Citations:Juntine

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English citations of Juntine

  • 1864, Titi Lucretui Cari de Rerum Natura libri sex with a translation and notes by H.A.J. Munro M.A.[1], introduction:
    If now all that is common to the first Aldine and the Juntine comes from Marullus, as Lachmann maintains, surely Candidus must have been struck with this coincidence, and would have recorded it against Avancius, the editor of the great rival publisher.
  • 1936 February, Loren Carey MacKinney, “‚Dynamidia’ in medieval medical literature” in Isis, volume XXIV, № 2, §: ‘Galenic dynamidia’, page 408:
    Of the first type, the pseudo-Galenic letter ad Paternianum is the outstanding example. It is a short treatise of broad medical scope, that seems most often to have been used as a general introduction to more technically detailed materials. It has been published, but only in the old and often inaccessible “Juntine” editions of Galen (36), as a liber de dynamidiis.
    (36) Opera Galeni (Venice; 1556, 1586, 1609); in the section of spurii.
  • ibidem, page 411, footnote 44:
    In the Juntine edition (Venice, 1609) of Spuria Galeni the alphabet is preceded by a Paternian letter that reads as follows.