- A dissection scene
- Title-page of Mellerstadt’s edition of the Anatomy of Mondino, Leipzig, 1493. The scene is laid in the open air
- a lecture on anatomy
- The first picture of dissection in an English-printed book
- Leonardo Da Vincis diagram of the heart
- The figure shows the ten layers of the head
- The figure shows a professor and pupil. The former is demonstrating the bones of a skeleton.
- Illustrating the general ideas on anatomy current at the Renaissance
- The layers of the head
- The first printed picture of dissection
- Diagram of the ventricles and the senses
- The Anatomy of the Eye
- Roger Bacons diagram of the Eye
- An anatomical diagram of about 1298
- Diagram of the senses, the humours, the cerebral ventricles, and the intellectual facultie
- Venice, 1496, showing the ventricles of the brain
- The Microcosm
- The Anatomy of the Eye
- The regions of the abdomen and their contents
- The arch of the aorta and its branches
- Lymphatics of the leg.
- The cartilages of the larynx; the trachea and bronchi
- Lymphatics of the head and neck. B, the thoracic duct
- The right auricle and ventricle laid open
- A cross section of the skin
- Skeleton
- The root of the left lung
- Front view of the thorax
- The Spine
- The Skull
- Superficial veins of the head and neck
- Passage into trachea and esophagus; Pharynx
- The External, Middle, and Internal Ear of the Left Side
- Sense-Organs susceptible to Pressure
- Vertical section of the skull, showing the sinuses of the dura mater
- Plan of the foetal circulation
- The Formation of an Image by the Refracting Media of the Eye
- The Growth and Migration of Granules of the Cerebellum
- The Retina in Vertical Section
- Organ of Corti
- Highly Magnified Section through the Wall of a Circumvallate Papilla of the Tongue, showing Two Taste-Bulbs.
- Horizontal Section through the Right Eye
- The Body of a Motor Neurone
- Diagram of a Lobule of the Liver
- The Surface of the Left Cerebral Hemisphere, Cerebellum,and Medulla Oblongata.
- The Anterior Half of the Larynx seen from Behind
- Diagram showing the Relative Positions of the Organs of the Chest and Abdomen.
- The Heart cut in the Plane of its Long Axis, and the Vessels which open into and out of it
- A Ganglion of a Leech
- Illustrating Galen’s physiological teaching