Levinus Lemnius (1505 - 1568)

Levinus Lemnius (1505 - 1568) - photo 1

Levinus Lemnius

Levinus Lemnius (Dutch: Lieven Lemse, Lenneus, Lennius, Lemmens, Lemnii of Lemnes) was a Dutch physician, philosopher, botanist and writer.

He studied under the famous Swiss botanist and bibliographer Conrad Gesner at the University of Louvain and under the famous Flemish anatomist Andreas Vesalius at the University of Padua. Lemnius's book On the Habit and Constitution of the Body was translated by Thomas Newton, an Anglican clergyman who translated some of Lemnius's treatises into English, as well as other modern continental and classical works.

Lemnius is considered the first author to describe the plants mentioned in the Bible, in T. Newton's translation, Herbal for the Bible (1587). Levin Lemnius's most famous book is Occulta naturae miracula (1559), a book of mysteries that was reprinted many times over a period of four hundred years.

Date and place of birt:20 may 1505, Zierikzee, The Netherlands
Date and place of death:1 july 1568, Zierikzee, The Netherlands
Period of activity: XVI century
Specialization:Botanist, Doctor, Philosopher, Writer
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