[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.

[37]

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.