• Pliny

    Caius Plinius Secundus, CE 23-79, Roman naturalist.

    Pliny the Elder was the author of Historia naturalis, the principal compendium of
    scientific knowledge for the original Augustan age, a work to which Percy Bysshe Shelley
    was introduced at Eton. He claimed there to have, for the most part, translated the
    encyclopedic work on metallurgy, pharmacology, zoology, anthropology, and psychology
    into English.

    The Natural History is the only one of Pliny's seven writings to survive antiquity
    entire. That work in thirty-seven books was an attempt to survey all natural knowledge
    systematically in an unadorned style, and his methodical approach and careful regard
    for citation make it a model of ancient scientific research, in spite of Pliny's superstitious
    beliefs in magic. Book 1 is an introduction to the entire work. Book 2 addresses cosmology
    and astronomy; books 3 through 6 are on geography. The next thirteen books treat biology:
    zoology in books 7 through 11, botany in books 12 through 19. Books 20 through 22
    address medicine; books 23 through 37 are concerned with metals, minerals, and precious
    stones.

    Pliny's authority was comparable to Aristotle's throughout the Middle Ages; only in
    1492 did he come under attack in Niccolò Leoniceno's catalogue of his errors. From
    then on its influence waned by degrees, and few regarded it seriously as science after
    the end of the seventeenth century.

    Pliny died in the eruption of Mount Vesuvius in CE 79, famously described in letters
    by his nephew.