two in nūber that is to say on ech side one and are sited towardes the toppe and posteriour region of the brest being bound also by the interuenture of Muscles to Occiput to the Vertebres of the necke and brest and to the bone Hyoides so likewise cleauyng to the vppermost ribbes behynd do serue as propper propugnacles to defend the backe and giue strong repulse to all outward iniuries offred therto the whiche part in déede of the backe is more in the way of outward damages and stroakes then any other wherefore the shoulder blades are made after a defensiue fourme beyng inwardly towardes the ribbes concaued and hollow but outwardly prominent and puttyng forth a strong ridge like the rising of a hill or rocke vnto the súperiour part not a litle to the augmenting of their validitie And besides those partes before named who seeth not how the shoulder blades are most firmely Articulated to the Canell bones and shoulders to the Vertebres of the brest necke Hyoides Occiput ribbes their Muscles wherby in déede appeareth how necessary is their cōstruction since not onely they defend the hinder partes but also admitte the insertion due growyng and rising of Muscles Their fashiō is after a Triangular maner although not equally sided or squared For the vpper part is a great deale shorter then the other two which goyng downwardes do end at an obtused and blunt corner And this obtused corner is that part which Collumbus supposeth most worthy to be called the seate or foundation of the shoulder blade Albeit Vesalius iudgeth it to be that side of Scapula that reacheth down after the longitude of the backe next to the Spinall Processes of the pectorall Vertebres But briefly these bones are endewed with thrée notable productions or Processes whereof the first beyng likewise shortest hath a broad
the roote of Penis and in the necke of the bleddar are two litle thicke Glandules called Parastate●… and Assidentes sittyng downe or restyng These receiue and conteine the séede brought thether by Vasa deferentia as hereafter among the partes of generation shal be playnly taught And among the Glandules likewise may be accompted the testicles of the mā or woman for in substaunce they differ litle And since we haue expressed the Glandules of the inner partes and that it is very necessary to be perfectly instructed also of those that Iurke in the exteriour members we will speake somewhat of them before we passe although I make hast to come agayne to the fleshes It is to be noted therfore that neare vnto the eares as also vnder the nether iaw lyeth many Glandules which serue both to the diuision of Ueynes and Arteries and to the receiuing of certaine supersluities of the brayne being therfore called the Emunctorie places of the brayne These be sufficient great and thicke wherein oft tymes chaunce those abscesses called of the Gréekes Parotides Moreouer vnder the armehole are not a fewe of them begotten for the causes afore mentioned Which place is called the Emunctorie of the hart In the flanke besides that betwene Abdomen and the thighe are many Glandules to the same end and purpose ordained this region beyng called the Emunctorie for the liuer Neither is the bought of the cubite and knée vtterly destitute of these Glandules although but small made for the vessels diuision Some agayne haue them in their necke armes and legges But those more seldo●…e Albert the whole substaunce of the pappes is Glandulous and fat beside the nipple whiche Glandules nature consented to make white that thereby accordyngly they might conuerte the red bloud into white milke since euery thyng that is altered in the body chaungeth into the colour of the same that altered it The Glandulous substaunce of the pappes was put so in the interiour part of the brest both for elegancie of fourme as also to be yelded more fitly vnto the infant in giuyng sucke beyng reposed betwene the skinne and fleshy Membran And this brief I chose as a sufficient descriptiō of the Glandules which now to come againe as is aforesayd is accōpted of some a thyrd kinde of flesh in the body NOtwithstandyng all the soft partes of the body both inward and outward are generally comprehended vnder the name of fleshe as of the outward partes the Muscles Glandules gummes c. of the inward partes the hart brayne liuer lunges splene reynes intrels c. Among all which there beyng not two alike in substaunce how can the aforesayd diuision stand true as for example what part of the body is of such substaunce as the hart What is like vnto the liuer is any of such matter as the Splene Which although I omit to speake of the rest are sufficient in my iudgement to disproue the triple diuision Besides this neither is the head of the yard neither the gummes which they would haue to be the onely true fleshe alike one an other but differ almost as much as the rest Galen therfore to this purpose sayth there be many kyndes of fleshes and that simple flesh is to be foūd no where without the mixture of other partes Then if we deuide the fleshes into thrée and almost all the partes of the body so diuersly vary in substaunce how may this diuision stand when among diuers partes be diuers substaunces yea and diuers temperatures if Galen haue sayd truth that the sanguin partes are hoter then those without bloud and so accordyng to more or lesse But further to omit long discourse and therewith the opinions of diuers Vesalius most propperly in my opinion hath deuided the fleshes into two that is the propper and impropper And truly this is that which my coniecture shooteth at For consideryng that some is hard some soft some inward some outward some begotten of bloud meanly dryed some more hard some more slacke c it shal be sufficient inough with Vesalius to deuided them into two and so if it be lawfull to call the propper Sanguinea and the impropper Exanguis As that to be propper or Sanguinea which is engendred of bloud of what sort is the flesh compounded in the Muscles the hart and all the rest of sanguin substaunce And that impropper or Exanguis which conteineth not bloud but is of nature for other no lesse vse ordained and created as is the brayne the sinewy partes Glandules c. Hetherto all the partes spoken of together with the Muscles of the belly declared other where are comprehended vnder the name of Mirach for so the Arabians call it or more propperly after Latins Abdomen NOw followeth the Membrā named Siphach or Peritonaeum which enclosing more nearely all the nutritiue partes that is betwene Septū transuersum and the thighes is a thinne coueryng but strong and toughe máde of sinewy substaunce enwrappyng thus the lower belly from the left to the right side and goyng by the gutte 〈◊〉 vnto the turnyng ioyntes of the loynes compasseth all the bowels and partes within Abdomē The vpper part wherof cleaueth to the lower part of Septum transuersum and the nether part vnto the bones of Pubis and Ilium Therfore the Grecians named it Peritonaion wherehence the Latins haue borowed this word Peritonaeum As that which foregardeth and circumplecteth all the subiect vessels and bowels no otherwise then as the whole cauitie of the brest together with all the inner partes which the brest conteineth are clothed and compassed about with the Membran called Pleura Peritonaeum is in figure somewhat round strongly knit vnto the Spine where it sheweth it selfe also thicker and it is so thicker neare the Spine because from thence it was to be deuided into many partes It is a Membran of thinne substaunce like broad continuall spider webbes with no Fibres at all intertered Wherefore is accompted in the number of the first of the simple bodyes called Similar partes And it is among all other simple Membrans of the body the largest and greatest The beginnyng wherof is taken on ech side from the Ligamentes which do connect and knit together the Vertebres of the loynes and which commit Os sacrum to the bones of Ilium Thus frō them as a broad Membrā deriued And ascendyng immediately from other side is couered ouer with the Muscles of the loynes and with these which occupieng the insides of Os ilium giue motion to the thighes and with Fibres cleaueth to them such as we sée Muscles in them selues committed together withall But so soone as it hath surmounted the Muscles it stretcheth forth to the inside of the transuerse Muscles of Abdomen to the whole inferiour region of Septum trāsuersum most firmely growyng to
veyne from the nauell led vnto the liuer whereby the child receiueth nourishment within the wombe and which after tyme of byrth becommeth without bloud and vse To this veyne where beyng knit to Peritonaeum it is layd ouer the ventricle in round circuit much fat springeth which that the ventricle in his concoctiue office might more swiftely labour yeldeth there some helpe Neither is the ventricle as some haue fondly supposed nourished by Chylus which it engendreth since by the benefite of those faculties whiche it obtaineth common with the other partes it draweth to it selfe out of the veynes and reteineth and laboureth propper nourishment thrustyng out from it selfe what soeuer is superfluous This also testifieth Collumbus saying no part of the body is nourished but by bloud Finally by the giftes by which the ventricle ministreth vnto the whole body and for which some call it the kyng of the body it receiueth meate and drinke by straight Fibres in at the stomach from the mouth which immediately taken is reteined by oblique Fibres and all a while embraced vntill by engendryng in it selfe the alteratiue facultie it haue conuerted the same into a thicke creame or iuyce in colour aunswerable to his owne substaunce and at length endeuouryng to put forth into the intrels that which it hath confected it openeth the lower Orifice and then by transuerse Fibres that which it embraced thrusteth downward Some tyme it vomitteth but that motion is violent and agaynst nature for then the oblique together with the transuerse Fibres do driue out with great endeuour and the straight Fibres of the stomach moue in opposite order to natures first decrée ANd sithens the guttes are to this ventricle continuall it séemeth immediately to prosecute their description a thyng of right required Which as they take their begynnyng from the ventricle so séeme they also one substaunce therewith although a litle thinner They are situated from the inferiour Orifice of the ventricle euen downe to the fundament and occupy the greater of Abdomen Their substaunce is Membraneous yet not euery where alike in thicknes But such notwithstādyng as easely might embrace that which it conseineth and agayne apte to be distented or retched out by the thynges conteined They haue two peculiar coates and one which they purchase from Peritonaeum to make them lesse subiect to iniurious offence Wherfore Galen affirmeth that the interiour by Dysenteria or other dayly griefes sometyme putrifieth yet the outer being safe some so affected do escape The interiour coate of the guttes is ●…oster then the interiour coate of the ventricle for that they receiue no rough or vnbroken thynges as doth the ventricle but their outer coate is more thinne and sleshy yet lesse fleshy then the inner coate of the ventricle because they are rather the instrumentes of distribution then of concortion The inner coate of the great gu●…es is so much harder then the interiour coate of the smal by how much they conteine matter more hard and voyde of iuyce For that which is conteined in the small guttes is liquid flowyng and watrish whereas that in the great guttes is hard Both the coates of the intestines haue orbicular Fibres that they might driue forth that which sloweth into them more spéedely and there the whole iuyce is spéedely sucked to the liuer But the outer coate of the straight intestine and of Colon obtaineth straight Fibres whiche are made as a band to the circular Fibres lest happely they sometyme in forcyng out the hard excrementes might also together with them depart and be plucked away And for this cause chiefly so many of that kynde are bestowed on the straight gut for that it amylecteth the dryer excrementes The thyrd coate of the intestines is as a propugnacle to the second by whose benefite and interuenture of Mesenterium the intrels are bounde to the backe This is taken from the Membrans of Peritonaeum securely carieng the vessels to the intestines For these Membrās together with the vesselles commyng to the hollow seate of the intrels are dilated there endewyng them with a thyrd coate By the hollow side of the guttes is ment the part which the vessell first touch and by the Gibbous part the contrary They are created round in fourme to be the more capacious and lesse subiect to iniuries But veynes and Arteries are not in like number giuen to euery one like as not in all the intrels is equall store of iuyce to be sucked out For by how much the intrelles in continuitie are nearer the ventricle by somuch they conteine more of the best iuyce therfore consequently greater store of vesselles are to the small guttes distributed and fewer to the great So are the guttes endewed with sinewes that they might giue knowledge of euery hurtfull hūger For if they were altogether voyde of sense nothyng might resist but that the guttes either by yellow Choler or other biting humour might throughly be correated before a man should féele Moreouer although the intrels be one continuall body notwithstādyng when they are circunduced into diuers and many enfoldes and turnynges and those differyng in figure neither chuse they in all places the same nature in situation substaunce and fourme And agayne others are made touchyng some peculiar part in man nether the principall vse of them all alike The learned Anathomistes and such as haue bene in dissectiō expert do number them as though they were mòe. And first they deuide them into small great then either of them agayne into thrée so that all are in number vj. constituted although Collumbus if it were lawfull to starte from the elders could contentedly stand to the first diuision that is to say Duodenum Ieiunum Tenue Coecum Colum and Rectum All which in order we will speake vpō so soone as we haue vnfolded the peculiar properties of the first diuision that is the office of the small and great guttes The small guttes as witnesseth Gal. Lib. 4. vs Partium are chiefly fourmed that by their benefite what soeuer iuyce is of the meate laboured by the diligence of the vētricle the same might be drawne into the liuer the shoppe or storehouse of bloud As also that the dregges and such thynges as are vnapt to be drawne might be duly excernedor auoyded Last of all to the concoctiue and alteratiue force the small guttes are somewhat assistaunt as that the substaunce first confected of the ventricle they might a litle more absolutely chaunge Neither is it to be denyed that the meate in the passage therof through the intrels is more concocted like as also in the veynes the bloud and in the hart the vitall spirite which sayth Collumbus is engendred by the labour of the lunges in the veniall Arteris but after made perfect in the hart as in the
or broken For the greater trunke of Vena porta whereas Mesenteriū about the region of the reynes springeth from the backe is led betwene the two Membrans therof associated with an Arterie which fetcheth his beginnyng from the great Arteric before the same disperse his braunches vnto the reynes to the end it might be poured out into the intrels Hether also are extended two Nerues on eche side one made out from those braunches whiche from the vj. payre of the brayne are reached out to the rootes of the ribbes So that the same great trunke of Vena porta and the sayd Arterie together with the two Nerues do go vnder the centre of Mesenterium makyng entraunce betwene the Membrans therof which mutually cleaue togethér and afterwardes strayeng throughout all the region of Mesenterium insert them selues to the intrels by innumerable braūches But beside this rehearsed Arterie there is an other certaine stocke deriued from the great arterie which entreth into that part of Mesenterium that vnder the region of the veynes begynneth from the backe And the exorture of this stocke is taken from the great Arterie a litle vnder the begynnyng of the seminall Arteries Furthermore euen as man euery where aboundeth with copious fatnes so likewise in Mesenterium the plenty therof is spyed by bloud there sweatyng out of the vesselles and after conuerted into fat by the nature of the Membrans So that beside the sinewes and vesselles the Membrans of Omentum conteine likewise much fatnes betwene them But beyond all fatnes there is an other thyng by nature added to Mesenterium that is a Glandulous body called in Gréeks Panchreas heretofore spoken of so substrewed and circumposed to the singular scissions of the vesselles euery where as that none of them by any mouyng may be dissolued or broken And therfore at the centre of Mesenterium where of the vessels the first distributiō is made nature hath layd this Glandulous body with all securitie to lead conduct the first deriuations most notable braunches of the vessels To the rest of Mesenterium for euery braunche she hath giuen some Glandule as a firmament of the same diuision neuer omittyng their officiall duety in moystening the guttes So that together with the beneficiall helpe of those Glandules the Membrans of Mesenterium most safely lead the vessels towardes the intestines with no lesse vtilitie byndyng the guttes to the backe and at length formally fashionyng a thyrd coate vnto them all As when the Membrās of Mesenterium deduce the vesselles to the hollow part of the guttes together with the vessels they growe vnto them but thence either of them mutually departyng créepe ouer by the sides of the guttes and degenerate into a thyrd tunicle by this occasion both byndyng them more strongly as also for the vesselles constitutyng the safer propugnacle THe next and most notable neighbour vnto the ventricle is the liuer the retainer of all concupiscible facultie whom no man for his vicinitie may deny to be greatly assistaunt vnto the same through his warme complexion and situation with the naturall nourishment of the bloud wherof who can disproue it the fountaine although Aristotle would fayne haue proued the begynnyng of bloud to be in the hart Wherfore this beyng one of the principall partes in the body leaueth vs to note how that it is first also engendred aboue other members in the body For when the Vmbelicall veyne is first engendred thereto also first cleaueth and encreaseth the liuer the first instrument of the generation of bloud It is collocated immediately vnder the midrief occupieng the greatest part of his inferiour seate but in the right side of Abdomen vnder the false ribbes in which place it is fastened with two Ligamentes of whiche the one is about the hollow beyne the other is called a Suspensorie of a certaine diuision wherein the Vmbelicall veyne is inserted These therfore do fasten the liuer vnto Septum transuersum And although it be situate in the right side as is sayd yet neuerthelesse it occupyeth a great part likewise of the left side whereas by the helpe of a strong Ligament it is connected and knit to Diaphragma It is not in figure exactly round and in man is a whole substaunce not deuided into lobes as Galen verely supposed although of that maner it be to be found in foure footed creatures And the cause why in vs y litter is whole and in them deuided Collumbus doth in this maner discusse that man being of direct straight figure fourmed by the hand of the omnipotent whith the hollow part of the liuer couereth next and immediately the ventricle which coueryng from the right to the left side occupyeth the whole Anteriour region maketh that the ventricle suffreth no cold Wherfore it is easely 〈◊〉 how finally auayllable are the vnguētes which some men minister vpon the sharpe 〈◊〉 to amend the cold intemperature of the ventricles whilest they increase but the heate of the liuer vnder lying and before hoate of nature But againe to the purpose The liuer of foure footed beastes is deuided into many lobes the apter to enclapse the ventricle as with the fingers of ones hand which if it should be whole and they goyng prone vpon the earth might by no meanes be brought to passe But in byrdes for that they rather stand vpstraight then go prone vpon the earth it is onely into two partes separated Therfore in man no where deuided at all but in the Anteriour part and out side of the liuer Whiche was necessary there to be deuided for the admission of the vmbellicall veyne Under this also where Vena porta goeth out are two small eminences necessary for the defence therof lest the veyne by the body of the Vertebres at any tyme should be compressed But neuerthelesse these eminences are neither to be called Lobes Fibres nor wynges The liuer hauyng two partes the one exteriour and the other interiour hath the outer Gibbous or vo●…ed forth and smooth but the other hollow and roughe like water bankes And that because that vnderneath it is placed the round bounched vētricle It is circundated and enwrapped with a thinne Membran of Peritonaeum wherfore the extremities therof are not voyde of féelyng It is in substaunce nothyng els but a heape of crudded bloud intertexed with 〈◊〉 veynes and some Arteries and is a great member the prince of Abdomen Wherein some haue supposed naturall spirites to be engendred but that sentence is not allowed for to be the fountaine of bloud as is aforesayd nature dedicated his office Neither do I suppose that any man in these dayes doubteth it to be the head originall and roote of all the veynes IN the hollow part wherof spryngeth a veyne called of the Grecians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the
part of the brest bone whereto the midreif groweth In the sides agayne from the first ribbe to the vpper face of the midreif which respecteth the cauitie of the brest thus clothyng it and also the whole amplitude of the brest This coate like as the cauitie of the brest in figure varieth very much For in the vpper part accordyng to the brest it is streit ended as it were poynted in the lower part broader then aboue but in the sides of the brest broader then in the inferiour part Moreuer in the fore part it is much shorter then behynd by reason of the obliquely situation of the midreif It toucheth from the poynte of the brest bone to the xi Vertebre of the brest Also in the fore part and in the sides outwardly euen like to the brest it selfe it is in figure 〈◊〉 or bounched forth but in the posteriour part longwise as it were to the amplifyeng and enlargyng therof it obtaineth an inward impression after the order of Peritonaeum For the bodyes of the Vertebres are apparaunt or prominent into the cauitie of the brest like as the rootes of the ribbes which are somewhat 〈◊〉 backwardes fro●… the bodyes of the Vertebres vntill forthwith procéedyng towardes the anteriour partes they are downwardes obliquate This Membran inwardly is for the most part smooth and as with a watry humor ouernoynted Besides where it reacheth forth certaine Membranous Processes by which it either yeldeth out other Membrans or gathereth some peculiar body vnto it Sometyme there is found although very seldome a harder kinde of fat in the inside of this coate no otherwise then to Peritonaeum and that especially where it is nearer to the Vertebres and where the chiefest veynes therof are guided Moreouer here and there on both sides it putteth forth Membranous Fibres to the lunges whereby the lunges are thereto very fast knit And to the inuolucre of the hart where the same coate couereth the midreif in great scope is continuated tyed But the outside of this Membran which groweth euery where to the partes adiacent is rough and vnequall after the maner of Membrans connected and tyed together It is perforated as oft as the midreif since it couereth it that is to say twise not thrée tymes as Vesalius would once for the descense of the stomach or vpper Orifice of the ●…entricle and the second tyme for the ascense of Vena caua but in déede the great Arterie runnyng close by the body of the Vertebres cannot perforate the same but is rather crossed ouer therewith or to be playne the midreif rather s●…meth to giue backe to the side thereof Under the Cannell bone it is not pearsed with a large and continuall hole but the vessels which créepe vnto it thether it containeth with very many holes and groweth vnto them Here likewise it transmitteth the braunches of Uena caua and Arteria magna as also the stomach rough Arterie the Nerues of the vj. payre of sinewes of the brayne and the Nerues to the midreif Last of all in the hinder part it is perforated after the longitude therof and that on both sides with an orderly consert of Ueynes and Arteries entryng forth that way to the spaces of the ribbes This coate is in substaunce Membranous to wit hard thinne equall and somewhat in strength surmountyng Peritonaeum And like as Peritonaeum so also the substaūce of this Membran is at the backe harder then neare the brest For the begynning therof is taken from the Ligamentes which bynde together the bodyes of the Vertebres vpon those I say it chiefly doth depend But it is not simple although Uesalius espyed not the contrary but double I meane not the right side and the left but that euery where this ●…bran Pleura is two fold or double or simply two Membrans the one interne the other externe betwene which Ueynes Arteries and Nerues do slyde all which are caryed betwene the spaces of the ribbes Whence it happeneth that there many tymes springeth inflamation with much tension and prickyng dolour called the Pleurisie Collumbus iudgeth the cause of this duplication the deepe dexteritie of Nature that so the outer might defend the inner Membran then which nothyng is more sensible from the rigour of the ribbes which should haue bene pro●…ered alway through the perpetuall motion of the lunges Beside this succingent coate the ribbes haue to them one peculiar which is no other then the Membran commō almost to all bones called in that it couereth the bone of the Greekes Periosteō But Pleura in that it bewrappeth what soeuer is conteined within the concauitie of the brest doth like Peritonaeum lend coates to all the partes conteined firmely thereby knittyng euery organ to other Last of all it so propperly prepareth way to the Nerues of Septum transuersum as that it deduceth them hid as it were in a scaberth to it This for the vse therof in that it clotheth defendeth and strengthneth the inner partes is called a coate but as touchyng the substaunce a Membran This Membran or rather these Membrans creep●…th downeward after the sides of Sternon towardes the Spine the right among thē selues beyng distaunt from the left and beyng so fastened to the same spine do deuide the brest into ij cauities and the lunges into two partes neither that rashly but that one side beyng hurt the other notwithstandyng might escape frée and serue to natures vse retaine at the least halfe their action This reduplicatiō as we may call it of Pleura is in this place called Mediastinum because it midmeasureth the brest beyng led from the toppe of the brest to the bottome or lowest part Betwene Mediastinum that is this double Pleura deuidyng the brest into two some matter may be gathered which Sternon beyng perforated may be drawne out by a diligent Chirurgian and in Anathomicall practise expert WIthin the vpper part of the brest where the veynes and arteries are deuided appeareth a certaine Glandulous part called Thimus which in Calues and such others creatures is most pleasaunt to be eaten I suppose we call it the swéete bread About the middest of Aesophagus are two litle Glandules placed there of nature to 〈◊〉 and moysten that passage THere is a certaine coate common to the inside of the nostrels to the palate and to the toung and it séemeth to be a portion of Dura mater or the hard Membran of the brayne which after it is crept forth of the Scull is amplified made thicker and almost fleshy wherewith when as the whole palate within and the mouth is clothed as the furthest part or extremitie of the palate it becommeth double and somewhat lengthned constituteth a round long and litle thicke pen●… called by diuers names as Vna Vuula Columella Gargareon The office of it is to deteyne the humiditie fallyng from the
of the nose to the vpper téeth others ' enter into the Scull by those holes there sited and lyke a trée through the sides of the hard Membran together with those Ueynes therein conspicuous are explicated and therefore is Sincip●…t in that place excaued But after that these Arteries haue esfused forth these braūches to the palate téeth as is sayd they rise vp into the Scull through that hole which is sited betwene Sphenoïdos the temporal bone in which place a part of the thyrd payre of sinewes descendeth although Vesalius for the same doth reprehend Galen But so sooue as they are passed the seate or sell of Sphenoïdes they minister ij Arteries to the eyes a long by the opticke sinewes to shew lyfe vnto the eyes and not onely lyfe vnto the eyes but also to the Muscles of the eyes and to those by which the iawe is opened I meane the vpper iawe wherefore you shall finde the diuisions of these large and many That whiche remaineth of these Arteries Caralides ascendeth aboue the aforesayd sell coherent with the thinne Membran and after the callous body toward the posteriour partes and diuers wayes is sprinkled through the thinne Membran aboue within and to the sides Also some of their braunches are deduced from the thinne to the hard Membrā and others from the thinne Membran to the substaunce of the brayne After so many distributions of the Soporiferous Arteries aboue the sell of the Cuneall bone they vnderlay the vpper Uentricles of the brayne immediately after they haue perforated the thinne Membran the whiche Uentricles are anfractuous or full of foldes and whereas at first they seemed but two they are seuered into very small ones and those innumerable There therfore you shall behold a most pleasaunt nette contexed and wouen together of Arteries the whiche Arteries haue their Ueynes to them ioyned in fellowshyp and in their endes lyeth the Pineall Glandule These hath Galen described for the netlyke foldyng as though it might represent the Secundine Collumbus notwithstandyng boldly affirmeth this if it be any where at all to be the marueilous nette for no where sayth he shall you finde such foldes through foldes and interweauynges of the least and innumerable Arteries els But Galen did describe the marueilous nette whereof he maketh mention to be aboue Sphenoïdes where that Glandule whiche receiueth euery excrement begotten in the braynes beyng to that office by Nature dedicated is resident But whosoeuer shall seeke the same where Galen hath described it he shal be frustrate of his purpose For nothyng els shall he finde there but certaine litle Arteries ministryng lyfe to these partes and to the bone Sphenoïdes The same Arteries which thus constitute the marueilous nette do send their power through the substaunce of the brayne whiche thyng of no other Anathomist saue onely of Collumbus hath bene written And this is the end of the description of the superiour trunke of the great Arterie without you make accompt of those Arteries to be described which flow forth to the right superiour ribbes This by the way is worthy to be noted that not one Arterie tendeth to the lunges whereby they might receiue vitall spirites from the hart And this is a sentence most approued in Anathomie that exceptyng the lunges onely all other partes of mans body are endewed with beatyng Arteries By whiche reason Collumbus protesteth sufficient authoritie to what seuere disputer soeuer shall goe about to proue that in the hart it selfe are not begotten the vitall spirites But of this matter is other where sayd The greater trunke of the great Arterie called as we haue often sayd Aorta tendyng downewardes declineth towardes the left side and is to the body of the Vertebres adherent whiche to the superiour trunke is not incident For that no otherwise then Vena caua is distaunt from the Vertebres This inferiour trunke therefore whilest it descendeth out of his hynder part profereth Arteries to the spaces of the ribbes and these agayne charge others to the Spinall marey to the Vertebres and to the Muscles in the posteriour part of the brest sited But where it commeth downe to Septum transuersum bringyng forth two a lyke Arteries whiche are into the same distributed it passeth vnder the same and still cleauyng to the body of the Vertebres marcheth downe to the last Vertebre saue one of the loynes But so soone as it hath passed the midreif it produceth an Arterie to the liuer in place whence ●…ena parta went forth as we haue sayd beyng there distributed An other spredeth to the vessicle of choler an other to the splene an other to the Uentricle and Omentum other litle braunches to the Glandulous body Pancreas and others also to the intestine Colon. Under this an other appeareth whereof are very many and large diuisions both through Mesenterium and to the small guttes beyng perpetuall mates to many of the Meseraicall veynes Moreouer a litle lower it begetteth two Arteries and those very notable called the Emulgent Arteries which enter into the kidneys Under the Emulgent Ueynes a litle more bendyng downe it produceth the two seminall Arteries whiche haue their begynnynges from the body of the great Arterie but not from the left Emulgent except in very fewe as to Galen it séemed These descendyng are folded together with the seminall Ueynes downe to the Testicles both in man and young mayde and in women to the body of the matrice yea to the inner part of the matrice and from these the vmbellicall Arteries of the infant take their begynnyng Under these seminall Arteries in the middest of the trunke emergeth an other Arterie whiche is caryed to the Mesenterium of the straight gutte and to part of the intestine Colon after the left side of Ileon But the Arteries of the strayght gutte downe to the extreme part of the fundament together with the Meseraicall Ueynes of Vena porta do descend wherfore there are made both Ueynes Arteries called Haemorroidales in the posteriour part out of the same Arterie vnder the midreif Arteries make egresse to the Vertebres to the Spinall marey to the Muscles of the backe and to the Muscles of the bellye But so soone as it is come to the last Vertebre of the loynes but one and in some bodyes to the last of all it is first deuided into two and those great braunches whiche 〈◊〉 the right and the left side but surmountyng the hollow Ueyne in the region of Os sacrum These two braunches are subdeuided and descendyng more are ramified to the sides of the bleddar to the necke of the matrice and to the Muscles resident in the concauitie of Abdomen Two others likewise passe through the holes sited in Os pubis and Coxendix from whiche holes so soone as these Arteries are gone forth of Abdomen they are sent to the two bodyes of Penis from the toppe to the lowest part and them do they passe in braunches they beyng those Arteries by
presse whence the foresayd Ueynes haue their rising Beyng caryed through the substaunce of the brayne and through the thinne 〈◊〉 where with Cerebe●… is inuolued they shew them selues mates to the netlike 〈◊〉 And albeit we haue sayd that lyke as Pericar●… in ample maner couereth the hart thereby to yeld him large scoape for continuall pulsation so this thicke Membran to couer the brayne aptly as was conuenient for Diastole and Sistole Yet not so disseuered from the brayne as the h●…t from Pericardion whiche are not bound together at all with veynes and arteries But D●…a Mater is tyed almost euery where to the 〈◊〉 that lappeth the substaunce of the brayne and that to no small end and vtilitie For the braūches deriued frō the thyrd cautie of the hard Mēbran with an innumerable fort on both sides vnto the seate or substaūce of the thinne Membran next vnto it do sustaine very fitly the brayne suspēded so that it can not fall downe to compresse the Uentricles so that by this meanes the hard Membran is both to the brayne an inuolment as also an apt proppe to support and hold vp the same To which purpose likewise are maruelously assistaunt the Fibres that créepe forth at the Sutures from the hard Membran and fastenyng it agayne and in like maner to the Scull as the thinne Membran to it with veynes and arteries so that the brayne thus secondly vpholden the waight thereof is excellently preuented to force it to much downwardes Furthermore consider that nature hath not onely sent these Fibres through the Sutures in reflected maner as the Smith that turneth agayne y poynt of the ●…ayle but they are also encreased aboue the Scull with a marueilous dilatation so that all mixyng together in one do at once degenerate into a thinne Pannicle or Membran which because it couereth the Scull the Grecians haue nominated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Neuerthelesse this is not the immediate or fole coueryng to the Scull For vnder it consisteth yet an other thinne Membran which is most common also to all other Bones in the body which bewrappyng them is therefore called by proper appellation of the Gréekes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 BUt to returne agayne to the inward Membrans of the brayne and those wherof we haue not as yet spoken Under Dura Mater which I haue sufficiently done my part to shewe lyeth Pia Mater called also Tenuis memrix with which indument the brayne and Cerebellum are nearely clad th●… is close to the substaunce of them it beyng of some called Choriou that is to saye Secundina And this thinne Membran is copiously stored with veynes and arteries But vnder it lyeth the white substaunce of the brayne which is soft and marey lyke although not so but differeth from the substaunce of the ●…arey that is found in the cauities of bones not a litle NOw to come to the figure and fashion of the substaunce of the brayne Pia Mater beyng taken away it is very like vnto the foldes of the small entrals when Othentum is lifted vp that is for the likenesse of the thyng in that the brayne like to the guttes séemeth to shew many infoldes and turnynges Of whiche circumuolutions if any man enquire the opinion of Collumbus is thus that it is so made both for the lightnes thereof as also by the same wyndyng foldes that the brayne might more easely moue in Diastole and Sistole Notwithstandyng they are not wantyng that haue sayd the brayne was made so for the cause of vnderstandyng whiche if it were so Asses and other beastes ●…ould be reasonable creatures as is man since they want not the lyke shape of the brayne But Vesalius Lib. 7. Cap. 4. auoydyng that errour and 〈◊〉 forth a more 〈◊〉 r●…son of truth thinketh that Nature rather ordayned such foldes in the brayne as a meanes of nourishement to the substaunce thereof for neither is it so firme in any place that Ueynes and Arteries as in other partes of the body may be through the same in euery place scatteryngly dispersed nor yet so small and slender in quantitie that Ueynes and Acteries in the toppe onely braunchyng are sufficient to nourish and warme the same throughout Which prouident Nature foreseeyng hath engrauen these cornered implexures that in them the thinne Membran replenished with sundry vessels might insinuate it selfe whereby to minister nourishment more fitly to the substaunce of the brayne And chiefly also for the occasion of this nourishment was the brayne in two partes dissected that is to say that the thinne Membran might fold it selfe in the middle therof and there made in reflexures should nourish the substaunce of the brayne without which diuision of the brayne and déepe reuolutions that part of the brayne whereas the right side beholdeth the left should not be nourished Hetherto Vesalius It séemeth certaine that Aristotle was not a litle deceaued in matters Anathomicall whilest he writeth that the hynder part of the head is destitute of brayne but euery man knoweth that the hinder part is not empty and voyde but hath and containeth therein not onely the brayne but Cerebellum also ANd to come to the middest of his substaunce we finde two cauities or rather for so are they called ventricles as one would say a right and a left whiche are long anfractuous or crooked stretchyng from the anteriour to the posteriour part There are whiche call these the anteriour Uentricles but Collumbus rather wisheth to terme them the superiour for asmuch as they are contained or situated aboue the rest These therfore are indifferent large and endowed with the thinne Membran wherein is reprehended the errour of Vesalius for somuch as he denyed the same Through these vpper ventricles of the brayne the reticular or net like foldes called Coriformes are caryed whose vses doe belong to the generation of animall spirite Wherof Realdus Collumbus chalengeth to him selfe the onely and first inuention after this maner The originall begynnyng of these ve●…tricles is aboue the Bone named Sphenoides towardes Ethmoides but the ayre drawen by the nostrels is conserued a space in that cauitie of the forehead or Cuneall bone which beyng there altered ascendeth into those two ventricles which he calleth the superiour or vppermost and that by the holes of the bone Ethmoides whereas and in whiche ventricles by continuall labour of the brayne and motion of the reticular 〈◊〉 this ayre is mixed with the vitall spirites And thus are the animall spirites made of the same ayre lately prepared and by mixyng with the vitall To this end Galen sayth thus the generation of the animall spirite hath the vitall his proper matter Wherfore the whole brayne is contexed and wouen together with the diuision and distribution of arteries of which many diuisions do go from the grounde or foundation of the brayne into the Uentricles no
what Collumbus Lib. 1. cap. 7. Where first the 〈◊〉 beg●… 〈◊〉 Poll. teste Why the 5. portion is called Col●… Vesalius The beginning and progresse of Colon. The cause of errour in Mundinus and others Collumbus Mundinus his 〈◊〉 surmise Gal●… oc 〈◊〉 Lab. 2. How y ventricle is offended by rousent of Colon. Vesalius Collumbus How it commeth that payne in Colon may seme ●…e be in Re●…es and contrea●…se Vesalius How Colon giueth pl●…ce to the small guttes and why The fo●…rme of Colon. Vessels to Colon. N●… Collumbus The ij Ligamentes that hold Colon. Vesalius The ●…i portion of the guttes called 〈◊〉 Situation De●…els N●…ues Collumbus The notable de●…ce of nature in placing that guttes in the belly vesal. cap. 6. Testante Gal. de an●…t admi lib. 7. Mesenterium and why it is so named What the veine●… in Mesaraeon are called Situation The originall of Mesenterium Cap. 6. Vesalius Fou●…e Di●…isson of Mesenterium Which is the middest Which is the right and lefte side How that part of Mesenterium is begotten that ●…oyneth the small guttes to the backe Whence spr●…geth the part knitting Co●…on and R●…cum to the backe Why Mesentenon is of such sub staunce How the truncke of Vena Porta entreth into Mesenterium Whence the vessels come senterium The distribution of the vessels to the guttes Fatte in Mesenterium Panchreas The office of Panchreas Situation The vse of all the Glandules to the guttes How the third coate is made to the guttes The 〈◊〉 of the third coate The 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 of concupiscible facultie The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 of bloud and ayde to the 〈◊〉 Gal. lib. 4 vs part Col. lib. 6 de Iecorect 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 first engendred and how vesal. lib. 5. cap. 7 Situation Col. 〈◊〉 Two 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 Figure Why mans 〈◊〉 is not deuided into lobes as us 〈◊〉 Ibidem Topic medicinis are 〈◊〉 applied vppon the sharpe cartilage Why the liuer in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 creatures is deuided into lobes The liuer in birdes is deuided into 〈◊〉 partes Why the liuer of men hath that onely d●…usion Two 〈◊〉 vnder Vena caua The coate that inuesteth the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it sense The substaunce of the liuer Natural spirites are not begotten in the liuer The originall of Vena poit●… Why it is called Vena po●… The first bra●…ch of Vena po●…ta is caried to the vpper orifice of the ventricle Vena Coronalis The De●…tricle is nouri●…hed by bloud not by chilus The splene onely is nourished with excde●…étes The beine from the sple●… to the ventricle carieng sowre iuyce to the stirting vp of appetite vesal. Ibidem The vse of Melancoly to the stomach after 〈◊〉 The vse of Melancoly to the stomach after Collumbus Col. Lib. 6. Why some easely other●… difficulty doe susteyne hunger The ●…eseraicall be●…es where they end in the intrels haue Membrans in their extre●…ties The great 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of na●… as 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vnknow●… to oth●…r 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before Col●… What Chilus is How the dis●…bution of 〈◊〉 is made Why there are ●…oe veynes i●… the vpper the●… in the nether i●…trels The 〈◊〉 d●…ll veynes The vse of Vena porta and his braunches The generatiō of yellow and black collor The ●…wresayd beaut●…s haue a d●…uble v●…e Col. 〈◊〉 Gal. 4. vs part What veynes to not make bloud Euery thing that altereth chau●… geth that that is to be 〈◊〉 into his colour The Dentricle chaungeth all meate●… into white The dey●… called Concaua Ch●…lis and Magna All●…che Partes of the body are nourished by bloud The comming of Vena caua to the hart Coronalis vena 〈◊〉 the hart The rising of the veyne without a felow call●… Axygon The Intercostall veynes Weynes sent from ●…he veyne without a fellow to nourish the left side The veynes that nourish the vertebres and spinall marey Deynes called Axillares The rising of the veyne called 〈◊〉 or Cephalica In what place Cephalia and 〈◊〉 is vn●…ted Where is the 〈◊〉 common veyne The veyne called 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The common veyne why it is so called Med●…na Vena Anal●… is a 〈◊〉 of ij veynes in ●…ne and sometyme of an Artery and a Veyne The ve●…ne 〈◊〉 to be cutte in disseases of the head The progresse of the two great vemes 〈◊〉 The foure vey●… to the muscles 〈◊〉 Abdomen The veynes which in men nourish the anteriour Muscles of Abdomen in women moreouer engender m●…ke The veynes to the Muscles and skinne of y head and partes of the face Of the veynes to the eye browes ioyned agayne disioyned The progresse of Iugularis Vena toward the seat of the skull The veynes nourishing the Muscles and glandules of 〈◊〉 The veyne that is opened in the dissease called Angina The ve●…ue sowen in Du●… mater Deynes nouri●…hing the substance of the brayne The part in the brayne called the presse The veyne consti●…ing a merualous cauitie The 〈◊〉 of veynes through the hard thinne 〈◊〉 and entr●… into the substaunce of the brayne the other 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The veyne nourishing the b●…nes of the head 〈◊〉 vpper 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 The course of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The veynes called 〈◊〉 not allway 〈◊〉 in number Galen 〈◊〉 bayi●…e vsed reasons as touching the situation of the 〈◊〉 veynes as touching ma●…s body Col. Li. 〈◊〉 de I 〈◊〉 Col. Ibidem The descriptiō of the ●…mulgent veynes The situation of the kidne●… There is no such ●…earse in y reine●… as others haue seig●…ed How bl●…ud hapneth to be made with Vrine The vse of the Emulgent veines The 〈◊〉 vessell named vreter The left Seminall veyne The false opinid of other Anathomistes as touching the beginning of the Seminall veyne Col. Ibid. The trew cause of the beginning of the Seminall veyne The rising of the right Seminall veyne The length of the S●…nall veynes 〈◊〉 not the gr●…ater delecta●…iō in 〈◊〉 The diuision of Vena 〈◊〉 at the 4. 〈◊〉 o●… the loynes The distribution of V●…na Ca●… to the inferiour partes Whence 〈◊〉 do fl●…we in women How the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in women are constituted The originall of the Vmb●…call veyne The veynes of C●…na nourishing Peritonaum What veynes make consent betwene y ma●…ce and pappes Through what veynes Men●…ua are purged The glandules wherein Bubo springeth The veynes to the yard and purse of the Testicles The veyne called Saphena Vena scij Ischij or Coxendicis Vena Poplitis Adian Lib. 14. de Var. hist. Antalcida his answere to the Persian present Col. Ibidem Fuchs Lib. 3. cap 14. The vtilitie of veynes All partes are nourished with bloud onely Why veynes were made hollowe The substaunce of the veynes Gal. Cap. 2. Lib. de inaequal intemp Fuch Lo. predicto How all veynes are comprehēded in the number of iiij The bl●…dder of choler Col. 〈◊〉 11. cap. 8. Situation vesal. Lib. 5. cap 〈◊〉 Figure Substaunce Fibres Tunicle 〈◊〉 Arter●…ss Nerues The passages or wayes of the bl●…ddar of ch●…ler The brounches whereby choice 〈◊〉 drawen
Why there groweth no fatte vnde●… the samne of the yard What is 〈◊〉 The Hebrewes ●…acke praeputium vesal. 1. oc cit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Why the partes of women are not here spoken of The opinion of Galen and Vesalius how bloud commeth into the left Uentricle of the hart The opinion of Collumbus Leonardus Botallus vesal. lib. 6. cap. 8. Of the Panicle called Pleura The ●…ure of 〈◊〉 ●…atte The tying of the lun●… and 〈◊〉 to Pleura The pe●…tions of 〈◊〉 Col. ●…ib 2. cap. 21. The great a●…rie doth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 6. cap. 2. The substa●…ce of Pl●… The beginning of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…ib 6 A●…ho com 33. Where hapneth the 〈◊〉 Why 〈◊〉 consisteth of ij The 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Pl●…ura 〈◊〉 called a coate 〈◊〉 how a membran Col. Lib. 11. cap. 3. The progres●… of Pl●…ura Why the lunges are de●…ded into ij partes Medi●…stinum In Mediastino ●…atter 〈◊〉 be gathered and also drawne forth Thimus The vse of the 〈◊〉 of Aesophagus Col. Lib. 11. Cap. 1. The coate to the nostreles palate and tongue Vuula and the office thereof The defect of Vuula what en●… eth ●…eynes to 〈◊〉 V●…l ●…ib 6. cap. 6. To whom the drawing of cold ayre much 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Loc. 〈◊〉 The Glandules 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 of the Gla●…uies 〈◊〉 The situation of the lunges and ●…itting Diuision Figure Why the lunges a●…e inwardly hollow Why the lunges is deuided into lobes Col. Ibid. Why the lunges is d●…ided into moc lobes in beastes then in men The substance of the lunges The substance of the lunges The vess●…ls in the lunges The descriptiō of A 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The vse of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Arteriall veyne The vse of the 〈◊〉 A 〈◊〉 vse of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…ow vitall 〈◊〉 are 〈◊〉 By the larg●…nes of the Arteriall veyne the vse 〈◊〉 f●…d out The vitall spirits p●…rtected in the hart are caried by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to all the partes of the 〈◊〉 How Collumbus sa●…eth his opi●…ion as touching the generation of vitall spirites in the lunges The Ne●…es of the lunges touch his coate but pearse net How hap●…eth bloudy sp●…trie in the 〈◊〉 V●…l ●…ib 6. cap. 7. The matter of voyce Gal. Lib. 6. vs part 〈◊〉 l●…b 6. cap. 8. The in●…cre of the hate 〈◊〉 Figu●…e The perforatiōs of 〈◊〉 Which is the scate or foundation of the hart The situation of pencardium The substance of pericardium The concau●…tie of pe●…cardium Pericardium beareth no f●…tte Intersepient membrans are those whiche grow about those vessels betwene the lunges and the hart Where pericardium groweth to Septum transuer●… Deyn●…s and 〈◊〉 to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The watrie h●…mor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the vse of it Col. l●…b 7. The hart V●…sal L●…b 6. cap. 9. The figure of the hart The cir●…scription of the ha●…t Col. Ibid. V●…sal l●…b 6. cap. 9. The 〈◊〉 of the ha●…t The substan̄ce of the hart Gal. quoque ●…ib 2. de 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cap. 4. Fibres Col. Ibid. The substaunce of the hart is not musculous V●…sal Ibid. Which are the strayght Fibres of the hart The transuerse The oblique The vse of the flesh of the hart The vses of the Fibres Cordis motus a 〈◊〉 G●…l lib. 7. vs part G●…l Ibid. What is Diastole What is Diastole Col. Loc. 〈◊〉 The 〈◊〉 beyne The Coronall Ar●…erye 〈◊〉 Ibid. The vse of the ●…etue to the hart The coate next the substance of the hart The fatte of the hart 〈◊〉 Ibid. The vse of the 〈◊〉 to the hart The 〈◊〉 of the right care 〈◊〉 the hart 〈◊〉 Substaunc●… Fibres Situation The descriptiō of the 〈◊〉 eare of the hart ●…se Col. Loc. cit ●…essels of the ha●… There are both Internae Extern●… 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 7. The beginning of the left is higher then the ri●…ht Col. Ibid. Col. 〈◊〉 cit P●…te 〈◊〉 This glandule in the brayne beareth the shape of p●…us Torcular is the forth caui●…e of Dura mater quabruplified betwene Cerebrum and Cerebellum Col. Loc. ci●… The Arteryes called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The cuneal bone is the bone Sphe●●●●● 〈◊〉 men●●o●…ed Glandula P●●●●ls called also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 V●… Lib. 7. cap. 1. 〈◊〉 spirite Naturall Animall spirite ●…se of the Animall spirite The Mer●…es 〈◊〉 the messengers of the brayne The 〈◊〉 of the brayne Aristotle in 〈◊〉 The brayne was not made to the cooling of the hart The 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 Animall spirite Col. Lib. 8. cap. 1. The first reason of the 〈◊〉 of the brayne The secōd reason The third reason Which ate the 〈◊〉 of the brayne The hart is more easely hurt then the brayne The fourth reason Cicero ●…ib 1. offic Wherein man most differeth from beastes 〈◊〉 Lib. 1. The fift reason Col. ●…n tract de 〈◊〉 What most adourneth man. The thicke and thinne Membr●… 〈◊〉 the brayne ●…uchsius cap. 2. de Cerebro Dura m●…ter couereth the brayne as 〈◊〉 the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●…ib 〈◊〉 cap. 8. 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is ij Membrans a 〈◊〉 not known to euery 〈◊〉 Why the exteriour 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is not so sensible as the interiour Where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 Where is the fi●…ure of a 〈◊〉 Where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is 〈◊〉 double and why The 〈◊〉 felled with bloud betwene the foure doubtenes of Dura mater The 〈◊〉 of the veynes called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is lede to an 〈◊〉 Where are the ij 〈◊〉 cauities of Dura mater foure doubled a●…e The third cauit●…e The figure of the third cauitie The rising of the veynes dispersed through y thinne Membran By what veynes the brayne is 〈◊〉 By what veynes the bones of the head are nourished The fourth cauitie of Dura 〈◊〉 doubled Where is the presse The leading of the ●…eynes from the pre●…e Ve●…l ●…ib 7. cap. 2. Now Dura 〈◊〉 is tyed to the brayne ●…ow Dura mater ●…howeth the ●…yne The vse of the Fibres sent through the seames Now pericranium is begotten Periosteon to the ●…cull Col. ●…oc Cit. Where is Pi●… m●…r Cho●…on Secundina Where lyeth the substaunce of the brayne The subst●… of the brayne ●…nd ●…rey ●…o not 〈◊〉 The figure of the brame Pi●… mater taken away The reason of the 〈◊〉 and turninges in the brayne The brayne hath not that Figure for 〈◊〉 ●…alie as some do●… say Collumb alloweth not this iudgement of V●…lius but 〈◊〉 that by veynes that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of 〈◊〉 brayne it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sayd Collu●… c●…p cit The ●…inder part of the head is no●… without brayne contrary to Aristotle Two Ventricles of the brayne Those which are called the 〈◊〉 should more rightly be called the 〈◊〉 ventricles Plexus Coriso●… The vse The inuention o●… Realdus Collumbu●… how the Anim●… spirites are begotten Gal. Lib. 9. vs part The vitall spirite the propper matter of the Animall Col. Loc. cit The vse of the Animall spirites The third 〈◊〉 tricle of y brasue The beginning of the neruess of the spinall marey The fourth ventricle of the brayne where The way of the 〈◊〉 spirites from the third to the
why their iaw is long 12 Beetles why they haue no heades 〈◊〉 Belly the muscles thereof dèscribed 55 Bleddar the muscles therof 56 Bleddar of choler described 80 Bleddar of vrine the situation forme figure netues deyn●…s fibres a●…teries therof 83 Bloud how it commeth to the vētricl●… of the hart 89. how it hapneth to be made with brine 78. the originall fount●…ine of it 75. 44. perfected in the veynes 72 Body the motions therof 51. the foūdation and frame thereof 1. is not made of one bone continuall 3. what incommodities it suffereth if nerues should proceede from the brayne 17. how it is maintained 63. nourished by bloud 76. di●…erse partes thereof haue diuerse substaunce and temperatures 66 Bones their nature substaunce vse signes described 1. howe vnited without appendance 2. their convticulation at large described 3 once broken how k●…it agayne 4. some partes of them in children séeme Ca●…tilages 7. how they differ frō the teeth 13. were made for the cause of other partes 14. nourished with bloud 26. why perforated 14. their vse 16. how they differ from Cartilages ●…7 ●…f they be large they moue largely and sodēly but short bones litle and easely 18 Boatelike bone of the foote described 36 A Boye in Denice his monstrous head 6 ●…rachiall bones described 29 Brayne the principall member of the body 6. the obstriction and dilatation therof vnder Bregma 8. en●…ironed in y head as in an hoate house 6. nerues proceede not from it 17. how it is helped to forge animall spirites 9. how purgeth humiditie and ex●…rement 9. 10. 11. 15. the veynes that nourishe it described 77. the primacy ●…essengers membrans therof 98. the propugnacles therof 98. 101. how nourished 99. the substaūce therof where it lyeth 99. the ventricles glasse testicle b●…ttockes yarde haunches and holes thereof described 100. what incōuenience it suffereth not beyng purged 6 Bregma a bone of the fore part of the head 〈◊〉 Brest the vertebres therof at large descr●…ed 19. 20. 21. the mansion place of the hart 23. the nature const●…nccion ribbes vertebres vse bones thereof described 23. 24. the Cartilages thereof 39. the muscles and motion●… therof 53. the Cartilages o●… the ribbes th●…rof to what vse 23. 24 Browes why it hath holes 14 Buttockes how c●…nstituted 57 A ●…ull enge●…dred without testicles 87 C. CAecum the ●…ut des●…ribed 7●… Canell Bones thei●… whole nature described 26 Cartilages their nature described 38. how they differ from nayles 40. how they differ frō bones 17. their vse 2 Ca●…tilago mucronata described 24. 40. 54 ¶ Cartilages of Bones looke vnder th●… name of the bone whereto they appertayne ¶ Cauities of bones looke vnder their bones Causties of processes disfer as the pro c●…sses 2. how enlarged 3 ¶ C●…lles looke Cauities Cerebell●… where it ly●…th 6. the nature substaunce and vse therof described 101 Checke bone described 11. the substaunce cauities thereof to what vse 12. 15. the muscles therof 45 Children onely haue a transuerse suture vnder the palate 1●… haue their neither iaw bone two 12. how they become toung tyed 42 Choler what it is and how incōmodious to the ventricle 80. the way of it 72. the generation of it 76 Chylus the description therof 76 Coccix the nature aetymology vse vertebres holes figure colour thereof described 22. the Cartilages therof 39 Colou the gut described 74 Collumbus muentor of the vses of Appendance 1. impugneth Galen 6. 45. his nu●…ber of bones of the head 8. differeth from other Anatho●…istes in the ●…escription of Tarsus 35. his opinion what is contained in the cauities of Os frontis 9. ●…cited the fourth processe of the ●…temporall bo●…es 9. ●…prehendeth Vesalius 10. 44. chalengeth Vesalius 21. fo●…d a thyrd bone of the orgā of heatyng 10. first ●…ound the Popin●…ay to ●…oue eithe●… iawes 11. maketh 13. bones in the vpperpa●… 12. derideth Galens opinion that there should be a bone in the hart 25. his experiēce that teeth are engendred in the matrice 14. inuented the mus●…les of y eye browes 46. 〈◊〉 a rare office of the 〈◊〉 veynes 76. first inuentor that veynes and atteries 〈◊〉 the substaunce of the lunges 78 Composition and coa●… of bones described 3. 5 Conco●… and alteratiue force ayded by the small guttes 72 Conu●…sions a cause therof 10 Concupiscible facultie the seate therof 75 Coriza the disease why it taketh away the sence of smellyng 10 Coxendix desetibed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moueth his vpper iawes 11 〈◊〉 the desctiption therof 27. the muscles therof 30 Cucularis 〈◊〉 50 Cuneall bone described 9. the processes and ca●…ties thetof 9. the holes therof 14 〈◊〉 and Cutis the nature of it described 63 D. DEluge the cause therof 10 〈◊〉 the muscle therof described 53 〈◊〉 and Sistole what it is where and when it appeareth 8 Dogges head distinguished with 〈◊〉 7. their dogge teeth and 〈◊〉 teeth distinguished with a seame 〈◊〉 their 〈◊〉 bone consisteth of two bones 12 Dregges where first they begyn 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the nature therof described 72 Dura mater 7 her veynes 77. their vse to the brayne 99 〈◊〉 what it is 〈◊〉 E. E●…es their Cartilages described 〈◊〉 their 〈◊〉 47 Eating insatiable why in some crea●… and not in man. 72 Effect must cōtent vo where the cause is not knowne 11 Em●… the disease 24 Emunctory of the hart and liuer 66 Emulgent veynes described 78 〈◊〉 described what it is 3 〈◊〉 described 16. why it ought to be 〈◊〉 39 〈◊〉 in Anathomy con●…d as of Galen 2. 6. 8. 〈◊〉 of Vesalius r. of Celsus 6. Aristotle 8. 44. 64 of some 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1. 4. 13. 19. 32. 40. 45. 53 〈◊〉 of the 〈◊〉 how 〈◊〉 6. 9. 10. 11 〈◊〉 of the belly excluded how 54 Experience that bones art sensible 1. that there is a bone in the hart 〈◊〉 that 〈◊〉 are 〈◊〉 in the 〈◊〉 14 〈◊〉 and Inspiration how pro●… 53. 54 Eyes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 102. their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their 〈◊〉 of what bones it consisteth 2. why placed in the head 6. their payne 〈◊〉 15 how they open shut 45. the muscles therof 46. their motion and stay 46. 47. the Cartilages of the lyddes of them 38. their browes drawne vpward 45. the muscles of their browes by whom inuented 〈◊〉 F. FAce the veynes therof 77. why it is round 12. the holes therof 15 105. the muscles therof 45 Fat the vse generation and nature of it described 64 Fea●…e a cause therof 10 Feelyng the sence therof described 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 looke those partes whose Fibres they are Fibula how it is ioyned to the legge 34 Fingers the bones vtilitie nature of them described 30. why composed of bones and ioyntes 31. their bones hollow 1. their Ligamentes 42. their muscles 61 Fistula lachrymalis what it is 11. 15 Flegme how it descendeth to moysten the palate 15. by what wayes purged 9. 10 Flesh the nature vse and properties therof described 65. 66 Fleshy membran described 64
not within 8 Suture transuerse vnder the palate onely in children 12 Sutures that separate the Bones of the head from the vpper iaw 11 Suture Coronalis 4. 7 Sweat why some doe lightly some hardly 64 Synchondrosis what it is 4 Syndesmosis what it is 4 Synneuresis what it is 4 Sylsarcosis what it is 4 Systole and Diastole 8 T. TAlus the description therof 34 Tarsus the bones and nature therof described 25 Tastyng the sence therof described 104 Teares how they spryng and whence they are engendred 14. 103 Teeth their number nature names situation payne and other properties described 13. 14. they are sensible 1. their beynes 78. their nerues 13 Temple the Bones therof described 9. why and whence they are rough 78. the Muscles thereof described 48. the daunger that ensueth the Muscles beyng hurt 10. the seate of the Muscles 15. the 〈◊〉 bones thereof how vnited 4. the seames therof described 7 Tendon what it is 44. the largest tendon what 59 Testicles their number substaūce vse coate veynes and membrans described 85. the 〈◊〉 therof 79. differ a litle from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 substaunce 65. the Muscles therof 56 〈◊〉 hys head of what figure it was 6 Théeues sayd to want a part of their hand 61 Thighe the figure bones and nature therof described 32. the Cartilages therof 40. why hardly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the motions and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thereof described 57. the Processes of it 2 Thimus 90 Thombe the bones and ioyntes therof described 29 Throt why it bo●…cheth not forth 〈◊〉 women as in men 65 Tibia the nature and description therof 33. the appendaunce of it hath Processes 2 Toes the bones therof described 37. their want how inco●…ous 58. the Muscles thereof described 60. the Ligamentes therof 42. their tend●…s 59 Toung the Bones therof 16. the Ligamentes thereof 42. 49. the vtilities and muscles therof 48. whenco it hath the sence of 〈◊〉 49 Toung tyed how children so 〈◊〉 41 Trochanteres what so called 2. 33 Tunnell where it is and the vse therof 〈◊〉 V. VEnice 6 Dentricle the partes figure 〈◊〉 and nature therof described 68. the Orifices therof 69. the veynes and arteries therof 70. the Nerues situation partes 〈◊〉 therto described 71. is nourished by bloud 75. how offended by Colon. 73. chaungeth meates into white 76. the mouth therof whē it is payned the hart doth ake 105. what 〈◊〉 it 〈◊〉 by choler 80. the mouth of it 24 Vertebres their Ligamentes whence they spring 42. all haue holes except the first of the necke 21. haue appendaunces 2 ¶ Vertebres of the necke brest and loynes looke the descriptiō of the necke brest and loynes Vertue none without his proper organ 46 Vesalius his diuision of the partes of the body 1. his errours 4. 10. 44. 53. 69. 54. mentioneth of a mad boye in Venice with a monstrons head 6. his opinion what is contained in the cauities of Os frontis 9. how bloud commeth to the hart 89. the first inuentor of the organs of hearyng 10. ignoraunt of the inferiour head of the shoulder 27. describeth Larinx as it is in beastes 49. 17. inuented the discourse of the holes of the head 13. reproued by Collumbus 21. 55 Veynes their number names nature vse described at large 75. why made hollow 79 Veyne Iugularis noutisheth the brayne 15 Deyne Axillaris and Cephalica 26 ¶ Veynes particular looke those partes to which they serue Vitall partes described 89 Vital spirites perfected by the hart 91 they are described 98. their propper matter 100 〈◊〉 the description of it 27. the appendaunce therof hath 〈◊〉 2 Vmbelicall veyne to what vse to the infant in the wombe 61 Vnaptnes a token therof 6 Vomit 71 Voyce the matter and instrumentes of it 18. 19. graue or base how it is vttered 50 Vrine the nature properties bleddar therof described 83. the passage therof 88. the vessels therof 78 Vuula the description therof 90 W. WOmās priuities the image therof in the brayne 100 Woundes in what part 〈◊〉 the body they are deadly 8. 24. 40. 54. 101 Wounded men why they losse sometyme sēce sometyme mouyng sometyme both 109 Wrest the bones nature and description therof 28. 29. the 〈◊〉 therof 40. the Ligamentes thereof 〈◊〉 Y. 〈◊〉 the office vse substaūce instrumentes and whole nature therof described 88. the veynes therof 79. the Muscles therof 56 Young man dead through the payne 〈◊〉 the head 6 Youth not to be obserued in Anathomy 56 FINIS AT LONDON Printed by Iohn Daye●… dwellyng ouer Aldersgate ¶ And are to be sold at the long shop at the West doore of Paules 1578. ❧ Cum gratia Privilegio Regiae Majestatis
History of the spirituall partes is sufficiently touched Therfore euen as Nature hath giuen vnto the veynes which she framed for instrumentes of distribution of the generatiue facultie of bloud euen so and by the same reason to the small intrels made for distribution therof into the veynes a certaine cōcoctiue facultie of meates is ioyned ●…lynded and turned with many foldes turnynges hath nature all the scope of the small guttes to the end that if any nourishment in the passage of the first anfract or turnyng do escape the mouthes of the vessels to the inside of the intrels opening it might chaunce into the second but if it did passe that also yet followeth the thyrd fourth fift and others a great number Wherfore for the streit and long passages with so many turnes and foldyngs euery part of the meate is at length constrained to appropinguate the mouth of some one or other of the vessels Cuē as the whole gutte euery where round about is replenished with an innumerable multitude of vessels whose Orifices penetrate into the capacitie of the intrels after the maner as shortly shal be said Of the which vessels is catched what soeuer is profitable of the nourishmēt that passeth by So as it cānot be that any iuyce fit for the nourishment of the body may slippe from the same vnprofitable The foldes and turnynges therefore of the guttes are to that end made to yeld exact distribution of all the concocted nourishment lest the same swiftely passyng away and so goyng out the body should be driuen into an vrgent necessitie of receiuyng nourishment whereby men should lead their liues in continuall néedefulnes of belly chere As for exāple The creatures in which none of those foldes or turnyng spoken of are founde but haue one simple intrell or gutte from the ventricle to the fundament straight pretensed we sée to be rauenous vnsatiable and such as liue in perpetuall desire of eatyng Not improuident by them did nature in mans body worke her effect in the intrels with such anfractuous foldes as are euident that they might delay and a while reteine the iuyce which floweth from the ventricle vntill the meseraicall veynes haue sucked in all that is commodious and caried it to the liuer But the great guttes although they be also to the distribution of the iuyces conuenient notwithstandyng particularly because great is their amplitude or scope and therfore able to gather together and conteine many thynges to the end that not immediately but by long space of tyme we vse egestiō Also if any thyng shall escape this suckyng in the small guttes the same whilest with longer delay the excrementes tary in the great is haled forth by their vessels But to speake of these particularly that is to say of the singular partes and diuisions First all that part of the gutte which vnder the ventricle from the inferiour Orifice therof straight after a certaine maner descendeth thither whereas the gutte first begynneth to be infolded because in man for the most part it holdeth the length of xij fingers is called of the Gréekes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and of the Latins Duodenum There are sayth Vesalius which thinke not good to call this a gutte but rather a rising begynnyng or a Processe of the intrels This portion or part Duodenum is led into no anfractuous foldes as before of others is sayd for asmuch as vnder the ventricle where it is caried it obteineth no spare place or vacant roome in which it might aptly bowe and infold it selfe As also that it be●…oued it to giue place to Uena porta commyng from the hollow of the liuer as Galen copiously mentioneth in his ii●… 〈◊〉 of the vtilitie of partes The originall therof is therfore from the inferiour Orifice of the vētricle ralled Pyloron and in diuers from the same Wherfore to this purpose Galen sayth in his fourth of the vse of partes That Duodenū or the begynnyng of the guttes is not part of the ventricle but soure other part connect and knit thereto Fuchsius therfore sayth that they are much deceiued which iudge no differēce betwene Duodenum and Pyloron Duodenum hath a veyne and an Arte●…e peculiar to it selfe and which is caried directly downward after the longitude therof This veyne purchaseth his estate from Venaporta before it be inserted in Mesenterium But the Arterie procéedeth from that which is offered to the liuer Nerues such as it hath it receiueth from those which come to the lower D●…ce of the ventricle and to the right side of the bottome therof Beside the intrell Duodenum chalengeth that vnto it selfe that the way or passage carieng yellow coler to the guttes is implanted to it that is to say by the influxe of coler stimulatyng and styrring vp the force of the guttes to helpe their action vehemently and to the expulsing of flegme within them insident But notwithstandyng that thus Uesalius describeth a peculiar propperty to Duodenum that is the accesse of yellow coler vnto it whereto Fuchsius not onely subscribeth but also sayth further that they are farre deceiued that affirme this passage of coler to be inserted to any other of the guttes alledgyng further with many wordes in the v●… Chapter of his thyrd booke that whereas the occasion of this errour seemeth to be takē●…ut of Gal. ●…b 13. Therap method cap. 13. It happeneth rather through i●…becillitie of his interpretour Tho. Linacre not perfectly vnderstandyng the sens●… or meanyng of that place But howsoeuer himselfe vnderstode of that place I will leaue to the learned to discusse Onely this I say that I say that all are not agréed vpon this poynt that Uesalius and he haue set downe without doubtyng as more propperly we may declare in describyng the next gutte The progresse of this portion Duodenum is thus after the extorture thereof from the ventricle it descendeth towardes the Spine whence agayne afterward it riseth and giueth a begynnyng to the foldes or turnynges of the guttes there endyng So vnder it is layd a certaine Glandulous body to support and shield the vessels propper to the same g●…tte as als●… to irrigate and moysten the amplitude or scope of the same gutte with a certaine gentle humour but because this intrell alone doth not receiue the r●…hearsed vtilitie but in like maner also the other intrels I will deferre their speciall explication till I take in hand to speake of Mesenterium Now the second intestine there begynneth where is made the first conuolution or enfold The Grecians call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Latins Ieiunum and that because from tyme to tyme in dissection in comparison of the other guttes it is founde voyde and empty For the iuyce that it receiueth it trāsmitteth most swiftly for that choler not mixed with the iuyce floweth to the side of the intrell styrryng vp by his