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Author: Hill, Thomas, b. ca. 1528.
Title: The contemplation of mankinde contayning a singuler discourse after the art of phisiognomie, on all the members and partes of man, as from the heade to the foote, in a more ample maner than hytherto hath beene published of any. In the place next after the chapter of the forehead, hath the phisiognomer added a proper treatise of the signification of sundrie lines seene in most mens foreheads: which in sundrie disputations with a skilfull Iew, he at the last obtayned. ... In the ende is a little treatise added of the signification of moles ... written by a worthie Grecian named Melampus. All which, englished by Thomas Hyll.
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Print source: The contemplation of mankinde contayning a singuler discourse after the art of phisiognomie, on all the members and partes of man, as from the heade to the foote, in a more ample maner than hytherto hath beene published of any. In the place next after the chapter of the forehead, hath the phisiognomer added a proper treatise of the signification of sundrie lines seene in most mens foreheads: which in sundrie disputations with a skilfull Iew, he at the last obtayned. ... In the ende is a little treatise added of the signification of moles ... written by a worthie Grecian named Melampus. All which, englished by Thomas Hyll.
Hill, Thomas, b. ca. 1528., Cocles, Bartolommeo della Rocca, 1467-1504. Chyromantie ac physionomie anastasis., Malampus, 3rd cent. B.C. Peri elaiōn sōmatos. English.

[Imprinted at London: By [Henry Denham for] William Seres, dwelling at the west ende of Paules Church, at the signe of the Hedgehogge], 1571.
Subject terms:
Physiognomy -- Early works to 1800.
URL: https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A68187.0001.001
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Table of Contents
A large and pleasant discourse of the whole Arte of Phisiogno∣mie, orderly vttering all the speciall parts of man, from the head to the foote, in a more ample maner than hy∣therto hath beene published.