ENCYCLOPEDIA 4U .com



Encyclopedia Home Page

Google
  Web Encyclopedia4u.com

 

Library of Sir Thomas Browne

Table of contents
1 Introduction
2 Ancient World
3 Late Roman Empire/early Christian era
4 Renaissance and Contemporaries
5 Medical
6 Esoteric
7 Natural History
8 Miscellaneous
9 Source

Introduction

No single document gives better evidence of the extraordinary learning of Sir Thomas Browne, the man, encyclopedist, and philosopher, than the 1711 Sales Auction Catalogue of his library. Not only is it testimony to the wide compass and depth of Browne's polymath learning in the spheres of science, religion and the arts, but it also provides a unique insight into the proliferation, distribution and availability of books printed in increasing number throughout 17th c. Europe and purchased by either the intelligentsia, aristocracy, priest, physician or educated merchant-class.

The 1711 Sales Auction Catalogue lists the reading material of an individual's life-time. It records the contents and volume of one of 17th century Europe's most wide-ranging, private libraries as well as some of the sources for the encyclopaedia Pseudodoxia Epidemica more commonly known as Vulgar Errors. It also highlights the inter-relationship between science, religion and the arts in the seventeenth century, albeit through the microcosm perspective of the private library of one of it's leading thinkers; as once remarked-

to the student of the history of ideas in its modern sense of the inter-relationship between philosophy, science, art and philosophy, Browne is of great importance.

Browne graduated from the University of Leiden in 1637, having previously studied at the Universities of Montpellier and Padua for his medical degree. Upon his establishment in Norwich as a physician he was able to begin a life-time's bibliophilia, building a private library, aquiring and no doubt reading many of an estimated 1500 titles. Adept in no less than five modern languages, French, Italian, Spanish, Dutch and Danish as well as Latin, Greek and Hebrew, the 1711 Sales Auction Catalogue reflects the wide scope of Browne's amateur hobbies, who following the translation of his Religio Medici and encyclopaedia Pseudodoxia Epidemica into French, Latin and Dutch was acknowledged as one of the great intellects of seventeenth century Europe.

Browne's erudite learning is reflected in the fact that the Classics of the ancient world as well as theology, history, geography, philology, philosophy, anatomy, antiquities, Biblical scholarship, cartography, embryology, medicine, cosmography, ornithology, minerology, zoology, travel, law, mathematics, geometry, literature, both Continental and English, the latest advances in scientific thinking in astronomy, chemistry as well as esoteric topics such as astrology, alchemy, physiognomy and the Cabbala are all represented in the Catalogue.

It was the American scholar Jeremiah Stanton Finch, Dean Emeritus Yale University who completed the indexing of the books of Sir Thomas and his son Edward Browne's libraries, 'after many years in many libraries' in 1986. J.S. Finch noted that the Catalogue advertised books of Sculpture and Painting, which somehow never made it to the Auction. In the event, the Auction held upon January 8th-10th 1711 was attended by Jonathan Swift and buyers working on behalf of Sir Hans Sloane. Thus an unknown percentage of books auctioned from the Library of Sir Thomas Browne subsequently formed the foundation for the future British Library.

The one-time blind librarian Jorge Luis Borges, a life-long admirer of Browne, considered paradise itself to be a Library. The following titles represent only a fraction of the total volume of Library of Sir Thomas Browne and have been selected as a thumb-nail sketch of the omniverous reading material and bibliophilia which Thomas Browne engaged upon over the course of half a century.

Ancient World

Late Roman Empire/early Christian era

Renaissance and Contemporaries

Astronomy

Contemporary science

Philosophy

Medical

  • Avicenna Opera 2 vols. 1608 Venice
  • Andreas Vesalius De humana Corporis fabrica 8 Books 1555
  • Fallopius opera Frankfurt 1600
  • Marcello Malpighi De viscerum structura London 1669
  • Marcello Malpighi de formatione Pulli in Ovo London 1673
  • Cardano Opera 10 vol. Leyden 1663
  • J.B. du Hamel of meteorites and fossils Paris 1660
  • Jan Swammerdam Uteri Muliebris Fabrica London 1680
  • Jan Swammerdam of Respiration Leyden 1667
  • Thomas Bartholin Anatomia Reformata Leyden 1651
  • Thomas Bartholin de Medicina Danorun Domestica Hannover 1666
  • Thomas Bartholin de Luce Animalium Leyden 1647
  • Thomas Bartholin Historiar. Anatomic. rarior. Cent. VI 3 vol. Hannover 1654
  • Thomas Bartholin de Pulmonum Substantia et Motu Hannover 1663
  • Thomas Sydenham Observations Medical London 1676
  • Caspar Bauhin Pinax theatri botanici Basle 1633
  • Walter Charleton
  • Franz de la Boe a.k.a. Franciscus Sylyius
  • Fabricus Opera Anatomica Paris 1625
  • Charles Estienne De dissectione Corporis humani 1545
  • Jean Fernel Cosmotheoria 1528 Colin??
  • Galen Opera 5 books in 3 vols. Basle 1538
  • Pierre Gassendi Vita Epicuri Leyden 1647
  • Francis Glisson De ventriculo London 1677
  • Pierre Gassendi de apparente magnitudine solis humilis et sublimis Paris 1642
  • Pierre Gassendi Instit. Astromia item Galileo et Kepler 1683
  • William Harvey De Generatione London 1651
  • William Harvey Exercitatio Anatomica de Motu Cordis et Sanguinis in Animalibus 1648

Esoteric

  • Athanasius Kircher, Oedipus Aegyptiacus (1652, Rome)
  • Athanasius Kircher China illustrated Amsterdam 1667
  • Gaffarel Unheard-of Curiosities (1650 Paris)
  • Elias Ashmole ed. Theatrum Chemicum (1652)
  • J.B. Porta Magia Naturalis (1644)
  • J.B.Porta Phytognomica Naples 1588
  • J.B. Porta Villa 12 Books Frankfurt 1592
  • Martin Ruland Dictionary of alchemy (1612)
  • Franceso Giorgio Harmonia Mundi (1525) Venice
  • Paracelsus Opera Medico-Chimica (1603) Frankfurt
  • Arthur Dee Fasciculus Chemicum
  • Thomas Vaughan 'A Hermeticall Banquet drest by a Spagyrical Cook'
  • Tommaso Campanella 7 Astrological books (1630) Frankfurt
  • Mersenne Quaestiones Celeberrimae in Genesim 1st ed. (1623) Paris
  • Vossius De Idolatria (1642)
  • Archangulus Cabalistarum Selectiora Obscurioraque Dogmata (1569) Venice
  • Henry Ranzovus Astrologia Scientiae Certitudo (1585)
  • Petrae Nosologia Harmonica Dogmatica and Hermetica (1615)
  • Helvetius Miraculo transmutandi Metallica Antwerp 1667
  • Sendivogius The true secret Philosophy 1651 Castille
  • Raymund Lull Vademecum, quo sontes Alchemica Art 1572

Natural History

  • Aldrovandi Museum Metallicum Bologna 1648
  • Aldrovandi Serpent and Draconum historica Bolonga 1640
  • Aldrovandi Ornithtologia Frankfurt 1610
  • J.J.Becher Physica Subterranea Frankfurt 1669

Miscellaneous

  • Schindler, Lexicon Hebraic, Chaldic, Syrian, Arabic (1612
  • J.C.Scaliger On Insomnia (1610) Geneva
  • "Of the cause of purple rain in Brussels" (1648)

Literature'

Source

  • A Facsimile of the 1711 Sales Auction Catalogue of Sir Thomas Browne and his son Edward's Libraries. Introduction, notes and index by J.S.Finch pub. E.J.Brill Leiden 1986

References

  • Music, mysticism and Magic - A sourcebook ed. Joscelyn Godwin pub. Arkana 1986
  • The Strategy for Truth-Leonard Nathanson Chicago University Press 1967
  • The greatest benefit to Mankind. A medical history from antiquity to the present. Roy Porter Harper and Collins 1999




Content on this web site is provided for informational purposes only. We accept no responsibility for any loss, injury or inconvenience sustained by any person resulting from information published on this site. We encourage you to verify any critical information with the relevant authorities.



Copyright © 2005 Par Web Solutions All Rights reserved.
| Privacy

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Library of Sir Thomas Browne".