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192d Grew, Nehemiah. (1641-1712) Musæum Regalis Societatis.
Or a catalogue & description of the natural and artificial rarities
belonging to the Royal Society and preserved at Gresham Colledge. Made
by Nehemiah Grew M.D. Fellow of the Royal Society, and of the Colledge
of Physitians. Whereunto is subjoyned the comparative anatomy of stomachs
and guts. By the same author.
London: W. Rawlins, for the author, 1681
$3,500 Folio, 7.6 x 12.5 in. First edition. A6, B-Z4, Aa-Zz4, Aaa-Ddd4, A-E4,
F2. This copy has all thirty one full-paged and folding engravings,
as well as the frontispiece portrait. This copy is bound in full contemporary
calf, rebacked.
The text portion of this book consists of descriptions of mysterious oddities
collected by the Royal Society in its early days. The Society was granted its
royal charter in 1662. It was a preoccupation of many educated men of the sixteenth
and seventeenth centuries across Europe to collect bizarre and exotic objects
from around the world. The far east, the new world, and beyond—all of
these remote locales yielded their most notable artifacts, natural objects,
animals, plants, machines and more. This intriguing and marvelous book includes
descriptions of an Egyptian mummy, a male human fetus, the skin of a moor,
the skeletons of a man and a woman, the skeleton of an abortive human fetus,
human skulls, a penis, the womb of a woman, a piece of bone “voided by
Sir W. Throgmorton with his Urine,” a monkey, a sloth, the skull of a
tiger, the skull of a hippopotamus, the fore tooth of a beaver, a weasel-headed
armadillo, the flying squirrel, the horns of a Syrian goat, a monstrous calf
with two heads, the skin of a rhinoceros, the tusk of an elephant, a hairy
ball taken from the stomach of a bull in Brazil, many tortoise shells, a crocodile,
a chameleon, a senembi lizard of Brazil, the skin of a few snakes from Brazil,
a great bat from the West Indies, a bird of paradise, a great red and blue
parrot, a hummingbird, the leg of a dodo, several loons, an auk (now extinct),
many eggs and nests, many whale bones, a white shark, the head of a dolphin,
the skeleton of a porpoise, a skate, a sturgeon, a lobster, many crabs, butterflies,
wasps, the nocoonaca from the West Indies, fruits, nuts, berries, coral, stones,
gems, an air pump, a condensing engine, a weather clock, two microscopes, an
otocoustick, a reflecting telescope, a model of a winding stair case, a double
bottomed ship, a canoe, a poisoned dagger, a cider press, Virginian money,
a hammock, many American Indian everyday objects, Iceland gloves, the fan of
an Indian king, a snowshoe from Greenland, and more, much much more. In the
plates some of the subjects include the hippopotamus skull, the buttock skin
of a rhinoceros, tortoise shells, the complete skeleton of a crocodile, the
sea unicorn, a coconut, fish, bird’s nests, shells, insects, and more.
Wing G-1952; DNB 609; DSB 534; Babson #406; Garrison-Morton 297; Le
Fanu III.
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