Iatrosophion.

Format
Manuscript, Book
Published/​Created
between 1501-1800.
Description
1 v. 15.5 x 10.5 cm

Availability

Copies in the Library

Location Call Number Status Location Service Notes
Special Collections - Manuscripts C0879 (Princeton Greek MS. 131) Browse related items Reading Room Request

    Details

    Subject(s)
    Getty AAT genre
    Summary note
    Iatrosophion compiled and used by Greek healers and practitioners of folk medicine, perhaps including local clerics, from the 16th to 18th centuries, possibly in Crete. The volume is foliated in part, but largely paginated (pp. 1-815). There are many missing and unnumbered pages. Decorative head pieces in the earlier parts of the manuscript. The text is comprised of approximately 70 sections, written in at least five different hands. This volume contains extracts from Greek medical treatises and information on botanical remedies (with a few color illustrations of plants), pharmacology, popular cures, astrological medicine (with charts), lists of "good" and "bad" days for phlebotomy, magical script, Cabalistic symbols, Zodiacal signs, pseudo-Solomonic pentacles, invocations of angels and demons, amuletic texts, spells, and prognostications. Among texts extracted are "Logoi pneumatikoi metaphrasthentes eis tēn koinēn glōttan para Agapiou monachou" (fols. 1r-3v); the "Iatrosophion plousiōtaton Agapiou Lantou Krētos logiōtatou kai sophōtatou" (fols. 21r-64v), copied from the Geoponicon of Agapios Landos (1585-1657), a Cretan monk; and "Vasileia Solomontos," a Greek version of the Clavicula Salomonis (fols. 171r-201r).
    Binding note
    Bound in paper. Composite volume was kept in a thick goatskin wrapper.
    Language note
    Greek.
    Source acquisition
    Purchase: Acquired with matching funds provided by the Program in Hellenic Studies with the support of the Stanley J. Seeger Hellenic Fund. AM 2017-132.
    Other standard number
    • C0879 (Princeton Greek MS. 131)
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