|||

Hermes Trismegistus

In the Renaissance Hermes Trismegistus was considered to be a pagan philosopher, who had foreseen Christianity. Renaissance scholars such as Ficino, Pico della Mirandola and Giordano Bruno believed in a prisca theologia’ — a single true theology that could be found in all religions.

Ars chemica, quod sit licita recte exercentibus, probationes doctisimorum jurisconsultorum. Septem tractatus seu capitula hermetis trismegisti, aurei. Eiusdem tabula smaragdina, in ipsius sepulchro inventa, cum commento hortulani philosophi. Studium consilii coniugii de massa solis et lunae. Opuscula antehac typis non excusa. [Strasbourg, excudebat Samuel Emmel, 1566] |

Astrologia aphoristica Ptolemaei, Hermetis, Ludovici de Rigiis, Almansoris, Hieronymi Cardani, et autoris innominati. Ulm, 1641

Chymisches Lust-Gärtlein. Ludwigsburg 1747

Centiloquium [Latin]. Almansor: Propositiones [Latin]. Venezia, Alovisius de Sancta Lucia, [about 1492]

Centiloquium. [Leipzig], Martin Landsberg, [not after March 1494-1495]

Contenta in hoc volumine Pimander; liber de de [sic] sapientia et potestate Dei; liber de voluntate divina. Item Crater Hermetis. Paris, in officina Henri Estienne, 1505

De potestate et sapientia Dei.Treviso, Gerardus de Lisa, 18 December 1471

De potestate et sapientia Dei. Ferrara, Andreas Belfortis, 8 January 1472

De potestate et sapientia Dei. Venezia, Maximus de Butricis, 29 July 1491

De potestate et sapientia Dei. Venezia, Damianus de Mediolano, 10 May 1493

De potestate et sapientia Dei. Paris, [Johannes Higman, for or with] Wolfgang Hopyl, 31 July 1494

De potestate ac sapiencia dei. Mainz 1503

De potestate et sapientia Dei. [Venezia, Petrus de Quarengiis, about 1517]

Deux livres l’un de la puissance et sapience de Dieu, l’autre de la volonté de Dieu. Paris, Etienne Groulleau, 1557

In hoc volumine de alchemia continentur haec. Gebri arabis, philosophi solertissimi, rerumque naturalium, praecipue metallicarun peritissimi, de investigatione profectionis metallorum. Liber I. Summae perfectionis metallorum, sive perfecti magisterii. Libri II. Eiusdem de inventione veritatis seu perfectionis metallorum. Liber I. De fornacibus construendis. Liber I. Item. Speculu alchemiae rogerii bachonis. Correctoriu alchemiae richardi anglici. Rosarius minor, de alchemia, incerti authoris. Liber secretorum alchemias calidis filii iazichi judaei. Tabula smaragdina de alchemia, hermetis trismeg. Hortulani philosophi, super tabulam smaragdinam hermetis commentarius. Nürnberg, apud Johann Petreius, 1541

Magia philosophica. 320 oracula Chaldaica. Asclepius. Poemander. Sermo sacer. Clavis. Sermo ad filium. Sermo ad Asclepium. Minerva mundi & alia miscellanea. Hamburg, 1593

Philosophisch güldene Quelle der Natur und Kunst. Erlangen 1751

Pimandras. Utriaque lingua restitutus. Bordeaux, 1574

Poimandrēs; Asklēpiou ōroi pros Ammōna basilea = Poemander, seu de potestate ac sapientia divina; aesculapii definitiones ad Ammonem regem. Paris, excudebat Guillaume Morel apud Adrien de Turnèbe, 1554 |

Up next Johann Conrad Creiling 1673-1752 Lambertus Hortensius (1500-1574)
Latest posts Roast Chestnuts and the Principle of Immunity Gerbrand Adriaensz Bredero Robert Fludd: An Short Note of His Life and Work Johann Jacob Scheuchzer (1672-1733) Trajano Boccalini (1656-1615) Johann Faulhaber (1580-1635) Jacob Schalling (1587-after 1615) Julius Sperber Stephan Michelspacher (ca 1571-1627) Authors and Writers Sebastian Franck Alchemy and Related Subjects - a Catalog Ashmole Against Slavery Holbein at the Steelyard: Cannon Street (City of London) A Portrait of the Author Astrology, a Catalog Abu Bakr Muhammad ibn Yahya ibn al-Sayigh (ca 787-ca 869) Coptic: The Language of the Gnostics and the Egyptian Christians Isaac de Beausobre (1659-1738) Dissertations on Gnostic Heresy in Early Modern Europe Clement of Alexandria (150-211/215) Alanus de Insulis (1128 - 1203) Three interesting Woodcuts Look! Joseph Albo (ca 1380-ca 1444) Pierre d’Ailly (1350–1420) Albert of Saxony (1320-1390) Giovanni Battista Abioso (1453-1523) Andrea Alciati (1492–1550) Daniel Cramer (1568-1637)