Citations:Juntine


 * 1936 February, Loren Carey MacKinney, “‚Dynamidia’ in medieval medical literature” in Isis, volume XXIV, № 2, §: ‘Galenic dynamidia’, page 408:
 * Of the first type, the pseudo-Galenic letter ad Paternianum is the outstanding example. It is a short treatise of broad medical scope, that seems most often to have been used as a general introduction to more technically detailed materials. It has been published, but only in the old and often inaccessible “Juntine” editions of Galen (36), as a liber de dynamidiis. (36) Opera Galeni (Venice; 1556, 1586, 1609); in the section of spurii.
 * ibidem, page 411, footnote 44:
 * In the Juntine edition (Venice, 1609) of Spuria Galeni the alphabet is preceded by a Paternian letter that reads as follows.
 * In the Juntine edition (Venice, 1609) of Spuria Galeni the alphabet is preceded by a Paternian letter that reads as follows.