[33] Conf. Epist. Zwinglii et Œcolampadii. Basil, 1592.
[34] Dialogi de Trinitate, 12mo. (1532), in the same form and type as the De Erroribus, and still without the name of the publisher or place of publication.
[35] Servetus’s De Trinitatis Erroribus is generally believed to be one of the rare books, yet it is commonly enough met with in England. So long ago as the year 1725, however, a copy bound with the Dialogi sold for the large sum of between four and five hundred French livres. There is a counterfeit edition published in Holland, and only to be distinguished from the original by the paper being somewhat better and the type a shade larger. The Book was never, in so far as we know, publicly condemned and burned. It was translated into Dutch (4to. 1620) with the epigraph: Prœft alle Dingen ende behout het gœde, 1 John iv.
[36] ‘Claudii Ptolemæi Alexandrini Geographicæ Enarrationis Libri Octo; ex Bilibaldi Pirckhemeri Tralatione, sed ad Græca et prisca exemplaria a Michaele Villanovano jam primum recogniti. Adjecta insuper ab eodem Scholia,’ etc. Lugduni, ex Officina Melch. et Gasp. Trechsel, 1535. Fol.
Accipe non noti præclara volumina mundi,
Oceani et magnas noscito lector opes.
Plurima debetur typhis tibi gratia, gentes
Ignotas, et aves quas vehis orbe novo;
Magna quoque autori referenda et gratia nostro
Qui facit hæc cunctis regna videnda locis.
[38] Tollin has collected a great deal of very interesting information on Servetus’s geographical studies, in his paper entitled ‘Michel Servet als Geograph,’ in the Zeitschrift der Gesellschaft für Erdkunde, 1875, S. 182 et seq.
[39] Quoted by Tollin in his Essays: ‘Wie Servet ein Mediciner wurde,’ in Goschen’s Deutsche Klinik, No. 8, 1875; and ‘Servet und Symphorien Champier,’ in Virchow’s Archiv für pathologische Anatomie, Bd. 61. Berlin, 1875.
[40] Paradoxorum Medicinæ, Libri iii., fol. Basil. 1535.
[41] In Leonhardum Fuchsium Defensio Apologetica, pro Symphoriano Campeggio.