The Book HubThe Book Hub

Home

Search

Genres

Languages

Your Library

Natural History Volume 3

Audiobook

Natural History Volume 3

Pliny the Elder

Naturalis Historia (Latin for "Natural History") is an encyclopedia published circa AD 77-79 by Pliny the Elder. It is one of the largest single works to have survived from the Roman empire to the modern day and purports to cover the entire field of ancient knowledge, based on the best authorities available to Pliny. The work became a model for all later encyclopedias in terms of the breadth of subject matter examined, the need to reference original authors, and a comprehensive index list of the contents. The scheme of his great work is vast and comprehensive, being nothing short of an encyclopedia of learning and of art so far as they are connected with nature or draw their materials from nature. The work divides neatly into the organic world of plants and animals, and the realm of inorganic matter, although there are frequent digressions in each section. He is especially interested in not just describing the occurrence of plants, animals and insects, but also their exploitation (or abuse) by man, especially Romans. The description of metals and minerals is particularly detailed, and valuable for the history of science as being the most extensive compilation still available from the ancient world. (Summary from Wikipedia)

This third volume includes books eleven to fifteen, covering the following subjects:
Book 11 - The various kinds of insects
Book 12 - The natural history of trees
Book 13 - The natural history of exotic trees and an account of unguents
Book 14 - The natural history of the fruit trees
Book 15 - The natural history of the fruit trees

Year of Publication: 1855Genres: Nature , Animals , Reference
Running Time: 11 hours 56 minutes 36 seconds
#Chapter Name
1
The Nights
01 - Book 11, Chapters 1-9 : <i>The extreme smallness of insects; whether insects respire and whether they have blood; the bodies of insects; bees; the order displayed in the work of bees(..); persons who have made bees their study</i>
Anna Simon
15:17
2
The Nights
02 - Book 11, Chapter 10 - 17: <i>The mode in which bees work; drones; the qualities of honey; (...); the reproduction of bees; the mode of government by the bees</is>
Anna Simon
22:26
3
The Nights
03 - Book 11, Chapters 18 - 29: <i>Happy omens sometimes afforded by a swarm of bees; the various kinds of bees; the diseases of bees; (...) wasps and hornets; the silk-worm; (...); spiders; the generation of spiders</i>
OllieB
20:08
4
The Nights
04 - Book 11, Chapters 30 - 38: <i>Scorpions; the grasshopper; the wings of insects; the beetle; the glow-worm; other kinds of beetles; locusts; ants; the chrysalis</i>
ericzundel
21:06
5
The Nights
05 - Book 11, Chapters 39 - 57: <i>Insects that are parasites of man; an animal which has no passage for the evacuations; moths, cantharides, gnats; (...); the various kinds of horns; animals in which they are moveable; the heads of animals; those which have none; the hair; the brain; the ears; the face; the eyes; the diversity of the color of the eyes; the theory of sight; the nature of the pupil; the hair of the eyelids; animals which have no eyelids</i>
ericzundel
33:32
6
The Nights
06 - Book 11, Chapters 58 - 73: <i>The cheeks; the nostrils; the mouth; the lips; the chin; the teeth (...); the tongue; the tonsils; the neck; the throat; the dorsal spine; the throat; the stomach; the heart; the blood; the vital spirit (...); the lungs; the liver</i>
OllieB
23:29
7
The Nights
07 - Book 11, Chapters 74 - 92 :<i>The gall; the properties of the gall; the diaphragm; the nature of laughter; the belly; animals which have no belly; the small guts (...); the spleen; the kidneys; the greast; the ribs; the bladder; the womb; animals which do not grow fat; the marrow; bones and fishbones; the cartilage; the nerves; the arteries; the veins (...);whether the blood is the principle of life</i>
laurencetrask
28:55
8
The Nights
08 - Book 11, Chapters 93 - 108:<i> The hide of animals; the hair and the covering of the skin; te paps; birds that have paps; the milk; cheese; various kinds of cheese; the fingers; the arms; the nails; the knees and the hams; varicose veins; the gait, the feet, the legs; hoofs; the feet of biords; the feet of animals</i>
laurencetrask
26:19
9
The Nights
09 - Book 11, Chapters 109 - 119:<i>The sexual parts; hermaphrodites; the testes; the tails of animals; the different voices of animals; superfluous limbs; respiration and nutriment; reasons for indigestion; from what causes corpulence arises and how it may be reduced; what things, by merely tasting of them, allay hunger and thirst; authors quoted</i>
Cynthia Moyer
28:54
10
The Nights
10 - Book 12, Chapters 1 - 13:<i>The honourable place occupied by trees in the system of nature; the early history of trees; exotic trees; the plane-tree; (...) the trees of India; (...) Indian trees, the names of which are unknown; Indian trees which bear flax</i>
Cynthia Moyer
27:47
11
The Nights
11 - Book 12, Chapters 14 - 28: <i> The pepper-tree; the various kinds of pepper; Caryophyllon, lycion and the Chironian pyxacanthus; macir; sugar; (...) trees of Persis; trees of the islands of the Persian sea; the cotton tree; (...) amomum, amomis</i>
Cynthia Moyer
29:41
12
The Nights
12 - Book 12, Chapters 29 - 42: <i>Cardamomum; the country of frankincense; the trees that bear frankincense; various kinds of frankincense; myrrh; the trees that produce myrrh; the nature and various kinds of myrrh; mastich; ladanum and stobolon; enhaemon; (...) why Arabia was called happy; cinnamomum, xylocinnamum</i>
Cynthia Moyer
48:01
13
The Nights
13 - Book 12, Chapters 43 - 63: <i>Cassia; cancamum and tarum; serichatum and gabalium; myrobalanum; phoenicobalanus; the sweet-scented calamus; the sweet-scented rush; hammoniacum; sphagnos; cypros; asphalatos; maron; balsamum, opobalsamum and xylobalsamum; storax; galbanum; panax; spondylium; malobathrum; omphacion; bryon; elate or sphate; cinnamon; authors quoted</i>
Cynthia Moyer
40:33
14
The Nights
14 - Book 13, Chapters 1 - 5:<i>Unguents: at what period they were first introduced; the various kinds of unguents; diaspa, magma, the modes of testing unguents; the excess to which luxury has run in unguents; when unguents were first used by the Romans</i>
Jon Ingram
19:44
15
The Nights
15 - Book 13, Chapters 6 - 9: <i>The palm tree; the nature of the palm tree; how the palm tree is planted; the different varieties of palm trees and their characteristics</i>
laurencetrask
17:42
16
The Nights
16 - Book 13, Chapters 10 - 27: <i>The trees of Syria: the pistacia, the cottana, the damascena and the myma; the cedar; the terebinth; the sumach tree; the trees of Egypt; the fig-tree of Alexandria; the fig tree of Cyprus; the carob tree; the Persian tree; the cucus; the Egyptian thorn; nine kinds of gum; the sarcocolla; the papyrus; the use of paper; when it was first invented; the mode of making paper; the nine different kinds of paper; the mode of testing the goodness of paper; the peculiar defects in paper; the paste used in the preparation of paper; the books of Numa</i>
Steve Gough
30:15
17
The Nights
17 - Book 13, Chapters 28 - 34: <i>The trees of Aethiopia; the trees of Mount Atlas; the citrus and the tables made of the wood there of; the points that are desirable or otherwise in these tables; the citron-tree; the lotus; the trees of Cyrenaica; the paliurus; nine varieties of the Punic apple; balaustium</i>
laurencetrask
16:25
18
The Nights
18 - Book 13, Chapters 35 - 52: <i> The trees of Asia and Greece; the tragion; tragacanthe; the tragos or scorpio; the euonymos; the tree called eon; (...) the royal thorn; the trees and shrubs of the Mediterranean; the sea bryon; plants of the red sea; plants of the Indian sea; the plants of the Troglodytic sea; authors quoted</i>
MaryAnn
23:41
19
The Nights
19 - Book 14, Chapters 1 - 4: <i>The nature of the vine; its mode of fructification; the nature of the grape and the cultivation of the vine; ninety-one varieties of the vine</i>
laurencetrask
35:11
20
The Nights
20 - Book 14, Chapters 5 - 9: <i>Remarkable facts connected with the culture of the vine; the most ancient wines; the nature of wines; fifty kinds of generous wines; thirty-eight varieties of foreign wines</i>
laurencetrask
25:12
21
The Nights
21 - Book 14, Chapters 10 - 23: <i> Seven kinds of salted wines; eighteen varieties of sweet wines; at what period generous wines were first commonly made in Italy; the inspection of wine ordered by king Romulus; wines drunk by the ancient Romans; some remarkable facts connected with wine-lofts; the Opimian wine; at what period four kinds of wine were first served at table; the uses of the wild vine; sixty-six varieties of artificial wine; hydromeli or melicraton; twelve kinds of wines with miraculous properties; what wines it is not lawful to use in the sacred rites</i>
BensonBrunswin
29:22
22
The Nights
22 - Book 14, Chapters 24 - 29: <i> How must is usually prepared; pitch and resin; vinegar; wine vessels; wine cellars; drunkenness; liquors with the strength of wine made from water and corn; authors quoted</i>
BensonBrunswin
25:56
23
The Nights
23 - Book 15, Chapters 1 - 8: <i>The olive; the nature of the olive and of the new olive oil; olive oil: the countries in which it is produced and its various qualities; fifteen varieties of olives; the nature of olive oil; the culture of the olive: its mode of preservation; the method of making olive oil; forty-eight varieties of artificial oils; amurca</i>
Rapunzelina
27:25
24
The Nights
24 - Book 15, Chapters 9 - 18: <i>The various kinds of fruit-trees and their natures; four varieties of pine nuts; the quince; six varieties of the peach; twelve kinds of plums; the peach; thirty different kinds of pomes; the fruits that have been most recently introduced; forty-one varieties of the pear; the mode of keeping various fruits and grapes</i>
rookieblue
29:09
25
The Nights
25 - Book 15, Chapters 19 - 26: <i> Twenty-nine varieties of the fig; historical anecdotes connected with the fig; caprification; three varieties of the medlar; four varieties of the sorb; nine varieties of the nut; eighteen varieties of the chestnut; the carob</i>
Cynthia Moyer
32:55
26
The Nights
26 - Book 15, Chapters 27 - 40: <i>The fleshy fruits; the mulberry; the fruit of the arbutus; the relative natures of berry fruits; nine varieties of the cherry; the cornel, the lentisk; thirteen different flavours of juices; the various natures of fruit; the myrtle; eleven varieties of the myrtle; the myrtle used at home in ovations; the laurel; thirteen varieties of it;authors quoted</i>
rookieblue
37:31

Ratings & reviews

Rate this audiobook

Be the first to review this audiobook.

More like this

Walden

Walden

Henry David Thoreau

Life on the Mississippi

Life on the Mississippi

Mark Twain

Has a Frog a Soul?

Has a Frog a Soul?

Thomas Henry Huxley

Fifteen Thousand Useful Phrases

Fifteen Thousand Useful Phrases

Grenville Kleiser

A-Birding on a Bronco

A-Birding on a Bronco

Florence A. Merriam Bailey

1001 Questions and Answers on English Grammar

1001 Questions and Answers on English Grammar

Benjamin Hathaway

Art of Landscape Painting in Oil Colour

Art of Landscape Painting in Oil Colour

Sir Alfred Edward East

Grammar-Land

Grammar-Land

M. L. Nesbitt

Yosemite

Yosemite

John Muir

English Synonyms and Antonyms

English Synonyms and Antonyms

James Champlin Fernald

Book of the Damned

Book of the Damned

Charles Hoy Fort

Easy Lessons in Einstein

Easy Lessons in Einstein

Edwin E. Slosson

Man-Eaters of Tsavo

Man-Eaters of Tsavo

John Henry Patterson

Sertões

Sertões

Euclides da Cunha