MONSTRORUM
PAGE 752

# INDEX

...light exiting through the bladder, 128.b; Milk flowing from a cut vein, 215.e; A loathing of milk, 214.c; The properties of human milk, 313.e; Illustrations of lizards with multiple tails, 594, 595, 596; Illustrations of two-bodied lizards, 661; What the upper arm (*lacertus*) is, 77.g; Rites of the Lacedaemonians, 102.a; The nature of Laconic speech, 102.a; Bloody tears, 123.h; Tears transformed into a fountain, 201.f; A lake that is cold by day and boiling by night, 209.e; The facial hollow known as the "lacuna," 76.b; The nature of the witches' ointment, 318; The character of a butcher, 139.e; A blind butcher, 213.h; Wool-workers, 140.a; The representation of dock (*lapathum*) in symbols, 264.b; What the touchstone was, 187.e; Stones possessing various shapes, 673.e, f; Stones shaped like human limbs, 135.g; A certain thief who did not die when hanged, 80.a; Why the laurel is sacred to Phoebus, 184.d; The sign of joy in statues, 301.e; Laws passed against women, 102.a; The courtesan Leæna, 216.d; A lion with a human head, 417.h, and its illustration, 442; Fiery images of a lion and an eagle, 718.a; Those who took the form of lions, 203.e; Moral lessons regarding lethargy, 257.e; Moral lessons regarding leprosy, 259.g; An eight-footed leveret, 543.h, and its illustration, 547; Varieties of Leucon, 683.h; Illustration of a monstrous Leucon, 687; Why children are called *liberi*, 111.g; The symbol of bound liberty, 274.a; Mention of Fortunio Liceti, 529.f, 559.g; The shape of the spleen, 81.e; Properties of the spleen, 276.b; Moral lessons regarding the spleen, 245.g; The signature of the spleen in plants, 307.h; Remedies for spleen disorders, 214.d; A monstrous trunk of Guaiacum wood, 663.g, and its illustration, 674; Description of mountain Libanotis, 695.g, and its monstrous illustration, 697; The poisonous tongue of men, 214.a; The tongue in place of the heart, 228.a; Those deprived of a tongue who yet speak, 148.d; Harms caused by the tongue, 171.f; Mystical aspects of the tongue, 227.b; Moral lessons of the tongue and lips, 241.h; Illustration of a tongue, 261.f; Remedies for bladder stones, 314.a, c, 160.a; What a "stone child" (*lithopaedium*) is, 591.f; Where disputes are decided by the sword, 103.g; The hieroglyphic of a litigator, 156.d; Symbols of letters, 261.f; Secret marks in letters, 261.e; Places named after men, 133.h; Talkative people who lose their voice, 214.a; The uses of the lotus herb, 217.g; The nature of the island of the Lotus-eaters, 278.d; Lucanian sausage, 75.e; Who the "Lucini" were, 137.g; The voracity of the pike, 269.h; The new plague of Moravia, 125.f; What lumbago is, 124.c; When the moon exerts the greatest influence on moisture, 289.g; Those who used the sign of the moon, 280.a; An image of the moon with a cross, 747.g; When three moons were seen, 744.a; Those raised on wolf’s milk, 216.a; Customs of the Portuguese, 105.g, 99.h; Illustration of the Portuguese living in the city of Bantam, 100; The metamorphosis of the nightingale, 196.d; Prophecies concerning Luther, 372.a; Lycanthropy, 133.e; What animal a lycanthrope is, and its illustration, 344; The transformation of the lynx, 194.b; The monstrous herb Lycopsis, 690.d, and its illustration, 694.

M

Mention of Agata the Capuchin, 414.a; The hieroglyphic of magnanimity, 155.c; Prophecies of the arrival of Muhammad, 366.a; What the examples of ancestors provide, 242.d; Varieties of the citron tree, 680.a; Differences among orange trees, 712.c; Monstrous illustration of an orange tree, 714; Why the cheeks (*mala*) are so called, 76.a; The difference between the breast, nipple, and teat, 76.d; The name "mamma" among the people of Aquino, 76.d; What the space between the nipples signifies, 68.d; Moral lessons regarding the breasts, 244.a; What the statue of Manasseh was, 310.d; The Manes gods, 294.b; Why the hand (*manus*) is called a gift (*munus*), 67.a; The hand as the "instrument of instruments," 113.h; What the hand of God is, 230.a; What a violent hand is, 231.g; What the palm of the hand measures, 68.a; When the measurement of the hand is gathered, 67.g; Why the palm of the hand is so called, 77.h; Illustration of a monstrous hand, 500, 501; A hand with an eye in an emblem, 267.h; A hand depicted with a dagger, 261.c; Prodigies of the hands, 142.a; Mystical aspects of the hand, 230.b.

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