350 BIBLIOGRAPHT An Alabama Student, Oxford, 1908. Fielding H. Garrison, Fra«— castorius, Athanasius Kircher and the Germ Theory of Disease, in Science, April 1, 1910, No. 796; and an additional article on the same subject in Science, June 8, 1910. A. C. Klebs; Ieono— graphic Notes on Girolamo Fracastoro, Johns Hopkins Hosp. Bulletin, Vol. XXVI, No. 297, Nov. 1915. R. Massalongo, Girolamo Fracastoro e la rinascenza della medicina in Italia, Venezia, Ferrari, 1915. (A reprint from Atti del Reali Instituto Veneto di Scienze, lettere ed arti, Tomo LXXIV; delivered as a lecture at a meeting of the Instituto, May 30, 1915.) C. and D. Singer, The Scientific Position of Girolamo Fracastoro, in Annals of Medical History, Vol. I, No. I, 1917. (A good sum— mary of the sources of his hypothesis of seminaria and the influ— ' ence of this theory down to the 17th cent.; also valuable for bibliography, and for the astronomical work of Fracastorius.) L. Olschki, Geschichte der Neusprachlichen Wissenschaftlichen Literatur, 3 Vols. Especially Vol. II, Bildung und Wissenschaft im Zeitalter der Renaissance in Italien, Leipzig, 1922, pp. 95—97, Fracastoro's Stil. A. C. Klebs, The History of Infection, in Annals of Medical History, Summer Number, 1917. C. and D. Singer, The Development of the Doctrine of the /Contagium Vivum 1500—1750, in Int. Med. Congress, Sect. History of Medicine, 1913, pp. 187—209. Karl Sudhoff, The Origin of Syphilis; and the End of the Fable of the Great Syphilis Epidemiec in Europe following the Discovery of the Antilles; translated by A. Allemann, in Bull. Soc. Med. Hist., 1917, II. pp. 15—26. Sudhoff and Singer, The Earliest Printed Literature on Syphilis, Florence, 1925. G. Cervetto, Di Giambattista da Monte e della medicina Italiana nel secolo XVI, Verona, 1839. G. "Bruno, Opere, Wagner, Leipzig, 1830, Vol. II, De !Infinito Universo e mondi (Fracastorius is one of the interlocutors in these Dialogues). N. Leonicenus, Libellus de Epidemia quam vulgo morbum Gallicum vocant, Venetiis, apud Aldum Manutium. m. Jun. 1497. Ulrich von Hutten, De Quaici Medicina et Morbo Gallico, Moguntiae, 1519. Hieronymus Mercurialis, Prae— lectiones de Peste, Patavii, 1577. Fernelius, De Luis Venereae Curatione Pemfectissima, Antwerp, 1579. A. Benivieni (died 1502), De Abditis nonnullis ac mirandis morborum et sanationum causis, Florence, Giunta, 1507 (W. Osler, Development of Mod— ern Medicine, 1922, p. 185, says: "*One of these observations,