The contemplation of mankinde : contayning a singuler discourse after the art of phisiognomie, on all the members and partes of man, as from the heade to the foote, in a more ample maner than hytherto hath beene published of any. In the place next after the chapter of the forehead, hath the phisiognomer added a proper treatise of the signification of sundrie lines seene in most mens foreheads: which in sundrie disputations with a skilfull Iew, he at the last obtayned. ... In the ende is a little treatise added of the signification of moles ... written by a worthie Grecian named Melampus. All which, englished by Thomas Hyll.
- Hill, Thomas, approximately 1528-
- Date:
- 1571
- Books
- Online
Online resources
About this work
Also known as
Pleasaunt discourse of phisiognomie.
Publication/Creation
[Imprinted at London] : [By [Henry Denham for] William Seres, dwelling at the west ende of Paules Church, at the signe of the Hedgehogge], 1571.
Physical description
16 unnumbered pages, 208, 109-132, 233-236 [i.e. 244] leaves : illustrations (woodcuts), portrait
Notes
A greatly enlarged version of Hill's 1556 translation of "Chyromantie ac physionomie anastasis" by Bartolommeo della Rocca Cocles, in which these woodcuts first appeared. The work by Malampus is "Peri elaiōn sōmatos".
Ostensible printer's name and address from colophon; actual printer's name from STC.
Includes a bibliography of Hill's works.
The first leaf is blank except for signature-mark "[par.].j.".
Quires B and C have numbered leaves interleaved with unnumbered.
Running title reads: A pleasaunt discourse of phisiognomie.
Identified as STC 17787 on UMI microfilm reel 287.
Reproductions of the original in the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery (same copy filmed twice).
References note
STC (2nd ed.) 13482.
Reproduction note
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI, 1999- (Early English books online) Digital version of: (Early English books, 1475-1640 ; 287:07, 511:04) s1999 miun s