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  1. Title: Herbarum vivae eicones. Author: Otto Brunfels (German, ca. Mainz 1488–1534 Bern) Artist: Hans Weiditz the Younger (German, Freiburg im Breisgau before 1500–ca. 1536 Strasbourg) Printer: Johann Schott (German, 1477–ca. 1548 Strasbourg) Published in: Strasbourg. Date: 1530.

  2. Otto Brunfels, Herbarum vivae eicones (Johann Schott, Strassburg, 1530) Written by the earliest of the German botanists, this work is a milestone in the history of botany. It is the first book on the subject to rely wholly on personal observation and has 135 original detailed woodcuts of plants taken directly from nature.

  3. Otto Brunfels. Otto Brunfels (ou Otho Braunfels, ou Othon Brunfels ), nado preto de Maguncia ( Alemaña) contra 1488 e finado en Berna ( Suíza) o 25 de novembro de 1534, foi un teólogo, humanista, médico e botánico alemán. Carl von Linné considerábao como un dos pais da botánica, se ben non tivo moito en conta os botánicos antigos.

  4. Otto Brunfels es del signo de Leo. Otto Brunfels, también conocido como Brunsfels o Braunfels (cerca de Maguncia, Alemania; 1488 - Berna, Suiza; 23 de diciembre de 1534 ), fue un teólogo, humanista, médico y botánico alemán . Carlos Linneo lo consideraba uno de los «padres de la botánica».

  5. Otto Brunfels (født 1488 i Mainz, død 1534 i Bern) var en tysk læge og botaniker. Brunfels, der oprindelig var teolog, trådte i Strassburg over til protestantismen, men kom i øvrigt, da han senere mere og mere hældede til de gammel-evangeliske brødremenigheders grundsætninger, i konflikt med Luther og Zwingli.

  6. Otto Brunfels’ Herbarium vivae eicones (1530s) contains excellent and accurate drawings by the wood engraver Hans Weiditz. This emphasis on accuracy also appeared in the subsequent herbals of Hieronymus Bock and Leonhard Fuchs. Plants brought back by explorers then began to be illustrated.

  7. Description. The Herbarum vivae eicones (Living Images of Plants) is a compilation of old and new commentaries on the properties of plants, published by the German botanist Otto Brunfels. The book contains some beautiful botanical illustrations conceived first as woodcuts by Hans Weiditz, a woodcut designer commissioned to illustrate the herbal.