Morgan, William (1623-1689)
- Morgan, William, 1623-1689
- Date:
- 1677
- Reference:
- MS.3633
- Archives and manuscripts
About this work
Description
Philosophia acroamatica sive disputatio in octo libros Aristotelis de physico auditu. Disputationes in duos libros de generatione et interitu: in tres libros. Aristotelis de anima: in libros Aristotelis de mundo et caelo: in Metaphysicam ... [Tractatus]: traditi per Rad. D. D. R[obertum] Pugh, Philosophiae Professoris, per me Edwardum Golding scripti. Illustrated with a few pen-drawn diagrams, and ornamented with 8 neatly drawn vignettes. Signature of 'William Bonsall 1800' on the verso of the last leaf of text. Produced in London?
Publication/Creation
1677
Physical description
1 volume 394 ll. (last 2 bl.). 4to. 22 × 17 cm. Original calf-gilt binding.
Contributors
Acquisition note
Purchased at Sotheby's 15/6/1908, Lot 25.
Biographical note
For William Morgan S.J., see the Dictionary of National Biography where there is also a notice of Robert Pugh [1609-1679]. Pugh is also entered in Gillow's 'Biographical dictionary of English Catholics', 1903, Vol. V.
Finding aids
Database description transcribed from S.A.J. Moorat, Catalogue of Western Manuscripts on Medicine and Science in the Wellcome Historical Medical Library (London: Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 1962-1973).
Notes
On the last leaf of the text the scribe states that these lectures were given 'In Ursa'. This may be the famous 'Bear' Inn, mentioned several times in Pepys' Diary, which Sir Walter Besant in 'Old and new London', Vol. VI, p. 12, states 'was for several centuries, one of the most popular of London Taverns'. It was situated at the Southwark end of London Bridge, known as 'Bridge-foot', and was demolished in 1761.
Ownership note
Phillipps MS. No. 20856.
Languages
Where to find it
Location Status Access Closed stores
Permanent link
Identifiers
Accession number
- 20656