Levinus Lemnius

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Levinus Lemnius [1] (20 May 1505 in Zierikzee – 1 July 1568 in Zierikzee) was a Dutch physician and author.[2]

Life

Lemnius studied medicine at the University of Leuven under Rembert Dodoens and Konrad Gesner;[3] and under Vesalius at Padua.[4] He travelled also to Switzerland and England.[5] After his wife's death he became a priest.[3]

Works

File:De Occultis Naturae Miraculis.jpg
Title page of the 1573 edition of De occultis naturae miraculis (Cologne).

His Occulta naturae miracula, a book of secrets, is his best-known work. It ran through many editions and was widely translated from Latin. It drew on classical sources, particularly Aristotle. Lemnius was influenced, too, by the "airs, waters, places" doctrine from the Hippocratic Corpus.[9] The work attempted to reconcile natural philosophy as found in classical sources with Christian doctrine, particularly on generation and reproduction, while emphasising extraordinary aspects.[10] His humoral theory was complex, with phlegm being divided into four, and the other humours also being subdivided.[11]


He is credited with first mentioning in this work of staining of bone, with madder root.[12] In the same work he gives credence to the theory of maternal impression;[13] his theory of teratology connects the Aristotelian theory of generation with birth defects.[14] He contributed to demonology, with Johann Weyer, by suggesting that mental illness and disturbance could be physically caused, rather than being a result of outside influence.[15] He also credited Solomon with the invention of the magnetic compass.[16]

This work in some form had a lifetime of nearly four centuries. It was later combined with a German manual on midwifery by Jakob Rüff, to create Aristotle's Masterpiece, a 17th-century work in English of advice on sex and reproduction, still sold in later editions in the 1930s.[17]

File:Secret Miracles of Nature.jpg
The Secret Miracles of Nature, title page from 1658 of the edition published by John Streater.

Notes

  1. Also Lenneus or Lennius, originally Lievin Lemnes or Lemmens or Lemse (and also Dutch Livinus of Lieven); in Italian known as Levinio Lennio or Lemmio; in England in the 16th century as Levine Lemnie.
  2. CERL page
  3. 3.0 3.1 (Dutch) http://www.dbnl.org/tekst/molh003nieu08_01/molh003nieu08_01_1789.php
  4. Tibor Klaniczay, André Stegmann, L'époque de la Renaissance 1400-1600 (2000), p. 371; Google Books.
  5. (Dutch) http://www.zierikzee-monumentenstad.nl/kk_4500000/lemse-lieven
  6. World Cat; subsequent Latin editions as De occultis naturae miraculis.
  7. World Cat
  8. 8.0 8.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  9. "Foolishness" in Early Modern Medicine and the Concept of Intellectual Disability, note 74.
  10. http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/exhibitions/Babies/captions.html
  11. From The Touchstone of Complexions; J. B. Bamborough, The Little World of Man (1952), p. 59.
  12. Brian Keith Hall, Bones and Cartilage: developmental and evolutionary skeletal biology (2005), p. 433.
  13. (Italian) http://www.linguaggioglobale.com/mostri/txt/16.htm
  14. http://www.digitalsilesia.eu/Content/23006/inscription_on_the_body.pdf, pp.33–4.
  15. Adam Crabtree, The Transition to Secular Psychotherapy: Hypnosis and the Alternate-Consciousness Paradigm, p. 555, Ch. 19 in History of Psychiatry and Medical Psychology 2008, Section Three, Part 4, 555-586, doi:10.1007/978-0-387-34708-0_19
  16. Paul Fleury Mottelay, A Bibliographical History of Electricity and Magnetism (1922), p. 5; online.
  17. http://www.lib.cam.ac.uk/exhibitions/Babies/Aristotle.html

Further reading

External links