Historia Naturalis Brasiliae

Historia Naturalis Brasiliae

Cover of the first edition
Author Willem Piso
Country Netherlands
Language Latin
Genre Scientific
Publisher Joannes de Laet
Publication date
1648
Media type Print
Pages 293 pp

Historia Naturalis Brasiliae (English: Brazilian Natural History), originally written in Latin, is the first scientific book about Brazil, written by Dutch naturalist Willem Piso and published in 1648.[1] Piso makes use of observations made by the German naturalists Georg Marcgrave, and H. Gralitzio, in addition to John de Laet. It was dedicated to John Maurice, Count of Nassau.[2]

Though referring to Brazil throughout the text, the authors in fact write of the coastal strip of the Northeast, occupied by the East India Company. It is based on Piso's trip to Brazil in 1637 and offers an important early western insight into Brazilian flora and fauna by analysing plants and animals and studying tropical diseases and indigenous therapies.

It was edited, as stated on its title page, in: Lugdun.[3] Batavorum: Apud Franciscum Hackium ; et Amstelodami:[4] Apud Lud. Elzevirium[2] - Latin name of the prestigious Elsevier publisher, which still exists.[5]

The work consists of a single volume, originally measuring 40 centimetres (height) and its full title, with subtitle, is: " Historia naturalis Brasiliae ...: in qua non tantum plantae et animalia, sed et indigenarum morbi, ingenia et mores describuntur et iconibus supra quingentas illustrantur ".[6]

The Brazilian physician and researcher Juliano Moreira said of Piso's work: 'This clearly masterful work, when carefully reexamined, shows, at each perquisition, new excellences, and thus it is still one of the most authentic glories of Dutch medical literature. We owe to Pies a description, so accurate and meticulous, of the then reigning endemics in Brazil and the means of treating them. He observed the yaws, tetanus, various types of paralysis, dysentery, hemeralopia, maculopapular. He described Ipecac and emeto - cathartic qualities, which aboriginals used long before the famous doctor Adrian Helvetius, grandfather of the notable French philosopher Claudio Adriano Helvetius received from Louis XIV a thousand louis gold, titles and honors for having discovered exactly those same therapeutic virtues. The Treaty of Helvetius titled "Remède contre le cours du ventre." dates from 1688'.[7]

References

  1. "Marcgrave Montanus - S4U Languages - Brazilian translation. Salvador and Sao Paulo. Ensino de idiomas and Brazilian Portuguese translations | Facsimile of original 1648 manuscript". s4ulanguages.com. Retrieved 2015-11-20.
  2. 1 2 História Natural do Brasil - edição brasileira: Guilherme Piso (trad. Prof. Alexandre Correia, seguido do texto original, da biografia do autor e de comentários) (1948). História Natural do Brasil Ilustrada (edição comemorativa do primeiro cinqüentenário do Museu Paulista ed.). Companhia Editora Nacional. p. 431.
  3. "Lugdun" is the shorthand for Lugdunum'' - the latin name of the Dutch city of Leiden
  4. "Amstelodami" is the latin name for Amsterdam
  5. Mariana Françozo (fev/2010). "Alguns comentários à Historia Naturalis Brasiliae" (PDF). Cadernos de Etnolingüística (ISSN 1946-7095) volume 2, número 1. Retrieved 2010-08-22. Check date values in: |date= (help)
  6. Rare books of Missouri Botanical Garden Library. "Bibliographic Information". www.illustrategarden.org. Retrieved 2010-08-22.
  7. Cited by Afonso de E. Taunay, "Escorço biográfico", In: História Natural do Brasil, op. cit., pg. 214.
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