SAVONAROLA, Giovanni Michele.
APHRODISIACAL ARTICHOKES AND A CHAPTER ON WINE
SAVONAROLA, Giovanni Michele.. Libro della natura et virtu delle cose, che nutriscono, e delle cose non naturali.
Venice, appresso Domenico, & Gio[vanni]. Battista Guerra, fratelli, 1576.
.Fourth edition, second issue, newly edited and enlarged by Bartolomeo Boldo, of this popular gastronomical work and manual of good digestive health, first published 1508. The guide considers both natural and unnatural aids to health, the latter referring to lifestyle choices rather than food or drink. The work is clearly divided into sections: grains, herbs, roots, citrus and other fruits, animals (meat), fish, eggs, milk, wine, oil, salt, spices and odorous flowers. The items in each section are then treated individually, usually with advice on taste, humoral effects and remedial qualities. Savonarola s treatise is sometimes noted for his advice on consuming artichokes as aphrodisiacs, equally useful for both men and women (p. 66). There are then sections on good air, exercise, maintaining quiet, good sleep, purgation and evacuation, the effects of the animal passions and perturbation, and, finally, eighteen observations for conserving health (all of which are linked to diet or digestion) along with nine doubtful (dubio) questions concerning habits for prolonging one s life. These include how many times you should eat per day, whether you should drink wine before you eat (and whether you should drink wine after eating fruit), and whether it is better to eat a good lunch or a good dinner; the answer is a good lunch. Savonarola was physician to the Estense court of Ferrara in the fifteenth century. .
Vicaire 770. Wellcome 5794. NLM 4078. Not in Bitting, Oberl é or Simon. Not in Osler.