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Conrad Gessner’s Fish Books (1556-1560)

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In the expansion of zoological knowledge in the sixteenth century, ichthyology played an avant-garde role. While the study of fishes had up until then received relatively little attention, scholars...
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  • 11 November 2026
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In the expansion of zoological knowledge in the sixteenth century, ichthyology played an avant-garde role. While the study of fishes had up until then received relatively little attention, scholars now aimed to fill this gap in their collective knowledge. A mass of new aquatic species was catalogued in quick succession, inspiring new approaches to the organisation and presentation of information.
The Swiss scholar Conrad Gessner (1516-1565) aimed to collect all information known since Antiquity, including also contemporary scholarly discussion. In supplementation he described species based on his own observation and on local knowledge, listing more species than anyone before him, illustrated with even more depictions. In order to present this information in an accessible manner, he experimented with novel methods description and with classification through cross-references to similar species. The Historia piscium thus provides us with a bird’s-eye view of the state of knowledge at its time of publication as well as illustrates developments in classification and the presentation of information through text and images which were taking place at the time.
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Price: $158.00
Pages: 412
Publisher: Brill
Imprint: Brill
Series: Intersections
Publication Date: 11 November 2026
ISBN: 9789004773929
Format: Hardcover
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Sophia Hendrikx, PhD (Universiteit Leiden, 2024) works as senior inspector the Dutch Information and Heritage Inspectorate. She published on zoological classification and nomenclature of the early modern period, translation of sixteenth century zoological descriptions, zoological illustrations of the early modern period, and the exchange and interpretation of knowledge and information within networks of sixteenth century naturalists.