Doctrine of signatures: (above) a plant resembling the fangs of a viper, above, and (below) a viper. Coloured ink drawing, c. 1923, after G.B. Della Porta.

  • Porta, Giambattista della, approximately 1535-1615.
Date:
1923
Reference:
524731i
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Description

In his Phytognomica, Della Porta discerns the hidden qualities of plants from the analogy of their forms with comparable features of animals. Those features of animals are "signs" which signify the same effects in plants which they have in animals: "ut cui signum competat, eidem et effectus: et cui effectio, pariter & signum: & quae signis vacent, & effectibus vacent" (Phytognomica, lib I, cap. xiii, Rouen 1650, p. 26); in English "That to which a sign belongs, to it also the effect belongs; and that to which the effect belongs, equally to it the sign belongs; and those which lack the signs also lack the effects"

Publication/Creation

1923

Physical description

1 drawing : ink, with watercolour

Lettering

Doctrine of signatures. Plant resembling the fangs of a snake. From a woodcut of the XVI century.

Reference

Wellcome Collection 524731i

Reproduction note

After: G.B. Della Porta, Phytognomica Io. Baptistæ Neopolitani, octo libris contenta, lib. V, cap. xvi (Rouen 1650 p. 371)

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