This month we will be looking at 10a 189, Baptista Massa de Argenta’s De fructibus virtutibus. De fructibus is a 15th-century Italian treatise on fruits, their properties, and their medicinal uses. The Library’s copy also contains a short treatise on how to make barley water.
Peter Kidd, a recipient of the F. C. Wood Institute travel grant, spent some time here in the Library in September of 2015, researching 10 of the Library’s pre-1500 Western manuscripts. 10a 189 especially caught his fancy. Read an introduction to his blog post below, and then follow the link to discover who owned 10a 189 before the Library. Did you know it is one of only 2 extant manuscript copies of De fructibus?!
“In early November 2014 I spent a stimulating morning looking at the medieval manuscripts belonging to the Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. One that particularly caught my interest is a small volume of 80 leaves, each about 155×115mm (6”×4½”), whose main content is a treatise in 27 chapters on edible fruits, from figs and grapes to pumpkins and capers. It was an appropriate acquisition for the College because it discusses each fruit under various headings, giving their general medical and other properties, and their effect on various parts of the body.”
For the full post: A Little-Known Manuscript Dated 1471, made for Ercole d’Este, Duke of Ferrara