•
Velleius Paterculus, 1590,
Padua •
Animadversiones in Curtium, 1594,
Frankfurt Posthumously: • a collection of poems, elegies, odes and epigrams, 1603,
Liegnitz •
Centuria prima epistolarum, 1606,
Hanau •
Divinationes et interpretationes in comoedias Plauti, 1607,
Frankfurt, 566 pages •
Notae in Taciti opera, 1607, Hannover •
Notae in Panegyrici veteres, 1607,
Heidelberg Disputed: •
Disputatio nova contra mulieres, qua probatur eas homines non esse, 1595, probably printed in
Zerbst, 11 sheets 4°. A tract which caused much annoyance among the theologians of the time because of its blasphemic precepts. His attackers overlooked the fact that the tract was intended as a parody on the
Socinian methods of refuting the divine nature of
Christ. During his lifetime, Acidalius denied having written these papers. It is believed that while Acidalius did not actually write the tract, he was nevertheless instrumental in its creation. Thus, the actual author remains anonymous. • Czapla, Ralf G. [Ed.]; Burkard, Georg [Ed.]; Burkard, Georg [Trans.]:
Disputatio nova contra mulieres, qua probatur eas homines non esse / Acidalius, Valens. (Neue Disputation gegen die Frauen zum Erweis, dass sie keine Menschen sind). Heidelberg 2006. == References ==