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Hermetica

The Hermetica are texts attributed to the legendary Hellenistic figure Hermes Trismegistus, a syncretic combination of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god Thoth.[1] These texts may vary widely in content and purpose, but are usually subdivided into two main categories, the "technical" and "religio-philosophical" Hermetica.

The category of "technical" Hermetica encompasses a broad variety of treatises dealing with astrology, medicine and pharmacology, alchemy, and magic, the oldest of which were written in Greek and may go back as far as the second or third century BCE.[2] Many of the texts belonging in this category were later translated into Arabic and Latin, often being extensively revised and expanded throughout the centuries. Some of them were also originally written in Arabic, though in many cases their status as an original work or translation remains unclear.[3] These Arabic and Latin Hermetic texts were widely copied throughout the Middle Ages (the most famous example being the Emerald Tablet).

The "religio-philosophical" Hermetica are a relatively coherent set of religio-philosophical treatises that were written mostly in the second and third centuries, though the very earliest one of them, the Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius, may go back to the first century CE.[4] They are chiefly focused on the relationship between human beings, the cosmos, and God (thus combining philosophical anthropology, cosmology, and theology). Many of them are also moral exhortations calling for a way of life (the "way of Hermes") leading to spiritual rebirth, and eventually to divinization in the form of a heavenly ascent.[5] The treatises in this category were probably all originally written in Greek, although some of them survive only in Coptic, Armenian, or Latin translations.[6] During the Middle Ages, most of them were only accessible to Byzantine scholars (an important exception being the Asclepius, which mainly survives in an early Latin translation), until a compilation of Greek Hermetic treatises known as the Corpus Hermeticum was translated into Latin by the Renaissance scholars Marsilio Ficino (1433–1499) and Lodovico Lazzarelli (1447–1500).[7]

Though strongly influenced by Greek and Hellenistic philosophy (especially Platonism and Stoicism),[8] and to a lesser extent also by Jewish ideas,[9] many of the early Greek Hermetic treatises also contain distinctly Egyptian elements, most notably in their affinity with traditional Egyptian wisdom literature.[10] This used to be the subject of much doubt, but it is now generally admitted that the Hermetica as such did in fact originate in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, even if most of the later Hermetic writings (which continued to be composed at least until the twelfth century CE) did not. It may even be the case that the great bulk of the early Greek Hermetica were written by Hellenizing members of the Egyptian priestly class, whose intellectual activity was centred in the environment of Egyptian temples.

Technical Hermetica edit

Greek edit

Greek astrological Hermetica edit

The oldest known texts associated with Hermes Trismegistus are a number of astrological works which may go back as far as the second or third century BCE:

  • The Salmeschoiniaka (the "Wandering of the Influences"), perhaps composed in Alexandria in the second or third century BCE, deals with the configurations of the stars.[11]
  • The Nechepsos-Petosiris texts are a number of anonymous works dating to the second century BCE which were falsely attributed to the Egyptian king Necho II (610–595 BCE, referred to in the texts as Nechepsos) and his legendary priest Petese (referred to in the texts as Petosiris). These texts, only fragments of which survive, ascribe the astrological knowledge they convey to the authority of Hermes.[12]
  • The Art of Eudoxus is a treatise on astronomy which was preserved in a second-century BCE papyrus and which mentions Hermes as an authority.[13]
  • The Liber Hermetis ("The Book of Hermes") is an important work on astrology laying out the names of the decans (a distinctly Egyptian system that divided the zodiac into 36 parts). It survives only in an early (fourth- or fifth-century CE) Latin translation,[14] but contains elements that may be traced to the second or third century BCE.[15]

Other early Greek Hermetic works on astrology include:

  • The Brontologion: a treatise on the various effects of thunder in different months.[16]
  • The Peri seismōn ("On earthquakes"): a treatise on the relation between earthquakes and astrological signs.[17]
  • The Book of Asclepius Called Myriogenesis: a treatise on astrological medicine.[18]
  • The Holy Book of Hermes to Asclepius: a treatise on astrological botany describing the relationships between various plants and the decans.[19]
  • The Fifteen Stars, Stones, Plants and Images: a treatise on astrological mineralogy and botany dealing with the effect of the stars on the pharmaceutical powers of minerals and plants.[20]

Greek alchemical Hermetica edit

Starting in the first century BCE, a number of Greek works on alchemy were attributed to Hermes Trismegistus. These are now all lost, except for a number of fragments (one of the larger of which is called Isis the Prophetess to Her Son Horus) preserved in later alchemical works dating to the second and third centuries CE. Especially important is the use made of them by the Egyptian alchemist Zosimus of Panopolis (fl. c. 300 CE), who also seems to have been familiar with the religio-philosophical Hermetica.[21] Hermes' name would become more firmly associated with alchemy in the medieval Arabic sources (see below), of which it is not yet clear to what extent they drew on the earlier Greek literature.[22]

Greek magical Hermetica edit

  • The Cyranides is a work on healing magic which treats of the magical powers and healing properties of minerals, plants and animals, for which it regularly cites Hermes as a source.[23] It was independently translated both into Arabic and Latin.[24]
  • The Greek Magical Papyri are a modern collection of papyri dating from various periods between the second century BCE and the fifth century CE. They mainly contain practical instructions for spells and incantations, some of which cite Hermes as a source.[25]

Arabic edit

Many Arabic works attributed to Hermes Trismegistus still exist today, although the great majority of them have not yet been published or studied by modern scholars.[26] For this reason too, it is often not clear to what extent they drew on earlier Greek sources. The following is a very incomplete list of known works:

Arabic astrological Hermetica edit

Some of the earliest attested Arabic Hermetic texts deal with astrology:

  • The Qaḍīb al-dhahab ("The Rod of Gold"), or the Kitāb Hirmis fī taḥwīl sinī l-mawālīd ("The Book of Hermes on the Revolutions of the Years of the Nativities") is an Arabic astrological work translated from Middle Persian by ʿUmar ibn al-Farrukhān al-Ṭabarī (d. 816 CE), who was the court astrologer of the Abbasid caliph al-Mansur (r. 754–775).[27]
  • The Carmen astrologicum is an astrological work originally written by the first-century CE astrologer Dorotheus of Sidon. It is lost in Greek, but survives in an Arabic translation, which was in turn based upon a Middle Persian intermediary. It was also translated by ʿUmar ibn al-Farrukhān al-Ṭabarī. The extant Arabic text refers to two Hermeses, and cites a book of Hermes on the positions of the planets.[28]
  • The Kitāb Asrār an-nujūm ("The Book of the Secrets of the Stars", later translated into Latin as the Liber de stellis beibeniis) is a treatise describing the influences of the brightest fixed stars on personal characteristics. The Arabic work was translated from a Middle Persian version which can be shown to date from before c. 500 CE, and which shared a source with the Byzantine astrologer Rhetorius (fl. c. 600 CE).[29]
  • The Kitāb ʿArḍ Miftāḥ al-Nujūm ("The Book of the Exposition of the Key to the Stars") is an Arabic astrological treatise attributed to Hermes which claims to have been translated in 743 CE, but which in reality was probably translated in the circles of Abu Ma'shar al-Balkhi (787–886 CE).[30]

Arabic alchemical Hermetica edit

  • The Sirr al-khalīqa wa-ṣanʿat al-ṭabīʿa ("The Secret of Creation and the Art of Nature"), also known as the Kitāb al-ʿilal ("The Book of Causes") is an encyclopedic work on natural philosophy falsely attributed to Apollonius of Tyana (c. 15–100, Arabic: Balīnūs or Balīnās).[31] It was compiled in Arabic in the late eighth or early ninth century,[32] but was most likely based on (much) older Greek and/or Syriac sources.[33] It contains the earliest known version of the sulfur-mercury theory of metals (according to which metals are composed of various proportions of sulfur and mercury),[34] which lay at the foundation of all theories of metallic composition until the eighteenth century.[35] In the frame story of the Sirr al-khalīqa, Balīnūs tells his readers that he discovered the text in a vault below a statue of Hermes in Tyana, and that, inside the vault, an old corpse on a golden throne held the Emerald Tablet.[36] It was translated into Latin by Hugo of Santalla in the twelfth century.[37]
  • The Emerald Tablet: a compact and cryptic text first attested in the Sirr al-khalīqa wa-ṣanʿat al-ṭabīʿa (late eighth or early ninth century).[38] There are several other, slightly different Arabic versions (among them one quoted in a text attributed to Jabir ibn Hayyan, and one found in the longer version of the pseudo-Aristotelian Sirr al-asrār or "Secret of Secrets"), but these are all likely to date from a later period.[39] It was translated several times into Latin in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries,[40] and was widely regarded by medieval and early modern alchemists as the foundation of their art.[41] Isaac Newton (1642–1726) still used it as a source of inspiration.[42]
  • The Risālat al-Sirr ("The Epistle of the Secret") is an Arabic alchemical treatise probably composed in tenth-century Fatimid Egypt.[43]
  • The Risālat al-Falakiyya al-kubrā ("The Great Treatise of the Spheres") is an Arabic alchemical treatise composed in the tenth or eleventh century. Perhaps inspired by the Emerald Tablet, it describes the author's (Hermes') attainment of secret knowledge through his ascension of the seven heavenly spheres.[44]
  • The Kitāb dhakhīrat al-Iskandar ("The Treasure of Alexander"): a work dealing with alchemy, talismans, and specific properties, which cites Hermes as its ultimate source.[45]
  • The Liber Hermetis de alchemia ("The Book of Hermes on Alchemy"), also known as the Liber dabessi or the Liber rebis, is a collection of commentaries on the Emerald Tablet. Translated from the Arabic, it is only extant in Latin. It is this Latin translation of the Emerald Tablet on which all later versions are based.[46]

Arabic magical Hermetica edit

 
14th-century Arabic manuscript of the Cyranides
  • The Kitāb al-Isṭamākhīs, Kitāb al-Isṭamāṭīs, Kitāb al-Usṭuwwaṭās, Kitāb al-Madīṭīs, and Kitāb al-Hādīṭūs, also known as the Pseudo-Aristotelian Hermetica, are a number of closely related and partially overlapping texts. Purporting to be written by Aristotle in order to teach his pupil Alexander the Great the secrets of Hermes, they deal with the names and powers of the planetary spirits, the making of talismans, and the concept of a personal "perfect nature".[47] Perhaps composed in the ninth century,[48] extracts from them appear in pseudo-Apollonius of Tyana's Sirr al-khalīqa wa-ṣanʿat al-ṭabīʿa ("The Secret of Creation and the Art of Nature", c. 750–850, see above),[49] in the Epistles of the Ikhwān al-Ṣafāʾ ("The Epistles of the Brethren of Purity", c. 900–1000),[50] in Maslama al-Qurṭubī's Ghāyat al-Ḥakīm ("The Aim of the Sage", 960, better known under its Latin title as Picatrix),[51] and in the works of the Persian philosopher Suhrawardī (1154–1191).[52] One of them was translated into Latin in the twelfth or thirteenth century under the title Liber Antimaquis.[53]
  • The Cyranides is a Greek work on healing magic which treats of the magical powers and healing properties of minerals, plants and animals, for which it regularly cites Hermes as a source. It was translated into Arabic in the ninth century, but in this translation all references to Hermes seem to have disappeared.[54]
  • The Sharḥ Kitāb Hirmis al-Ḥakīm fī Maʿrifat Ṣifat al-Ḥayyāt wa-l-ʿAqārib ("The Commentary on the Book of the Wise Hermes on the Properties of Snakes and Scorpions"): a treatise on the venom of snakes an other poisonous animals.[55]
  • The Dāʾirat al-aḥruf al-abjadiyya (The Circle of Letters of the Alphabet"): a practical treatise on letter magic attributed to Hermes.[56]

Religio-philosophical Hermetica edit

Contrary to the "technical" Hermetica, whose writing began in the early Hellenistic period and continued deep into the Middle Ages, the extant religio-philosophical Hermetica were for the most part produced in a relatively short period of time, i.e., between c. 100 and c. 300 CE.[57] They regularly take the form of dialogues between Hermes Trismegistus and his disciples Tat, Asclepius, and Ammon, and mostly deal with philosophical anthropology, cosmology, and theology.[58] The following is a list of all known works in this category:

Corpus Hermeticum edit

 
First Latin edition of the Corpus Hermeticum, translated by Marsilio Ficino, 1471 CE

Undoubtedly the most famous among the religio-philosophical Hermetica is the Corpus Hermeticum, a selection of seventeen Greek treatises that was first compiled by Byzantine editors, and translated into Latin in the fifteenth century by Marsilio Ficino (1433–1499) and Lodovico Lazzarelli (1447–1500).[59] Ficino translated the first fourteen treatises (I–XIV), while Lazzarelli translated the remaining three (XVI–XVIII).[60] The name of this collection is somewhat misleading, since it contains only a very small selection of extant Hermetic texts, whereas the word corpus is usually reserved for the entire body of extant writings related to some author or subject. Its individual treatises were quoted by many early authors from the second and third centuries on, but the compilation as such is first attested only in the writings of the Byzantine philosopher Michael Psellus (c. 1017–1078).[61]

The most well known among the treatises contained in this compilation is its opening treatise, which is called the Poimandres. However, at least until the nineteenth century, this name (under various forms, such as Pimander or Pymander) was also commonly used to designate the compilation as a whole.[62]

In 1462 Ficino was working on a Latin translation of the collected works of Plato for his patron Cosimo de' Medici, but when a manuscript of the Corpus Hermeticum became available, he immediately interrupted his work on Plato in order to start translating the works of Hermes, which were thought to be much more ancient, and therefore much more authoritative, than those of Plato.[63] This translation provided a seminal impetus in the development of Renaissance thought and culture, having a profound impact on the flourishing of alchemy and magic in early modern Europe, as well as influencing philosophers such as Ficino's student Pico della Mirandola (1463–1494), Giordano Bruno (1548–1600), Francesco Patrizi (1529–1597), Robert Fludd (1574–1637), and many others.[64]

Asclepius edit

The Asclepius (also known as the Perfect Discourse, from Greek Logos teleios) mainly survives in a Latin translation, though some Greek and Coptic fragments are also extant.[65] It is the only Hermetic treatise belonging to the religio-philosophical category that remained available to Latin readers throughout the Middle Ages.[66]

Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius edit

The Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius is a collection of aphorisms that has mainly been preserved in a sixth-century CE Armenian translation, but which likely goes back to the first century CE.[67] The main argument for this early dating is the fact that some of its aphorisms are cited in multiple independent Greek Hermetic works. According to Jean-Pierre Mahé, these aphorisms contain the core of the teachings which are found in the later Greek religio-philosophical Hermetica.[68]

Stobaean excerpts edit

In fifth-century Macedonia, Joannes Stobaeus or "John of Stobi" compiled a huge Anthology of Greek poetical, rhetorical, historical, and philosophical literature in order to educate his son Septimius. Though epitomized by later Byzantine copyists, it still remains a treasure trove of information about ancient philosophy and literature which would otherwise be entirely lost.[69] Among the excerpts of ancient philosophical literature preserved by Stobaeus are also a significant number of discourses and dialogues attributed to Hermes.[70] While mostly related to the religio-philosophical treatises as found in the Corpus Hermeticum, they also contain some material that is of a rather more "technical" nature. Perhaps the most famous of the Stobaean excerpts, and also the longest, is the Korē kosmou ("The Daughter of the Cosmos" or "The Pupil [of the eye] of the Cosmos").[71]

The Hermetic excerpts appear in the following chapters of Stobaeus's Anthology (which is organized by subject matter, and contains in the same chapters many excerpts and doctrines attributed to others):[72]

  • In the chapter "God is Craftsman of Existing Things and Pervades the Universe with his Design of Providence": 1.1.29a
  • In the chapter "On Justice, Punisher of Errors, Arrayed alongside God to Oversee Human Deeds on Earth": 1.3.52
  • In the chapter "On (Divine) Necessity, by which things Planned by God Inevitably Occur": 1.4.7b, 1.4.8
  • In the chapter "On Fate and the Good Ordering of Events": 1.5.14, 1.5.16, 1.5.20
  • In the chapter "On the Nature and Divisions of Time, and the Extent of its Causation": 1.8.41
  • In the chapter "On Matter": 1.11.2
  • In the chapter "On the Cosmos: Whether it Has a Soul, is Administered by Providence, the Location of its Ruling Faculty, and its Source of Nourishment": 1.21.9
  • In the chapter "On Nature and its Derived Causes": 1.41.1, 1.41.4, 1.41.6, 1.41.7, 1.41.8, 1.41.11
  • In the chapter "How Resemblances from Parents and Ancestors Are Transmitted": 1.42.7
  • In the chapter "On the Soul": 1.49.3, 1.49.4, 1.49.5, 1.49.6, 1.49.44 (= the Korē Kosmou excerpt), 1.49.45, 1.49.46, 1.49.47
  • In the chapter "On the Interpreters of Divine Matters and How the Truth concerning the Essence of Intelligible Realities is Incomprehensible to Human Beings": 2.1.26
  • In the chapter "On What is in Our Power" ("Free Will"): 2.8.31
  • In the chapter "On Truth": 3.11.31
  • In the chapter "On Bold Speech": 3.13.65

Hermes among the Nag Hammadi findings edit

Among the Coptic treatises which were found in 1945 in the Upper Egyptian town of Nag Hammadi, there are also three treatises attributed to Hermes Trismegistus. Like all documents found in Nag Hammadi, these were translated from the Greek.[73] They consist of some fragments from the Asclepius (VI,8; mainly preserved in Latin, see above), The Prayer of Thanksgiving (VI,7) with an accompanying scribal note (VI,7a), and an important new text called The Discourse on the Eighth and Ninth (VI,6).[74] They all share a bipartite rather than a tripartite anthropology.[75]

Oxford and Vienna fragments edit

The Oxford Hermetica consists of a number of short fragments from some otherwise unknown Hermetic works. The fragments are preserved in pages 79–82 of Codex Clarkianus gr. II, a 13th- or 14th-century manuscript held at the Bodleian Library in Oxford. The texts, anthologized from much earlier materials, deal with the soul, the senses, law, psychology, and embryology.[76]

The Vienna Hermetica consists of four short fragments from what once was a collection of ten Hermetic treatises, one of which was called On Energies. The fragments are preserved on the back sides of two papyri, P. Graec. Vindob. 29456 recto and 29828 recto, now housed in Vienna. The front sides of the papyri contain fragments of Jannes and Jambres, a Jewish romance.[77]

Book of the Rebuke of the Soul edit

Written in Arabic and probably dating from the twelfth century, the Kitāb fi zajr al-nafs ("The Book of the Rebuke of the Soul") is one of the few later Hermetic treatises belonging to the category of religio-philosophical writings.[78]

Fragments and testimonies edit

Fragments of otherwise lost Hermetic works have survived through their quotation by various historical authors. The following is a list of authors in whose works such literal fragments have been preserved:[79]

Apart from literal fragments from Hermetic works, testimonies concerning the ideas of Hermes (likely deriving from Hermetic works but not quoted literally) have also been preserved in the works of various historical authors:[81]

History of scholarship on the Hermetica edit

During the Renaissance, all texts attributed to Hermes Trismegistus were still generally believed to be of ancient Egyptian origin and to date from before the time of Moses, or even from before the biblical flood. In the early seventeenth century, the classical scholar Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614) demonstrated that some of the Greek texts betrayed too recent a vocabulary and must rather date from the early Christian period.[82] Other authors made similar criticisms of the Hermetica, largely as a means of undermining various religious and esoteric movements of the time that drew inspiration from them. By the end of the century most scholars had ceased to regard them as sources of primeval wisdom.[83]

Studies in the early twentieth century sought to discern who had written the Hermetica. Richard Reitzenstein first argued that the Hermetica were a product of a coherent religious community whose ideas derived from Egyptian religion, although in later years he thought Hermetic beliefs were largely Iranian in origin, a position that received little support.[84] Scholars in the middle of the century, such as Arthur Darby Nock, C. H. Dodd, and most influentially André-Jean Festugière, argued that the intellectual background of the Hermetica was overwhelmingly Greek, with possible influences from Iranian religions and Judaism, but little connection with authentic Egyptian beliefs.[85] Festugière believed the philosophical Hermetica had only slight connections to the technical Hermetica, and that the former originated with a small philosophical school rather than a religious community.[86] Birger A. Pearson has argued for the presence of Jewish elements in the Hermetica,[87] while Peter Kingsley discounts Christian influence in favor of Greek and Jewish elements.[88]

More recent research suggests a greater continuity with the culture of ancient Egypt than had previously been believed.[89] In the 1970s and 1980s, Jean-Pierre Mahé analyzed the Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius together with the recently published Hermetica from Nag Hammadi.[90] Mahé pointed out that the earliest Greek Hermetic treatises contain many parallels with Egyptian prophecies and hymns to the gods, and that close comparisons can be found with Egyptian wisdom literature, which (like many of the early Greek Hermetica) was characteristically couched in words of advice from a "father" to a "son".[91] Soon afterward, Garth Fowden argued that the philosophical and technical Hermetica were distinct but interdependent, and that both were products of complex interactions between Greek and Egyptian culture.[92] Richard Jasnow and Karl-Theodor Zauzich have identified fragments of a Demotic (late Egyptian) text that contains substantial sections of a dialogue between Thoth and a disciple, written in a format similar to the Hermetica. This text probably originated among the scribes of a "House of Life", an institution closely connected with major Egyptian temples.[93][94] Christian Bull argued in 2018 that the Hermetica were in fact written by Egyptian priests in late Ptolemaic and Roman times who presented their traditions to Greek-speaking audiences in Greek philosophical terms.[95]

In contradistinction to the early Greek religio-philosophical Hermetica, which have long been studied from a scholarly perspective, the "technical" Hermetica (both the early Greek treatises and the later Arabic and Latin works) remain largely unexplored by modern scholarship.[96]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ A survey of the literary and archaeological evidence for the background of Hermes Trismegistus in the Greek Hermes and the Egyptian Thoth is found in Bull 2018, pp. 33–96.
  2. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiii; Bull 2018, pp. 2–3. Garth Fowden is somewhat more cautious, noting that our earliest testimonies date to the first century BCE (see Fowden 1986, p. 3, note 11).
  3. ^ Van Bladel 2009, p. 17.
  4. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xliv; Bull 2018, p. 32. The sole exception to the general dating of c. 100–300 CE is The Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius, which may date to the first century CE (see Bull 2018, p. 9, referring to Mahé 1978–1982, vol. II, p. 278; cf. Mahé 1999, p. 101). Earlier dates have been suggested, most notably by Flinders Petrie (500–200 BCE) and Bruno H. Stricker (c. 300 BCE), but these suggestions have been rejected by most other scholars (see Bull 2018, p. 6, note 23).
  5. ^ Bull 2018, p. 3.
  6. ^ E.g., The Discourse on the Eighth and Ninth (Coptic; preserved in the Nag Hammadi library, which consists entirely of works translated from Greek into Coptic; see Robinson 1990, pp. 12–13), the Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius (Armenian; see Bull 2018, p. 9), and the Asclepius (also known as the Perfect Discourse, Latin; see Copenhaver 1992, pp. xliii–xliv).
  7. ^ Copenhaver 1992, pp. xl–xliii; Hanegraaff 2006, p. 680.
  8. ^ Bull 2018, p. 2.
  9. ^ See, e.g., Pearson 1981, and the copious references in Bull 2018, p. 29, note 118.
  10. ^ Mahé 1978–1982. Mahé also demonstrated numerous other Egyptian influences on the Hermetica (cf. Bull 2018, pp. 9–10).
  11. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiii; Bull 2018, pp. 387–388.
  12. ^ Bull 2018, pp. 163–174; cf. Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiii. On the identification of Nechepsos with Necho II and of Petosiris with Petese, see the references in Bull 2018, p. 163, note 295.
  13. ^ Bull 2018, pp. 167–168.
  14. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xlv.
  15. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiii; Bull 2018, pp. 385–386.
  16. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiii; Bull 2018, p. 168.
  17. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiii.
  18. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiii.
  19. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiv. On this work, see Piperakis 2017, Piperakis 2022a, and Piperakis 2022b.
  20. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiv.
  21. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxiv.
  22. ^ Van Bladel 2009, p. 17.
  23. ^ Copenhaver 1992, pp. xxxiv–xxxv. The Greek text was edited by Kaimakis 1976. English translation of the first book in Waegeman 1987.
  24. ^ The Arabic translation of the first book was edited by Toral-Niehoff 2004. The Arabic fragments of the other books were edited by Ullmann 2020. The Latin translation was edited by Delatte 1942.
  25. ^ Copenhaver 1992, pp. xxxv–xxxvi.
  26. ^ According to Van Bladel 2009, p. 17, note 42, there are least twenty Arabic Hermetica extant.
  27. ^ Van Bladel 2009, p. 28.
  28. ^ Van Bladel 2009, pp. 28–29.
  29. ^ Van Bladel 2009, pp. 27–28. The Arabic text and its Latin translation were edited by Kunitzsch 2001. See also Kunitzsch 2004.
  30. ^ Bausani 1983; Bausani 1986. On the dating, see Ullmann 1994, pp. 7–8.
  31. ^ Edited by Weisser 1979.
  32. ^ Kraus 1942–1943, vol. II, pp. 274-275 (c. 813–833); Weisser 1980, p. 54 (c. 750–800).
  33. ^ Kraus 1942–1943, vol. II, pp. 270-303; Weisser 1980, pp. 52–53.
  34. ^ Kraus 1942–1943, vol. II, p. 1, note 1; Weisser 1980, p. 199.
  35. ^ Norris 2006.
  36. ^ Ebeling 2007, pp. 46–47.
  37. ^ Edited by Hudry 1997–1999. On its later influence, see Asl 2016.
  38. ^ Edited by Weisser 1979.
  39. ^ Weisser 1980, p. 46.
  40. ^ See Hudry 1997–1999, p. 152 (as part of the Latin translation of the Sirr al-khalīqa; English translation in Litwa 2018, p. 316); Steele 1920, pp. 115–117 (as part of the Latin translation of the Sirr al-asrār); Steele & Singer 1928 (as part of the Latin translation of the Liber dabessi, a collection of commentaries on the Tablet). On the Latin translations, see further Colinet 1995, Mandosio 2004, Caiazzo 2004, and Mandosio 2005.
  41. ^ Principe 2013, p. 31.
  42. ^ Dobbs 1988; Newman 2019, pp. 145, 166, 183.
  43. ^ Edited by Vereno 1992, pp. 136–159.
  44. ^ Van Bladel 2009, pp. 181-183 (cf. p. 171, note 25). Edited by Vereno 1992, pp. 160–181.
  45. ^ Ruska 1926, pp. 68–107; Raggetti 2021, p. 287. See further Alfonso-Goldfarb & Abou-Chahla Jubran 1999 and Alfonso-Goldfarb & Abou-Chahla Jubran 2008.
  46. ^ Edited by Steele & Singer 1928. On this text, see further Colinet 1995; Mandosio 2004, pp. 683–684; Caiazzo 2004, pp. 700–703; Mandosio 2005.
  47. ^ Van Bladel 2009, pp. 101-102, 114, 224. A small fragment from the Kitāb al-Isṭamākhīs was published by Badawi 1947, pp. 179–183. See also Saif 2021.
  48. ^ A dating proposed by Saif 2021, pp. 36–44.
  49. ^ Weisser 1980, pp. 68–69.
  50. ^ Plessner 1954, p. 58.
  51. ^ Van Bladel 2009, pp. 101–102.
  52. ^ Van Bladel 2009, p. 224.
  53. ^ Edited by Burnett 2001.
  54. ^ Van Bladel 2009, p. 17, note 45, p. 21, note 60. The Arabic version of the first book was edited by Toral-Niehoff 2004. The Arabic fragments of the other books were edited by Ullmann 2020.
  55. ^ Ullmann 1994; cf. Van Bladel 2009, p. 17.
  56. ^ Bonmariage & Moureau 2016.
  57. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xliv; Bull 2018, p. 32. The sole exception is The Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius, which may date to the first century CE (see Bull 2018, p. 9, referring to Mahé 1978–1982, vol. II, p. 278; cf. Mahé 1999, p. 101). Earlier dates have been suggested, most notably by Flinders Petrie (500–200 BCE) and Bruno H. Stricker (c. 300 BCE), but these suggestions have been rejected by most other scholars (see Bull 2018, p. 6, note 23). Some Hermetic treatises of a generally religio-philosophical nature were written in later periods (e.g., the Kitāb fi zajr al-nafs or "The Book of the Rebuke of the Soul", dating from the twelfth century; edited by Bardenhewer 1873 and by Badawi 1955, pp. 53–116; English translation of Bardenhewer's Latin translation in Scott 1924–1936, vol. IV, pp. 277-352), but these appear to be rather rare, and it is not clear whether they bear any relation to the early Greek treatises; see Van Bladel 2009, p. 226.
  58. ^ Bull 2018, p. 3.
  59. ^ Copenhaver 1992, pp. xl–xliii.
  60. ^ See Hanegraaff 2006, p. 680. The Chapter no. XV of early modern editions was once filled with an entry from the Suda (a tenth-century Byzantine encyclopedia) and three excerpts from Hermetic works preserved by Joannes Stobaeus (fl. fifth century, see below), but this chapter was left out in later editions, which therefore contain no chapter XV (see Copenhaver 1992, p. xlix).
  61. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xlii.
  62. ^ See, e.g., the English translation by Everard, John 1650. The Divine Pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus. London.
  63. ^ Copenhaver 1992, pp. xlvii–xlviii.
  64. ^ Ebeling 2007, pp. 68–70.
  65. ^ Copenhaver 1992, pp. xliii–xliv.
  66. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xlvii. On this work, see also Parri 2011.
  67. ^ Armenian text edited by Mahé 1978–1982 and Mahé 2019. English translation in Mahé 1999, French translation in Mahé 2019.
  68. ^ Mahé 1999, pp. 101–108; cf. Bull 2018, p. 9.
  69. ^ Litwa 2018, p. 19.
  70. ^ English translation in Litwa 2018, pp. 27–159.
  71. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xxxviii; cf. Bull 2018, pp. 101–111.
  72. ^ As listed by Litwa 2018.
  73. ^ Robinson 1990, pp. 12–13.
  74. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. xliv. These were all translated by James Brashler, Peter A. Dirkse and Douglas M. Parrott in: Robinson 1990, pp. 321–338. Edition and French translation in Mahé 2019, German translation in Gall 2021.
  75. ^ Roig Lanzillotta 2021.
  76. ^ Paramelle & Mahé 1991 (reprint with French translation in Mahé 2019). English translation in Litwa 2018, pp. 161–169.
  77. ^ Mahé 1984. English translation in Litwa 2018, pp. 171–174.
  78. ^ Van Bladel 2009, p. 226. Edited by Bardenhewer 1873 and by Badawi 1955, pp. 53–116; English translation of Bardenhewer's Latin translation in Scott 1924–1936, vol. IV, pp. 277-352.
  79. ^ These are listed and translated by Litwa 2018, pp. 175–256 (Greek originals of the majority of Litwa's fragments in Nock & Festugière 1945–1954, vol. IV, pp. 101–150), except Ibn Umayl, whose Hermetic fragments have been collected and translated by Stapleton, Lewis & Taylor 1949 (Arabic originals in Turāb ʿAlī, Stapleton & Hidāyat Ḥusain 1933).
  80. ^ Collected and translated by Stapleton, Lewis & Taylor 1949. Arabic originals in Turāb ʿAlī, Stapleton & Hidāyat Ḥusain 1933.
  81. ^ These are listed and translated by Litwa 2018, pp. 257–339.
  82. ^ Copenhaver 1992, p. l; Ebeling 2007, p. 92.
  83. ^ Ebeling 2007, pp. 113–114.
  84. ^ Bull 2018, pp. 4–6
  85. ^ Copenhaver 1992, pp. liii–lv
  86. ^ Bull 2018, pp. 7–8
  87. ^ Pearson 1981. See also the copious references in Bull 2018, p. 29, note 118.
  88. ^ Kingsley 1993, p. 14 (reprinted, with additions and updates, in Kingsley 2000).
  89. ^ Kingsley 1993, p. 1 (reprinted, with additions and updates, in Kingsley 2000).
  90. ^ Bull 2018, pp. 9–10
  91. ^ Mahé 1996, 358f.
  92. ^ Fowden 1986, pp. 74, 153
  93. ^ Jasnow & Zauzich 1998
  94. ^ Jasnow & Zauzich 2014, pp. 1, 47, 49
  95. ^ Bull 2018, pp. 456, 459
  96. ^ Van Bladel 2009, pp. 9–10, 17.

Bibliography edit

English translations of Hermetic texts edit

Some pieces of Hermetica have been translated into English multiple times by modern Hermeticists. However, the following list is strictly limited to scholarly translations:

  • Brashler, James; Dirkse, Peter A.; Parrott, Douglas M. (1990). "The Discourse on the Eighth and Ninth VI,6". In Robinson, James M. (ed.). The Nag Hammadi Library in English (3rd ed.). New York: HarperCollins. pp. 321–327. ISBN 978-0060669355.
  • Brashler, James; Dirkse, Peter A.; Parrott, Douglas M. (1990). "Prayer of Thanksgiving (VI,7) and Scribal Note (VI,7a)". In Robinson, James M. (ed.). The Nag Hammadi Library in English (3rd ed.). New York: HarperCollins. pp. 328–329. ISBN 978-0060669355.
  • Brashler, James; Dirkse, Peter A.; Parrott, Douglas M. (1990). "Asclepius 21–29 VI,8". In Robinson, James M. (ed.). The Nag Hammadi Library in English (3rd ed.). New York: HarperCollins. pp. 330–338. ISBN 978-0060669355.
  • Copenhaver, Brian P. (1992). Hermetica: The Greek Corpus Hermeticum and the Latin Asclepius in a New English Translation, with Notes and Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-42543-3.
  • Litwa, M. David, ed. (2018). Hermetica II: The Excerpts of Stobaeus, Papyrus Fragments, and Ancient Testimonies in an English Translation with Notes and Introductions. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316856567. ISBN 978-1-107-18253-0. S2CID 217372464.
  • Mahé, Jean-Pierre (1999). "The Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius". In Salaman, Clement; van Oyen, Dorine; Wharton, William D.; Mahé, Jean-Pierre (eds.). The Way of Hermes. London: Duckworth Books. pp. 99–122. ISBN 9780892811861.
  • Scott, Walter (1924–1936). Hermetica: The Ancient Greek and Latin Writings Which Contain Religious or Philosophic Teachings Ascribed to Hermes Trismegistus. Vol. I–IV. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 601704008. (older edition and translation of the Corpus Hermeticum, the Asclepius, the Stobaean excerpts, and various testimonia; vol. IV [pp. 277–352] also contains an English translation of Bardenhewer's Latin translation of the Arabic Kitāb fi zajr al-nafs or "Book of the Rebuke of the Soul")
  • Stapleton, H. E.; Lewis, G. L.; Taylor, F. Sherwood (1949). "The sayings of Hermes quoted in the Māʾ al-waraqī of Ibn Umail". Ambix. 3 (3–4): 69–90. doi:10.1179/amb.1949.3.3-4.69. (contains Hermetic fragments with, a.o., a commentary on the Emerald Tablet)
  • Waegeman, Maryse (1987). Amulet and Alphabet: Magical Amulets in the First Book of Cyranides. Amsterdam: J. C. Gieben. ISBN 90-70265-80-X. OCLC 17009220.

Secondary literature edit

  • Alfonso-Goldfarb, Ana Maria; Abou-Chahla Jubran, Safa (1999). Livro do Tesouro de Alexandre: Um estudo de hermética árabe na oficina da história de ciência. Petrópolis: Editora Vozes. ISBN 9788532614988.
  • Alfonso-Goldfarb, Ana Maria; Abou-Chahla Jubran, Safa (2008). "Listening to the Whispers of Matter Through Arabic Hermeticism: New Studies on the Book of the Treasure of Alexander". Ambix. 55 (2): 99–121. doi:10.1179/174582308X255426. PMID 19048971. S2CID 20127962.
  • Asl, Mohammad Karimi Zenjani (2016). "Sirr al-Khalīqa and its influence in the Arabic and Persianate world: 'Awn b. al-Mundhir's Commentary and its unknown Persian Translation". Al-Qantara. XXXVII (2): 435–473. doi:10.3989/alqantara.2016.015.
  • Bausani, Alessandro (1983). "Il Kitāb ʿArḍ Miftāḥ al-Nujūm attribuito a Hermes: Prima traduzione araba di un testo astrologico?". Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei. Memorie. Classe di Scienze Morali, Storiche e Filologiche. 8/27 (2): 84–140. OCLC 718412090.
  • Bausani, Alessandro (1986). "Il Kitāb ʿArḍ Miftāḥ al-Nujūm attribuito a Hermes". Actas do XI Congresso da UEAI (Evora 1982): 371ff.
  • Bull, Christian H. (2018). The Tradition of Hermes Trismegistus: The Egyptian Priestly Figure as a Teacher of Hellenized Wisdom. Religions in the Graeco-Roman World: 186. Leiden: Brill. doi:10.1163/9789004370845. ISBN 978-90-04-37084-5. S2CID 165266222.
  • Caiazzo, Irene (2004). "La Tabula smaragdina nel Medioevo latino, II. Note sulla fortuna della Tabula smaragdina nel Medioevo latino". In Lucentini, P.; Parri, I.; Perrone Compagni, V. (eds.). La tradizione ermetica dal mondo tardo-antico all'umanesimo. Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi, Napoli, 20–24 novembre 2001 [Hermetism from Late Antiquity to Humanism]. Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia. Vol. 40. Turnhout: Brepols. pp. 697–711. doi:10.1484/M.IPM-EB.4.00122. ISBN 978-2-503-51616-5.
  • Colinet, Andrée (1995). "Le livre d'Hermès intitulé Liber dabessi ou Liber rebis". Studi medievali. 36 (2): 1011–1052.
  • Copenhaver, Brian P. (1992). Hermetica: The Greek Corpus Hermeticum and the Latin Asclepius in a New English Translation, with Notes and Introduction. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-42543-3.
  • Dobbs, Betty J. T. (1988). "Newton's Commentary on The Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus: Its Scientific and Theological Significance". In Merkel, Ingrid; Debus, Allen G. (eds.). Hermeticism and the Renaissance: Intellectual History and the Occult in Early Modern Europe. Washington, D.C.: The Folger Shakespeare Library. pp. 182–191. ISBN 9780918016850.
  • Dodd, Charles H. (1935). The Bible and the Greeks. London: Hodder & Stoughton. OCLC 362655.
  • Ebeling, Florian (2007). The Secret History of Hermes Trismegistus: Hermeticism from Ancient to Modern Times. Translated by Lorton, David. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-4546-0. JSTOR 10.7591/j.ctt1ffjptt.
  • Festugière, André-Jean (1944–1954). La Révélation d'Hermès Trismégiste. Vol. I–IV. Paris: Gabalda. ISBN 9782251326740.
  • Festugière, André-Jean (1967). Hermétisme et mystique païenne. Paris: Aubier Montaigne. ISBN 978-2700735529.
  • Fowden, Garth (1986). The Egyptian Hermes: a Historical Approach to the Late Pagan Mind. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-32583-8. OCLC 13333446.
  • Gall, Dorothee, ed. (2021). Die göttliche Weisheit des Hermes Trismegistos: Pseudo-Apuleius, Asclepius. Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck. doi:10.1628/978-3-16-160108-8. ISBN 978-3-16-160108-8. (German translation of the Asclepius, with essays by Sydney H. Aufrère, Dorothee Gall, Claudio Moreschini, Zlatko Pleše, Joachim F. Quack, Heike Sternberg el-Hotabi, and Christian Tornau)
  • Hanegraaff, Wouter J. (2006). "Lazzarelli, Lodovico". In Hanegraaff, Wouter J. (ed.). Dictionary of Gnosis and Western Esotericism. Leiden: Brill. pp. 679–683. ISBN 9789004152311.
  • Jasnow, Richard; Zauzich, Karl-Theodor (1998). "A Book of Thoth?". In Eyre, Christopher (ed.). Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Egyptologists, Cambridge, 3-9 September 1995. Leuven: Peeters. ISBN 978-90-429-0014-1.
  • Jasnow, Richard; Zauzich, Karl-Theodor (2014). Conversations in the House of Life: A New Translation of the Ancient Egyptian Book of Thoth. Harrassowitz Verlag. ISBN 978-3-447-10116-5.
  • Kingsley, Peter (1993). "Poimandres: The Etymology of the Name and the Origins of the Hermetica". Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes. 56 (1): 1–24. doi:10.2307/751362. JSTOR 751362. S2CID 190303663. (reprinted, with additions and updates, in Kingsley 2000)
  • Kingsley, Peter (2000). "Poimandres: The Etymology of the Name and the Origins of the Hermetica". In Van den Broek, Roelof; Van Heertum, Cis (eds.). From Poimandres to Jacob Böhme: Gnosis, Hermetism and the Christian Tradition. Leiden: Brill. pp. 41–76. doi:10.1163/9789004501973_005. ISBN 978-90-71-60810-0.
  • Kraus, Paul (1942–1943). Jâbir ibn Hayyân: Contribution à l'histoire des idées scientifiques dans l'Islam. I. Le corpus des écrits jâbiriens. II. Jâbir et la science grecque. Cairo: Institut Français d'Archéologie Orientale. ISBN 9783487091150. OCLC 468740510. (vol. II, pp. 270–303 about pseudo-Apollonius of Tyana's Sirr al-khalīqa or "The Secret of Creation")
  • Kunitzsch, Paul (2004). "Origin and History of Liber de stellis beibeniis". In Lucentini, P.; Parri, I.; Perrone Compagni, V. (eds.). La tradizione ermetica dal mondo tardo-antico all'umanesimo. Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi, Napoli, 20–24 novembre 2001 [Hermetism from Late Antiquity to Humanism]. Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia, 40. Vol. 40. Turnhout: Brepols. pp. 449–460. doi:10.1484/M.IPM-EB.4.00108. ISBN 978-2-503-51616-5.
  • Lucentini, P.; Parri, I.; Perrone Compagni, V., eds. (2004). La tradizione ermetica dal mondo tardo-antico all'umanesimo. Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi, Napoli, 20–24 novembre 2001 [Hermetism from Late Antiquity to Humanism]. Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia, 40 (in Italian). Vol. 40. Turnhout: Brepols. doi:10.1484/m.ipm-eb.5.112150. ISBN 978-2-503-51616-5.
  • Mahé, Jean-Pierre (1978–1982). Hermès en Haute-Egypte. Vol. I–II. Quebec: Presses de l'Université Laval. ISBN 9780774668170.
  • Mahé, Jean-Pierre (1996). "Preliminary Remarks on the Demotic "Book of Thoth" and the Greek Hermetica". Vigiliae Christianae. 50 (4): 353–363. doi:10.2307/1584313. JSTOR 1584313.
  • Mandosio, Jean-Marc (2004). "La Tabula smaragdina nel Medioevo latino, I. La Tabula smaragdina e i suoi commentari medievali". In Lucentini, P.; Parri, I.; Perrone Compagni, V. (eds.). La tradizione ermetica dal mondo tardo-antico all'umanesimo. Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi, Napoli, 20–24 novembre 2001 [Hermetism from Late Antiquity to Humanism]. Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia. Vol. 40. Turnhout: Brepols. pp. 681–696. doi:10.1484/M.IPM-EB.4.00121. ISBN 978-2-503-51616-5.
  • Mandosio, Jean-Marc (2005). "La création verbale dans l'alchimie latine du Moyen Âge". Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi. 63: 137–147. doi:10.3406/alma.2005.894. S2CID 166127275.
  • Newman, William R. (2019). Newton the Alchemist: Science, Enigma, and the Quest for Nature's Secret Fire. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691174877.
  • Norris, John (2006). "The Mineral Exhalation Theory of Metallogenesis in Pre-Modern Mineral Science". Ambix. 53 (1): 43–65. doi:10.1179/174582306X93183. S2CID 97109455.
  • Parri, Ilaria (2011). "Tra ermetismo antico ed ermetismo medievale: l'Asclepius". In Arfé, Pasquale; Caiazzo, Irene; Sannino, Antonella (eds.). Adorare caelestia, gubernare terrena: Atti del Colloquio Internazionale in onore di Paolo Lucentini (Napoli, 6-7 Novembre 2007). Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia. Vol. 58. Turnhout: Brepols. pp. 43–58. ISBN 978-2-503-53490-9.
  • Pearson, Birger A. (1981), "Jewish elements in Corpus Hermeticum I", in Vermaseren, M. J.; van den Broek, Roel B. (eds.), Studies in Gnosticism and Hellenistic Religions Presented to Gilles Quispel on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday, Brill, pp. 336–348, doi:10.1163/9789004295698_020, ISBN 978-90-04-06376-1
  • Piperakis, Spyros (2017). "Decanal Iconography and Natural Materials in the Sacred Book of Hermes to Asclepius". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. 57 (1): 136–161.
  • Piperakis, Spyros (2022a). "Plants Full of Signs: Herbal Lore in the Sacred Book of Hermes to Asclepius I". Classical Philology. 117 (1): 163–178. doi:10.1086/717566.
  • Piperakis, Spyros (2022b). "Plants Full of Signs: Herbal Lore in the Sacred Book of Hermes to Asclepius II". Classical Philology. 117 (3): 480–494. doi:10.1086/720286.
  • Plessner, Martin (1954). "Hermes Trismegistus and Arab Science". Studia Islamica. 2 (2): 45–59. doi:10.2307/1595141. JSTOR 1595141.
  • Principe, Lawrence M. (2013). The Secrets of Alchemy. Chicago: The University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0226103792.
  • Raggetti, Lucia (2021). "The Treasure of Alexander – Stories of Discovery and Authorship". In Brinkmann, Stefanie; Ciotti, Giovanni; Valente, Stefano; Wilden, Eva Maria (eds.). Education Materialised: Reconstructing Teaching and Learning Contexts through Manuscripts. Studies in Manuscript Cultures. Vol. 23. Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 279–314. doi:10.1515/9783110741124-015. ISBN 9783110741124.
  • Robinson, James M. (1990). The Nag Hammadi Library in English. 3th, revised edition. New York: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0060669355.
  • Roig Lanzillotta, Lautaro (2021). "The Discourse on the Eighth and the Ninth (NHC VI,6), the Prayer of Thanksgiving (NHC VI,7), and the Asclepius (NHC VI,8): Hermetic Texts in Nag Hammadi and Their Bipartite View of Man". Gnosis: Journal of Gnostic Studies. 6 (1): 49–78. doi:10.1163/2451859X-12340102.
  • Ruska, Julius (1926). Tabula Smaragdina. Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der hermetischen Literatur. Heidelberg: Winter. OCLC 6751465.
  • Saif, Liana (2021). "A Preliminary Study of the Pseudo-Aristotelian Hermetica: Texts, Context, and Doctrines". Al-ʿUṣūr al-Wusṭā. 29 (1): 20–80. doi:10.52214/uw.v29i1.8895. S2CID 244916418.
  • Van Bladel, Kevin (2009). The Arabic Hermes: From Pagan Sage to Prophet of Science. Oxford: Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195376135.001.0001. ISBN 978-0-19-537613-5.
  • Van den Kerchove, Anna (2012). La Voie d'Hermès. Pratiques rituelles et traités hermétiques. Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies 77. Leyde: Brill. doi:10.1163/9789004223653. ISBN 978-90-04-22345-5.
  • Van den Kerchove, Anna (2017). Hermès Trismégiste. Le messager divin. Paris: Éditions Entrelacs. ISBN 979-1-09-017447-4.
  • Vereno, Ingolf (1992). Studien zum ältesten alchemistischen Schrifttum. Auf der Grundlage zweier erstmals edierter arabischer Hermetica. Vol. Islamkundliche Untersuchungen, band 155. Berlin: Klaus Schwarz Verlag. ISBN 978-3879972067.
  • Weisser, Ursula (1980). Das "Buch über das Geheimnis der Schöpfung" von Pseudo-Apollonios von Tyana. Berlin: De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110866933. ISBN 978-3-11-086693-3.

Editions of Hermetic texts edit

Greek edit

  • Kaimakis, Dimitris (1976). Die Kyraniden. Meisenheim am Glan: Hain. ISBN 9783445013347. (Greek text of the Cyranides)
  • Mahé, Jean-Pierre (1984). "Fragments hermétiques dans les papyri Vindobonenses graecae 29456r et 29828r". In Lucchesi, Enzo; Saffrey, Henri Dominique (eds.). Mémorial André-Jean Festugière: Antiquité païenne et chrétienne. Geneva: Cramer. pp. 51–64. OCLC 610335292. (Vienna fragments)
  • Mahé, Jean-Pierre (2019). Hermès Trismégiste. Paralipomènes: Grec, copte, arménien. Codex VI de Nag Hammadi - Codex Clarkianus 11 Oxoniensis - Définitions hermétiques - Divers. Vol. V. Paris: Les Belles Lettres. ISBN 9782251006321.
  • Nock, Arthur Darby; Festugière, André-Jean (1945–1954). Corpus Hermeticum. Vol. I–IV. Paris: Les Belles Lettres. ISBN 9782251001371. (Greek text of the Corpus Hermeticum and of the Stobaean excerpts, various fragments and testimonies)
  • Paramelle, Joseph; Mahé, Jean-Pierre (1991). "Extraits hermétiques inédits dans un manuscrit d'Oxford". Revue des Études Grecques. 104 (495/496): 109–139. doi:10.3406/reg.1991.2504. JSTOR 44264627. (Oxford fragments)

Armenian edit

Arabic edit

  • Badawi, Abdurrahman (1947). al-Insāniyya wa-l-wujūdiyya fī l-fikr al-'Arabī. Beirut: Dār al-Qalam. OCLC 163528808. (pp. 179–183 contain a small fragment from the Kitāb al-Isṭamākhīs)
  • Badawi, Abdurrahman (1955). al-Aflāṭūniyyah al-muḥdatha ʿinda al-ʿarab. Dirāsāt islāmiyya, 19. Cairo: Maktabat al-nahḍa al-miṣriyya. OCLC 976547332. (pp. 53–116 contain an edition of the Kitāb fi zajr al-nafs)
  • Bardenhewer, Otto (1873). Hermetis Trismegisti qui apud Arabes fertur De castigatione animae libellum. Bonn: Marcus. (Arabic text of the Kitāb fi zajr al-nafs with a Latin translation by Bardenhewer)
  • Bonmariage, Cécile; Moureau, Sébastien (2016). Le Cercle des lettres de l'alphabet (Dā'irat al-aḥruf al-abjadiyya): Un traité pratique de magie des lettres attribué à Hermès. Leiden: Brill. doi:10.1163/9789004321540_001. ISBN 978-90-04-31584-6. (Arabic text and French translation)
  • Kunitzsch, Paul (2001). "Liber de stellis beibeniis". In Bos, Gerrit; Burnett, Charles; Lucentini, Paolo (eds.). Hermetis Trismegisti Astrologica et Divinatoria. Corpus Christianorum, CXLIV. Hermes Latinus, IV.IV. Turnhout: Brepols. pp. 7–81. ISBN 978-2-503-04447-7. (Arabic and Latin text of the Liber de stellis beibeniis)
  • Turāb ʿAlī, M.; Stapleton, H. E.; Hidāyat Ḥusain, M. (1933). "Three Arabic Treatises on Alchemy by Muḥammad bin Umail (10th century A.D.)". Memoirs of the Asiatic Society of Bengal. 12 (1): 1–213. OCLC 29062383. (contains Hermetic fragments with, a.o., a commentary on the Emerald Tablet; translated in Stapleton, Lewis & Taylor 1949)
  • Toral-Niehoff, Isabel (2004). Kitab Giranis. Die arabische Übersetzung der ersten Kyranis des Hermes Trismegistos und die griechischen Parallelen. München: Herbert Utz. ISBN 3-8316-0413-4. (Arabic translation of the first book of the Cyranides)
  • Ullmann, Manfred (1994). Das Schlangenbuch des Hermes Trismegistos. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz. ISBN 978-3447035231. (Arabic text of the Book of the Wise Hermes on the Properties of Snakes and Scorpions)
  • Ullmann, Manfred (2020). "Die arabischen Fragmente der Bücher II bis IV der Kyraniden". Studia graeco-arabica. 10: 49–58. (Arabic translation of fragments from books 2–4 of the Cyranides)
  • Weisser, Ursula (1979). Buch über das Geheimnis der Schöpfung und die Darstellung der Natur (Buch der Ursachen) von Pseudo-Apollonios von Tyana. Sources and Studies in the History of Arabic-Islamic Science. Aleppo: Institute for the History of Arabic Science. OCLC 13597803. (Arabic text of the Sirr al-khalīqa, including a version of the Emerald Tablet)

Coptic edit

  • Mahé, Jean-Pierre (2019). Hermès Trismégiste. Paralipomènes: Grec, copte, arménien. Codex VI de Nag Hammadi - Codex Clarkianus 11 Oxoniensis - Définitions hermétiques - Divers. Vol. V. Paris: Les Belles Lettres. ISBN 9782251006321. (text of Nag Hammadi, VI, with French translation)

Latin edit

  • Burnett, Charles (2001). "Aristoteles/Hermes: Liber Antimaquis". In Bos, Gerrit; Burnett, Charles; Lucentini, Paolo (eds.). Hermetis Trismegisti Astrologica et Divinatoria. Corpus Christianorum, CXLIV. Hermes Latinus, IV.IV. Turnhout: Brepols. pp. 177–221. ISBN 978-2-503-04447-7. (Latin text of the Liber Antimaquis, a translation from the Arabic Kitāb al-Isṭamākhīs)
  • Delatte, Louis (1942). Textes latins et vieux français relatifs aux Cyranides. Paris: Droz. OCLC 901714095. (Latin translation of the Cyranides)
  • Hudry, Françoise (1997–1999). "Le De secretis nature du Ps. Apollonius de Tyane, traduction latine par Hugues de Santalla du Kitæb sirr al-halîqa". Chrysopoeia. 6: 1–154. (Latin translation of the Sirr al-khalīqa, including a version of the Emerald Tablet)
  • Kunitzsch, Paul (2001). "Liber de stellis beibeniis". In Bos, Gerrit; Burnett, Charles; Lucentini, Paolo (eds.). Hermetis Trismegisti Astrologica et Divinatoria. Corpus Christianorum, CXLIV. Hermes Latinus, IV.IV. Turnhout: Brepols. pp. 7–81. ISBN 978-2-503-04447-7. (Arabic and Latin text of the Liber de stellis beibeniis)
  • Nock, Arthur Darby; Festugière, André-Jean (1945–1954). Corpus Hermeticum. Vol. I–IV. Paris: Les Belles Lettres. ISBN 9782251001371. (Latin text of the Asclepius)
  • Steele, Robert (1920). Secretum secretorum cum glossis et notulis. Opera hactenus inedita Rogeri Baconi, vol. V. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 493365693. (Latin translation of the Sirr al-asrār; pp. 115–117 contain a version of the Emerald Tablet)
  • Steele, Robert; Singer, Dorothea Waley (1928). "The Emerald Table". Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine. 21 (3): 41–57/485–501. doi:10.1177/003591572802100361. PMC 2101974. PMID 19986273. (contains Latin translation of the Emerald Tablet as it occurs in the Liber dabessi)

External links edit

  • The Gnostic Society Library hosts translations of the Corpus Hermeticum, the Asclepius, the Stobaean excerpts, and some ancient testimonies on Hermes (all taken from Mead, George R. S. 1906. Thrice Greatest Hermes: Studies in Hellenistic Theosophy and Gnosis. Vols. 2-3. London: Theosophical Publishing Society; note that these translations are outdated and were written by a member of the Theosophical Society; modern scholarly translations are found above), as well as translations of the three Hermetic treatises in the Nag Hammadi findings (reproduced with permission from the translations prepared by James Brashler, Peter A. Dirkse and Douglas M. Parrott as originally published in: Robinson, James M. 1978. The Nag Hammadi Library in English. Leiden: Brill).

hermetica, this, article, about, ancient, texts, philosophical, system, hermeticism, argentine, heavy, metal, band, hermética, other, uses, hermetic, disambiguation, texts, attributed, legendary, hellenistic, figure, hermes, trismegistus, syncretic, combinatio. This article is about the ancient texts For the philosophical system see Hermeticism For the Argentine heavy metal band see Hermetica For other uses see Hermetic disambiguation The Hermetica are texts attributed to the legendary Hellenistic figure Hermes Trismegistus a syncretic combination of the Greek god Hermes and the Egyptian god Thoth 1 These texts may vary widely in content and purpose but are usually subdivided into two main categories the technical and religio philosophical Hermetica The category of technical Hermetica encompasses a broad variety of treatises dealing with astrology medicine and pharmacology alchemy and magic the oldest of which were written in Greek and may go back as far as the second or third century BCE 2 Many of the texts belonging in this category were later translated into Arabic and Latin often being extensively revised and expanded throughout the centuries Some of them were also originally written in Arabic though in many cases their status as an original work or translation remains unclear 3 These Arabic and Latin Hermetic texts were widely copied throughout the Middle Ages the most famous example being the Emerald Tablet The religio philosophical Hermetica are a relatively coherent set of religio philosophical treatises that were written mostly in the second and third centuries though the very earliest one of them the Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius may go back to the first century CE 4 They are chiefly focused on the relationship between human beings the cosmos and God thus combining philosophical anthropology cosmology and theology Many of them are also moral exhortations calling for a way of life the way of Hermes leading to spiritual rebirth and eventually to divinization in the form of a heavenly ascent 5 The treatises in this category were probably all originally written in Greek although some of them survive only in Coptic Armenian or Latin translations 6 During the Middle Ages most of them were only accessible to Byzantine scholars an important exception being the Asclepius which mainly survives in an early Latin translation until a compilation of Greek Hermetic treatises known as the Corpus Hermeticum was translated into Latin by the Renaissance scholars Marsilio Ficino 1433 1499 and Lodovico Lazzarelli 1447 1500 7 Though strongly influenced by Greek and Hellenistic philosophy especially Platonism and Stoicism 8 and to a lesser extent also by Jewish ideas 9 many of the early Greek Hermetic treatises also contain distinctly Egyptian elements most notably in their affinity with traditional Egyptian wisdom literature 10 This used to be the subject of much doubt but it is now generally admitted that the Hermetica as such did in fact originate in Hellenistic and Roman Egypt even if most of the later Hermetic writings which continued to be composed at least until the twelfth century CE did not It may even be the case that the great bulk of the early Greek Hermetica were written by Hellenizing members of the Egyptian priestly class whose intellectual activity was centred in the environment of Egyptian temples Contents 1 Technical Hermetica 1 1 Greek 1 1 1 Greek astrological Hermetica 1 1 2 Greek alchemical Hermetica 1 1 3 Greek magical Hermetica 1 2 Arabic 1 2 1 Arabic astrological Hermetica 1 2 2 Arabic alchemical Hermetica 1 2 3 Arabic magical Hermetica 2 Religio philosophical Hermetica 2 1 Corpus Hermeticum 2 2 Asclepius 2 3 Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius 2 4 Stobaean excerpts 2 5 Hermes among the Nag Hammadi findings 2 6 Oxford and Vienna fragments 2 7 Book of the Rebuke of the Soul 3 Fragments and testimonies 4 History of scholarship on the Hermetica 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 7 1 English translations of Hermetic texts 7 2 Secondary literature 7 3 Editions of Hermetic texts 7 3 1 Greek 7 3 2 Armenian 7 3 3 Arabic 7 3 4 Coptic 7 3 5 Latin 8 External linksTechnical Hermetica editGreek edit Greek astrological Hermetica edit The oldest known texts associated with Hermes Trismegistus are a number of astrological works which may go back as far as the second or third century BCE The Salmeschoiniaka the Wandering of the Influences perhaps composed in Alexandria in the second or third century BCE deals with the configurations of the stars 11 The Nechepsos Petosiris texts are a number of anonymous works dating to the second century BCE which were falsely attributed to the Egyptian king Necho II 610 595 BCE referred to in the texts as Nechepsos and his legendary priest Petese referred to in the texts as Petosiris These texts only fragments of which survive ascribe the astrological knowledge they convey to the authority of Hermes 12 The Art of Eudoxus is a treatise on astronomy which was preserved in a second century BCE papyrus and which mentions Hermes as an authority 13 The Liber Hermetis The Book of Hermes is an important work on astrology laying out the names of the decans a distinctly Egyptian system that divided the zodiac into 36 parts It survives only in an early fourth or fifth century CE Latin translation 14 but contains elements that may be traced to the second or third century BCE 15 Other early Greek Hermetic works on astrology include The Brontologion a treatise on the various effects of thunder in different months 16 The Peri seismōn On earthquakes a treatise on the relation between earthquakes and astrological signs 17 The Book of Asclepius Called Myriogenesis a treatise on astrological medicine 18 The Holy Book of Hermes to Asclepius a treatise on astrological botany describing the relationships between various plants and the decans 19 The Fifteen Stars Stones Plants and Images a treatise on astrological mineralogy and botany dealing with the effect of the stars on the pharmaceutical powers of minerals and plants 20 Greek alchemical Hermetica edit Starting in the first century BCE a number of Greek works on alchemy were attributed to Hermes Trismegistus These are now all lost except for a number of fragments one of the larger of which is called Isis the Prophetess to Her Son Horus preserved in later alchemical works dating to the second and third centuries CE Especially important is the use made of them by the Egyptian alchemist Zosimus of Panopolis fl c 300 CE who also seems to have been familiar with the religio philosophical Hermetica 21 Hermes name would become more firmly associated with alchemy in the medieval Arabic sources see below of which it is not yet clear to what extent they drew on the earlier Greek literature 22 Greek magical Hermetica edit The Cyranides is a work on healing magic which treats of the magical powers and healing properties of minerals plants and animals for which it regularly cites Hermes as a source 23 It was independently translated both into Arabic and Latin 24 The Greek Magical Papyri are a modern collection of papyri dating from various periods between the second century BCE and the fifth century CE They mainly contain practical instructions for spells and incantations some of which cite Hermes as a source 25 Arabic edit Many Arabic works attributed to Hermes Trismegistus still exist today although the great majority of them have not yet been published or studied by modern scholars 26 For this reason too it is often not clear to what extent they drew on earlier Greek sources The following is a very incomplete list of known works Arabic astrological Hermetica edit Further information Astrology in medieval Islam Some of the earliest attested Arabic Hermetic texts deal with astrology The Qaḍib al dhahab The Rod of Gold or the Kitab Hirmis fi taḥwil sini l mawalid The Book of Hermes on the Revolutions of the Years of the Nativities is an Arabic astrological work translated from Middle Persian by ʿUmar ibn al Farrukhan al Ṭabari d 816 CE who was the court astrologer of the Abbasid caliph al Mansur r 754 775 27 The Carmen astrologicum is an astrological work originally written by the first century CE astrologer Dorotheus of Sidon It is lost in Greek but survives in an Arabic translation which was in turn based upon a Middle Persian intermediary It was also translated by ʿUmar ibn al Farrukhan al Ṭabari The extant Arabic text refers to two Hermeses and cites a book of Hermes on the positions of the planets 28 The Kitab Asrar an nujum The Book of the Secrets of the Stars later translated into Latin as the Liber de stellis beibeniis is a treatise describing the influences of the brightest fixed stars on personal characteristics The Arabic work was translated from a Middle Persian version which can be shown to date from before c 500 CE and which shared a source with the Byzantine astrologer Rhetorius fl c 600 CE 29 The Kitab ʿArḍ Miftaḥ al Nujum The Book of the Exposition of the Key to the Stars is an Arabic astrological treatise attributed to Hermes which claims to have been translated in 743 CE but which in reality was probably translated in the circles of Abu Ma shar al Balkhi 787 886 CE 30 Arabic alchemical Hermetica edit Further information Alchemy and chemistry in the medieval Islamic world The Sirr al khaliqa wa ṣanʿat al ṭabiʿa The Secret of Creation and the Art of Nature also known as the Kitab al ʿilal The Book of Causes is an encyclopedic work on natural philosophy falsely attributed to Apollonius of Tyana c 15 100 Arabic Balinus or Balinas 31 It was compiled in Arabic in the late eighth or early ninth century 32 but was most likely based on much older Greek and or Syriac sources 33 It contains the earliest known version of the sulfur mercury theory of metals according to which metals are composed of various proportions of sulfur and mercury 34 which lay at the foundation of all theories of metallic composition until the eighteenth century 35 In the frame story of the Sirr al khaliqa Balinus tells his readers that he discovered the text in a vault below a statue of Hermes in Tyana and that inside the vault an old corpse on a golden throne held the Emerald Tablet 36 It was translated into Latin by Hugo of Santalla in the twelfth century 37 The Emerald Tablet a compact and cryptic text first attested in the Sirr al khaliqa wa ṣanʿat al ṭabiʿa late eighth or early ninth century 38 There are several other slightly different Arabic versions among them one quoted in a text attributed to Jabir ibn Hayyan and one found in the longer version of the pseudo Aristotelian Sirr al asrar or Secret of Secrets but these are all likely to date from a later period 39 It was translated several times into Latin in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries 40 and was widely regarded by medieval and early modern alchemists as the foundation of their art 41 Isaac Newton 1642 1726 still used it as a source of inspiration 42 The Risalat al Sirr The Epistle of the Secret is an Arabic alchemical treatise probably composed in tenth century Fatimid Egypt 43 The Risalat al Falakiyya al kubra The Great Treatise of the Spheres is an Arabic alchemical treatise composed in the tenth or eleventh century Perhaps inspired by the Emerald Tablet it describes the author s Hermes attainment of secret knowledge through his ascension of the seven heavenly spheres 44 The Kitab dhakhirat al Iskandar The Treasure of Alexander a work dealing with alchemy talismans and specific properties which cites Hermes as its ultimate source 45 The Liber Hermetis de alchemia The Book of Hermes on Alchemy also known as the Liber dabessi or the Liber rebis is a collection of commentaries on the Emerald Tablet Translated from the Arabic it is only extant in Latin It is this Latin translation of the Emerald Tablet on which all later versions are based 46 Arabic magical Hermetica edit nbsp 14th century Arabic manuscript of the CyranidesThe Kitab al Isṭamakhis Kitab al Isṭamaṭis Kitab al Usṭuwwaṭas Kitab al Madiṭis and Kitab al Hadiṭus also known as the Pseudo Aristotelian Hermetica are a number of closely related and partially overlapping texts Purporting to be written by Aristotle in order to teach his pupil Alexander the Great the secrets of Hermes they deal with the names and powers of the planetary spirits the making of talismans and the concept of a personal perfect nature 47 Perhaps composed in the ninth century 48 extracts from them appear in pseudo Apollonius of Tyana s Sirr al khaliqa wa ṣanʿat al ṭabiʿa The Secret of Creation and the Art of Nature c 750 850 see above 49 in the Epistles of the Ikhwan al Ṣafaʾ The Epistles of the Brethren of Purity c 900 1000 50 in Maslama al Qurṭubi s Ghayat al Ḥakim The Aim of the Sage 960 better known under its Latin title as Picatrix 51 and in the works of the Persian philosopher Suhrawardi 1154 1191 52 One of them was translated into Latin in the twelfth or thirteenth century under the title Liber Antimaquis 53 The Cyranides is a Greek work on healing magic which treats of the magical powers and healing properties of minerals plants and animals for which it regularly cites Hermes as a source It was translated into Arabic in the ninth century but in this translation all references to Hermes seem to have disappeared 54 The Sharḥ Kitab Hirmis al Ḥakim fi Maʿrifat Ṣifat al Ḥayyat wa l ʿAqarib The Commentary on the Book of the Wise Hermes on the Properties of Snakes and Scorpions a treatise on the venom of snakes an other poisonous animals 55 The Daʾirat al aḥruf al abjadiyya The Circle of Letters of the Alphabet a practical treatise on letter magic attributed to Hermes 56 Religio philosophical Hermetica editContrary to the technical Hermetica whose writing began in the early Hellenistic period and continued deep into the Middle Ages the extant religio philosophical Hermetica were for the most part produced in a relatively short period of time i e between c 100 and c 300 CE 57 They regularly take the form of dialogues between Hermes Trismegistus and his disciples Tat Asclepius and Ammon and mostly deal with philosophical anthropology cosmology and theology 58 The following is a list of all known works in this category Corpus Hermeticum edit Main article Corpus Hermeticum nbsp First Latin edition of the Corpus Hermeticum translated by Marsilio Ficino 1471 CEUndoubtedly the most famous among the religio philosophical Hermetica is the Corpus Hermeticum a selection of seventeen Greek treatises that was first compiled by Byzantine editors and translated into Latin in the fifteenth century by Marsilio Ficino 1433 1499 and Lodovico Lazzarelli 1447 1500 59 Ficino translated the first fourteen treatises I XIV while Lazzarelli translated the remaining three XVI XVIII 60 The name of this collection is somewhat misleading since it contains only a very small selection of extant Hermetic texts whereas the word corpus is usually reserved for the entire body of extant writings related to some author or subject Its individual treatises were quoted by many early authors from the second and third centuries on but the compilation as such is first attested only in the writings of the Byzantine philosopher Michael Psellus c 1017 1078 61 The most well known among the treatises contained in this compilation is its opening treatise which is called the Poimandres However at least until the nineteenth century this name under various forms such as Pimander or Pymander was also commonly used to designate the compilation as a whole 62 In 1462 Ficino was working on a Latin translation of the collected works of Plato for his patron Cosimo de Medici but when a manuscript of the Corpus Hermeticum became available he immediately interrupted his work on Plato in order to start translating the works of Hermes which were thought to be much more ancient and therefore much more authoritative than those of Plato 63 This translation provided a seminal impetus in the development of Renaissance thought and culture having a profound impact on the flourishing of alchemy and magic in early modern Europe as well as influencing philosophers such as Ficino s student Pico della Mirandola 1463 1494 Giordano Bruno 1548 1600 Francesco Patrizi 1529 1597 Robert Fludd 1574 1637 and many others 64 Asclepius edit Main article Asclepius treatise The Asclepius also known as the Perfect Discourse from Greek Logos teleios mainly survives in a Latin translation though some Greek and Coptic fragments are also extant 65 It is the only Hermetic treatise belonging to the religio philosophical category that remained available to Latin readers throughout the Middle Ages 66 Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius edit Main article Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius The Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius is a collection of aphorisms that has mainly been preserved in a sixth century CE Armenian translation but which likely goes back to the first century CE 67 The main argument for this early dating is the fact that some of its aphorisms are cited in multiple independent Greek Hermetic works According to Jean Pierre Mahe these aphorisms contain the core of the teachings which are found in the later Greek religio philosophical Hermetica 68 Stobaean excerpts edit In fifth century Macedonia Joannes Stobaeus or John of Stobi compiled a huge Anthology of Greek poetical rhetorical historical and philosophical literature in order to educate his son Septimius Though epitomized by later Byzantine copyists it still remains a treasure trove of information about ancient philosophy and literature which would otherwise be entirely lost 69 Among the excerpts of ancient philosophical literature preserved by Stobaeus are also a significant number of discourses and dialogues attributed to Hermes 70 While mostly related to the religio philosophical treatises as found in the Corpus Hermeticum they also contain some material that is of a rather more technical nature Perhaps the most famous of the Stobaean excerpts and also the longest is the Kore kosmou The Daughter of the Cosmos or The Pupil of the eye of the Cosmos 71 The Hermetic excerpts appear in the following chapters of Stobaeus s Anthology which is organized by subject matter and contains in the same chapters many excerpts and doctrines attributed to others 72 In the chapter God is Craftsman of Existing Things and Pervades the Universe with his Design of Providence 1 1 29a In the chapter On Justice Punisher of Errors Arrayed alongside God to Oversee Human Deeds on Earth 1 3 52 In the chapter On Divine Necessity by which things Planned by God Inevitably Occur 1 4 7b 1 4 8 In the chapter On Fate and the Good Ordering of Events 1 5 14 1 5 16 1 5 20 In the chapter On the Nature and Divisions of Time and the Extent of its Causation 1 8 41 In the chapter On Matter 1 11 2 In the chapter On the Cosmos Whether it Has a Soul is Administered by Providence the Location of its Ruling Faculty and its Source of Nourishment 1 21 9 In the chapter On Nature and its Derived Causes 1 41 1 1 41 4 1 41 6 1 41 7 1 41 8 1 41 11 In the chapter How Resemblances from Parents and Ancestors Are Transmitted 1 42 7 In the chapter On the Soul 1 49 3 1 49 4 1 49 5 1 49 6 1 49 44 the Kore Kosmou excerpt 1 49 45 1 49 46 1 49 47 In the chapter On the Interpreters of Divine Matters and How the Truth concerning the Essence of Intelligible Realities is Incomprehensible to Human Beings 2 1 26 In the chapter On What is in Our Power Free Will 2 8 31 In the chapter On Truth 3 11 31 In the chapter On Bold Speech 3 13 65Hermes among the Nag Hammadi findings edit Further information Nag Hammadi library Among the Coptic treatises which were found in 1945 in the Upper Egyptian town of Nag Hammadi there are also three treatises attributed to Hermes Trismegistus Like all documents found in Nag Hammadi these were translated from the Greek 73 They consist of some fragments from the Asclepius VI 8 mainly preserved in Latin see above The Prayer of Thanksgiving VI 7 with an accompanying scribal note VI 7a and an important new text called The Discourse on the Eighth and Ninth VI 6 74 They all share a bipartite rather than a tripartite anthropology 75 Oxford and Vienna fragments edit The Oxford Hermetica consists of a number of short fragments from some otherwise unknown Hermetic works The fragments are preserved in pages 79 82 of Codex Clarkianus gr II a 13th or 14th century manuscript held at the Bodleian Library in Oxford The texts anthologized from much earlier materials deal with the soul the senses law psychology and embryology 76 The Vienna Hermetica consists of four short fragments from what once was a collection of ten Hermetic treatises one of which was called On Energies The fragments are preserved on the back sides of two papyri P Graec Vindob 29456 recto and 29828 recto now housed in Vienna The front sides of the papyri contain fragments of Jannes and Jambres a Jewish romance 77 Book of the Rebuke of the Soul edit Written in Arabic and probably dating from the twelfth century the Kitab fi zajr al nafs The Book of the Rebuke of the Soul is one of the few later Hermetic treatises belonging to the category of religio philosophical writings 78 Fragments and testimonies editFragments of otherwise lost Hermetic works have survived through their quotation by various historical authors The following is a list of authors in whose works such literal fragments have been preserved 79 Tertullian in On the Soul and Against the Valentinians Cyprian or pseudo Cyprian in Quod idola dii non sint Idols are Not Gods Lactantius in Divine Institutes and Epitome of the Divine Institutes Iamblichus in On the Mysteries and Commentary on Plato s Timaeus Zosimus of Panopolis in On the Letter Omega Ephrem the Syrian in Prose Refutations Cyril of Alexandria in Against Julian Marcellus of Ancyra in On the Holy Church John Lydus in On Months Gregory of Nazianzus in Oration Didymus of Alexandria in Commentary on Ecclesiastes and Psalms Commentary Gaius Iulius Romanus quoted by Charisius in The Art of Grammar Augustine of Hippo in The City of God 8 23 26 Quodvultdeus in Against Five Heresies Ibn Umayl in The Silvery Water and the Starry Earth 80 Michael Psellus in Opusculum Albert the Great in Book of Minerals On Intellect and the Intelligible and Commentary on John Nicholas of Cusa in On Learned IgnoranceApart from literal fragments from Hermetic works testimonies concerning the ideas of Hermes likely deriving from Hermetic works but not quoted literally have also been preserved in the works of various historical authors 81 Artapanus of Alexandria Cicero Marcus Manilius Thrasyllus Dorotheus of Sidon Philo of Byblos Athenagoras of Athens Hippolytus of Rome in Refutation of All Heresies pseudo Manetho Arnobius Iamblichus Marius Victorinus the Emperor Julian Ammianus Marcellinus Filastrius Augustine Hermias Cyril of Alexandria John of Antioch Isidore of Seville John of Damascus in Passion of Artemius al Kindi Abu Maʿshar Ibn al Nadim al Mubashshir ibn Fatik Michael Psellus Albert the Great Nicholas of CusaHistory of scholarship on the Hermetica editDuring the Renaissance all texts attributed to Hermes Trismegistus were still generally believed to be of ancient Egyptian origin and to date from before the time of Moses or even from before the biblical flood In the early seventeenth century the classical scholar Isaac Casaubon 1559 1614 demonstrated that some of the Greek texts betrayed too recent a vocabulary and must rather date from the early Christian period 82 Other authors made similar criticisms of the Hermetica largely as a means of undermining various religious and esoteric movements of the time that drew inspiration from them By the end of the century most scholars had ceased to regard them as sources of primeval wisdom 83 Studies in the early twentieth century sought to discern who had written the Hermetica Richard Reitzenstein first argued that the Hermetica were a product of a coherent religious community whose ideas derived from Egyptian religion although in later years he thought Hermetic beliefs were largely Iranian in origin a position that received little support 84 Scholars in the middle of the century such as Arthur Darby Nock C H Dodd and most influentially Andre Jean Festugiere argued that the intellectual background of the Hermetica was overwhelmingly Greek with possible influences from Iranian religions and Judaism but little connection with authentic Egyptian beliefs 85 Festugiere believed the philosophical Hermetica had only slight connections to the technical Hermetica and that the former originated with a small philosophical school rather than a religious community 86 Birger A Pearson has argued for the presence of Jewish elements in the Hermetica 87 while Peter Kingsley discounts Christian influence in favor of Greek and Jewish elements 88 More recent research suggests a greater continuity with the culture of ancient Egypt than had previously been believed 89 In the 1970s and 1980s Jean Pierre Mahe analyzed the Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius together with the recently published Hermetica from Nag Hammadi 90 Mahe pointed out that the earliest Greek Hermetic treatises contain many parallels with Egyptian prophecies and hymns to the gods and that close comparisons can be found with Egyptian wisdom literature which like many of the early Greek Hermetica was characteristically couched in words of advice from a father to a son 91 Soon afterward Garth Fowden argued that the philosophical and technical Hermetica were distinct but interdependent and that both were products of complex interactions between Greek and Egyptian culture 92 Richard Jasnow and Karl Theodor Zauzich have identified fragments of a Demotic late Egyptian text that contains substantial sections of a dialogue between Thoth and a disciple written in a format similar to the Hermetica This text probably originated among the scribes of a House of Life an institution closely connected with major Egyptian temples 93 94 Christian Bull argued in 2018 that the Hermetica were in fact written by Egyptian priests in late Ptolemaic and Roman times who presented their traditions to Greek speaking audiences in Greek philosophical terms 95 In contradistinction to the early Greek religio philosophical Hermetica which have long been studied from a scholarly perspective the technical Hermetica both the early Greek treatises and the later Arabic and Latin works remain largely unexplored by modern scholarship 96 See also editHellenistic religion Magic Hellenistic medieval European Renaissance Sage philosophy Stoic cosmology and theology TheurgyReferences edit A survey of the literary and archaeological evidence for the background of Hermes Trismegistus in the Greek Hermes and the Egyptian Thoth is found in Bull 2018 pp 33 96 Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiii Bull 2018 pp 2 3 Garth Fowden is somewhat more cautious noting that our earliest testimonies date to the first century BCE see Fowden 1986 p 3 note 11 Van Bladel 2009 p 17 Copenhaver 1992 p xliv Bull 2018 p 32 The sole exception to the general dating of c 100 300 CE is The Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius which may date to the first century CE see Bull 2018 p 9 referring to Mahe 1978 1982 vol II p 278 cf Mahe 1999 p 101 Earlier dates have been suggested most notably by Flinders Petrie 500 200 BCE and Bruno H Stricker c 300 BCE but these suggestions have been rejected by most other scholars see Bull 2018 p 6 note 23 Bull 2018 p 3 E g The Discourse on the Eighth and Ninth Coptic preserved in the Nag Hammadi library which consists entirely of works translated from Greek into Coptic see Robinson 1990 pp 12 13 the Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius Armenian see Bull 2018 p 9 and the Asclepius also known as the Perfect Discourse Latin see Copenhaver 1992 pp xliii xliv Copenhaver 1992 pp xl xliii Hanegraaff 2006 p 680 Bull 2018 p 2 See e g Pearson 1981 and the copious references in Bull 2018 p 29 note 118 Mahe 1978 1982 Mahe also demonstrated numerous other Egyptian influences on the Hermetica cf Bull 2018 pp 9 10 Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiii Bull 2018 pp 387 388 Bull 2018 pp 163 174 cf Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiii On the identification of Nechepsos with Necho II and of Petosiris with Petese see the references in Bull 2018 p 163 note 295 Bull 2018 pp 167 168 Copenhaver 1992 p xlv Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiii Bull 2018 pp 385 386 Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiii Bull 2018 p 168 Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiii Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiii Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiv On this work see Piperakis 2017 Piperakis 2022a and Piperakis 2022b Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiv Copenhaver 1992 p xxxiv Van Bladel 2009 p 17 Copenhaver 1992 pp xxxiv xxxv The Greek text was edited by Kaimakis 1976 English translation of the first book in Waegeman 1987 The Arabic translation of the first book was edited by Toral Niehoff 2004 The Arabic fragments of the other books were edited by Ullmann 2020 The Latin translation was edited by Delatte 1942 Copenhaver 1992 pp xxxv xxxvi According to Van Bladel 2009 p 17 note 42 there are least twenty Arabic Hermetica extant Van Bladel 2009 p 28 Van Bladel 2009 pp 28 29 Van Bladel 2009 pp 27 28 The Arabic text and its Latin translation were edited by Kunitzsch 2001 See also Kunitzsch 2004 Bausani 1983 Bausani 1986 On the dating see Ullmann 1994 pp 7 8 Edited by Weisser 1979 Kraus 1942 1943 vol II pp 274 275 c 813 833 Weisser 1980 p 54 c 750 800 Kraus 1942 1943 vol II pp 270 303 Weisser 1980 pp 52 53 Kraus 1942 1943 vol II p 1 note 1 Weisser 1980 p 199 Norris 2006 Ebeling 2007 pp 46 47 Edited by Hudry 1997 1999 On its later influence see Asl 2016 Edited by Weisser 1979 Weisser 1980 p 46 See Hudry 1997 1999 p 152 as part of the Latin translation of the Sirr al khaliqa English translation in Litwa 2018 p 316 Steele 1920 pp 115 117 as part of the Latin translation of the Sirr al asrar Steele amp Singer 1928 as part of the Latin translation of the Liber dabessi a collection of commentaries on the Tablet On the Latin translations see further Colinet 1995 Mandosio 2004 Caiazzo 2004 and Mandosio 2005 Principe 2013 p 31 Dobbs 1988 Newman 2019 pp 145 166 183 Edited by Vereno 1992 pp 136 159 Van Bladel 2009 pp 181 183 cf p 171 note 25 Edited by Vereno 1992 pp 160 181 Ruska 1926 pp 68 107 Raggetti 2021 p 287 See further Alfonso Goldfarb amp Abou Chahla Jubran 1999 and Alfonso Goldfarb amp Abou Chahla Jubran 2008 Edited by Steele amp Singer 1928 On this text see further Colinet 1995 Mandosio 2004 pp 683 684 Caiazzo 2004 pp 700 703 Mandosio 2005 Van Bladel 2009 pp 101 102 114 224 A small fragment from the Kitab al Isṭamakhis was published by Badawi 1947 pp 179 183 See also Saif 2021 A dating proposed by Saif 2021 pp 36 44 Weisser 1980 pp 68 69 Plessner 1954 p 58 Van Bladel 2009 pp 101 102 Van Bladel 2009 p 224 Edited by Burnett 2001 Van Bladel 2009 p 17 note 45 p 21 note 60 The Arabic version of the first book was edited by Toral Niehoff 2004 The Arabic fragments of the other books were edited by Ullmann 2020 Ullmann 1994 cf Van Bladel 2009 p 17 Bonmariage amp Moureau 2016 Copenhaver 1992 p xliv Bull 2018 p 32 The sole exception is The Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius which may date to the first century CE see Bull 2018 p 9 referring to Mahe 1978 1982 vol II p 278 cf Mahe 1999 p 101 Earlier dates have been suggested most notably by Flinders Petrie 500 200 BCE and Bruno H Stricker c 300 BCE but these suggestions have been rejected by most other scholars see Bull 2018 p 6 note 23 Some Hermetic treatises of a generally religio philosophical nature were written in later periods e g the Kitab fi zajr al nafs or The Book of the Rebuke of the Soul dating from the twelfth century edited by Bardenhewer 1873 and by Badawi 1955 pp 53 116 English translation of Bardenhewer s Latin translation in Scott 1924 1936 vol IV pp 277 352 but these appear to be rather rare and it is not clear whether they bear any relation to the early Greek treatises see Van Bladel 2009 p 226 Bull 2018 p 3 Copenhaver 1992 pp xl xliii See Hanegraaff 2006 p 680 The Chapter no XV of early modern editions was once filled with an entry from the Suda a tenth century Byzantine encyclopedia and three excerpts from Hermetic works preserved by Joannes Stobaeus fl fifth century see below but this chapter was left out in later editions which therefore contain no chapter XV see Copenhaver 1992 p xlix Copenhaver 1992 p xlii See e g the English translation by Everard John 1650 The Divine Pymander of Hermes Mercurius Trismegistus London Copenhaver 1992 pp xlvii xlviii Ebeling 2007 pp 68 70 Copenhaver 1992 pp xliii xliv Copenhaver 1992 p xlvii On this work see also Parri 2011 Armenian text edited by Mahe 1978 1982 and Mahe 2019 English translation in Mahe 1999 French translation in Mahe 2019 Mahe 1999 pp 101 108 cf Bull 2018 p 9 Litwa 2018 p 19 English translation in Litwa 2018 pp 27 159 Copenhaver 1992 p xxxviii cf Bull 2018 pp 101 111 As listed by Litwa 2018 Robinson 1990 pp 12 13 Copenhaver 1992 p xliv These were all translated by James Brashler Peter A Dirkse and Douglas M Parrott in Robinson 1990 pp 321 338 Edition and French translation in Mahe 2019 German translation in Gall 2021 Roig Lanzillotta 2021 Paramelle amp Mahe 1991 reprint with French translation in Mahe 2019 English translation in Litwa 2018 pp 161 169 Mahe 1984 English translation in Litwa 2018 pp 171 174 Van Bladel 2009 p 226 Edited by Bardenhewer 1873 and by Badawi 1955 pp 53 116 English translation of Bardenhewer s Latin translation in Scott 1924 1936 vol IV pp 277 352 These are listed and translated by Litwa 2018 pp 175 256 Greek originals of the majority of Litwa s fragments in Nock amp Festugiere 1945 1954 vol IV pp 101 150 except Ibn Umayl whose Hermetic fragments have been collected and translated by Stapleton Lewis amp Taylor 1949 Arabic originals in Turab ʿAli Stapleton amp Hidayat Ḥusain 1933 Collected and translated by Stapleton Lewis amp Taylor 1949 Arabic originals in Turab ʿAli Stapleton amp Hidayat Ḥusain 1933 These are listed and translated by Litwa 2018 pp 257 339 Copenhaver 1992 p l Ebeling 2007 p 92 Ebeling 2007 pp 113 114 Bull 2018 pp 4 6 Copenhaver 1992 pp liii lv Bull 2018 pp 7 8 Pearson 1981 See also the copious references in Bull 2018 p 29 note 118 Kingsley 1993 p 14 reprinted with additions and updates in Kingsley 2000 Kingsley 1993 p 1 reprinted with additions and updates in Kingsley 2000 Bull 2018 pp 9 10 Mahe 1996 358f Fowden 1986 pp 74 153 Jasnow amp Zauzich 1998 Jasnow amp Zauzich 2014 pp 1 47 49 Bull 2018 pp 456 459 Van Bladel 2009 pp 9 10 17 Bibliography editEnglish translations of Hermetic texts edit Some pieces of Hermetica have been translated into English multiple times by modern Hermeticists However the following list is strictly limited to scholarly translations Brashler James Dirkse Peter A Parrott Douglas M 1990 The Discourse on the Eighth and Ninth VI 6 In Robinson James M ed The Nag Hammadi Library in English 3rd ed New York HarperCollins pp 321 327 ISBN 978 0060669355 Brashler James Dirkse Peter A Parrott Douglas M 1990 Prayer of Thanksgiving VI 7 and Scribal Note VI 7a In Robinson James M ed The Nag Hammadi Library in English 3rd ed New York HarperCollins pp 328 329 ISBN 978 0060669355 Brashler James Dirkse Peter A Parrott Douglas M 1990 Asclepius 21 29 VI 8 In Robinson James M ed The Nag Hammadi Library in English 3rd ed New York HarperCollins pp 330 338 ISBN 978 0060669355 Copenhaver Brian P 1992 Hermetica The GreekCorpus Hermeticumand the LatinAsclepiusin a New English Translation with Notes and Introduction Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 42543 3 Litwa M David ed 2018 Hermetica II The Excerpts of Stobaeus Papyrus Fragments and Ancient Testimonies in an English Translation with Notes and Introductions Cambridge Cambridge University Press doi 10 1017 9781316856567 ISBN 978 1 107 18253 0 S2CID 217372464 Mahe Jean Pierre 1999 The Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius In Salaman Clement van Oyen Dorine Wharton William D Mahe Jean Pierre eds The Way of Hermes London Duckworth Books pp 99 122 ISBN 9780892811861 Scott Walter 1924 1936 Hermetica The Ancient Greek and Latin Writings Which Contain Religious or Philosophic Teachings Ascribed to Hermes Trismegistus Vol I IV Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 601704008 older edition and translation of the Corpus Hermeticum the Asclepius the Stobaean excerpts and various testimonia vol IV pp 277 352 also contains an English translation of Bardenhewer s Latin translation of the Arabic Kitab fi zajr al nafs or Book of the Rebuke of the Soul Stapleton H E Lewis G L Taylor F Sherwood 1949 The sayings of Hermes quoted in the Maʾ al waraqi of Ibn Umail Ambix 3 3 4 69 90 doi 10 1179 amb 1949 3 3 4 69 contains Hermetic fragments with a o a commentary on the Emerald Tablet Waegeman Maryse 1987 Amulet and Alphabet Magical Amulets in the First Book ofCyranides Amsterdam J C Gieben ISBN 90 70265 80 X OCLC 17009220 Secondary literature edit Alfonso Goldfarb Ana Maria Abou Chahla Jubran Safa 1999 Livro do Tesouro de Alexandre Um estudo de hermetica arabe na oficina da historia de ciencia Petropolis Editora Vozes ISBN 9788532614988 Alfonso Goldfarb Ana Maria Abou Chahla Jubran Safa 2008 Listening to the Whispers of Matter Through Arabic Hermeticism New Studies on the Book of the Treasure of Alexander Ambix 55 2 99 121 doi 10 1179 174582308X255426 PMID 19048971 S2CID 20127962 Asl Mohammad Karimi Zenjani 2016 Sirr al Khaliqa and its influence in the Arabic and Persianate world Awn b al Mundhir s Commentary and its unknown Persian Translation Al Qantara XXXVII 2 435 473 doi 10 3989 alqantara 2016 015 Bausani Alessandro 1983 Il Kitab ʿArḍ Miftaḥ al Nujum attribuito a Hermes Prima traduzione araba di un testo astrologico Atti della Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei Memorie Classe di Scienze Morali Storiche e Filologiche 8 27 2 84 140 OCLC 718412090 Bausani Alessandro 1986 Il Kitab ʿArḍ Miftaḥ al Nujum attribuito a Hermes Actas do XI Congresso da UEAI Evora 1982 371ff Bull Christian H 2018 The Tradition of Hermes Trismegistus The Egyptian Priestly Figure as a Teacher of Hellenized Wisdom Religions in the Graeco Roman World 186 Leiden Brill doi 10 1163 9789004370845 ISBN 978 90 04 37084 5 S2CID 165266222 Caiazzo Irene 2004 La Tabula smaragdina nel Medioevo latino II Note sulla fortuna della Tabula smaragdina nel Medioevo latino In Lucentini P Parri I Perrone Compagni V eds La tradizione ermetica dal mondo tardo antico all umanesimo Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi Napoli 20 24 novembre 2001 Hermetism from Late Antiquity to Humanism Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia Vol 40 Turnhout Brepols pp 697 711 doi 10 1484 M IPM EB 4 00122 ISBN 978 2 503 51616 5 Colinet Andree 1995 Le livre d Hermes intitule Liber dabessi ou Liber rebis Studi medievali 36 2 1011 1052 Copenhaver Brian P 1992 Hermetica The GreekCorpus Hermeticumand the LatinAsclepiusin a New English Translation with Notes and Introduction Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 42543 3 Dobbs Betty J T 1988 Newton s Commentary on The Emerald Tablet of Hermes Trismegistus Its Scientific and Theological Significance In Merkel Ingrid Debus Allen G eds Hermeticism and the Renaissance Intellectual History and the Occult in Early Modern Europe Washington D C The Folger Shakespeare Library pp 182 191 ISBN 9780918016850 Dodd Charles H 1935 The Bible and the Greeks London Hodder amp Stoughton OCLC 362655 Ebeling Florian 2007 The Secret History of Hermes Trismegistus Hermeticism from Ancient to Modern Times Translated by Lorton David Ithaca Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 4546 0 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctt1ffjptt Festugiere Andre Jean 1944 1954 La Revelation d Hermes Trismegiste Vol I IV Paris Gabalda ISBN 9782251326740 Festugiere Andre Jean 1967 Hermetisme et mystique paienne Paris Aubier Montaigne ISBN 978 2700735529 Fowden Garth 1986 The Egyptian Hermes a Historical Approach to the Late Pagan Mind Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 32583 8 OCLC 13333446 Gall Dorothee ed 2021 Die gottliche Weisheit des Hermes Trismegistos Pseudo Apuleius Asclepius Tubingen Mohr Siebeck doi 10 1628 978 3 16 160108 8 ISBN 978 3 16 160108 8 German translation of the Asclepius with essays by Sydney H Aufrere Dorothee Gall Claudio Moreschini Zlatko Plese Joachim F Quack Heike Sternberg el Hotabi and Christian Tornau Hanegraaff Wouter J 2006 Lazzarelli Lodovico In Hanegraaff Wouter J ed Dictionary of Gnosis and Western Esotericism Leiden Brill pp 679 683 ISBN 9789004152311 Jasnow Richard Zauzich Karl Theodor 1998 A Book of Thoth In Eyre Christopher ed Proceedings of the Seventh International Congress of Egyptologists Cambridge 3 9 September 1995 Leuven Peeters ISBN 978 90 429 0014 1 Jasnow Richard Zauzich Karl Theodor 2014 Conversations in the House of Life A New Translation of the Ancient Egyptian Book of Thoth Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3 447 10116 5 Kingsley Peter 1993 Poimandres The Etymology of the Name and the Origins of the Hermetica Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 56 1 1 24 doi 10 2307 751362 JSTOR 751362 S2CID 190303663 reprinted with additions and updates in Kingsley 2000 Kingsley Peter 2000 Poimandres The Etymology of the Name and the Origins of the Hermetica In Van den Broek Roelof Van Heertum Cis eds From Poimandres to Jacob Bohme Gnosis Hermetism and the Christian Tradition Leiden Brill pp 41 76 doi 10 1163 9789004501973 005 ISBN 978 90 71 60810 0 Kraus Paul 1942 1943 Jabir ibn Hayyan Contribution a l histoire des idees scientifiques dans l Islam I Le corpus des ecrits jabiriens II Jabir et la science grecque Cairo Institut Francais d Archeologie Orientale ISBN 9783487091150 OCLC 468740510 vol II pp 270 303 about pseudo Apollonius of Tyana s Sirr al khaliqa or The Secret of Creation Kunitzsch Paul 2004 Origin and History of Liber de stellis beibeniis In Lucentini P Parri I Perrone Compagni V eds La tradizione ermetica dal mondo tardo antico all umanesimo Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi Napoli 20 24 novembre 2001 Hermetism from Late Antiquity to Humanism Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia 40 Vol 40 Turnhout Brepols pp 449 460 doi 10 1484 M IPM EB 4 00108 ISBN 978 2 503 51616 5 Lucentini P Parri I Perrone Compagni V eds 2004 La tradizione ermetica dal mondo tardo antico all umanesimo Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi Napoli 20 24 novembre 2001 Hermetism from Late Antiquity to Humanism Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia 40 in Italian Vol 40 Turnhout Brepols doi 10 1484 m ipm eb 5 112150 ISBN 978 2 503 51616 5 Mahe Jean Pierre 1978 1982 Hermes en Haute Egypte Vol I II Quebec Presses de l Universite Laval ISBN 9780774668170 Mahe Jean Pierre 1996 Preliminary Remarks on the Demotic Book of Thoth and the Greek Hermetica Vigiliae Christianae 50 4 353 363 doi 10 2307 1584313 JSTOR 1584313 Mandosio Jean Marc 2004 La Tabula smaragdina nel Medioevo latino I La Tabula smaragdina e i suoi commentari medievali In Lucentini P Parri I Perrone Compagni V eds La tradizione ermetica dal mondo tardo antico all umanesimo Atti del Convegno internazionale di studi Napoli 20 24 novembre 2001 Hermetism from Late Antiquity to Humanism Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia Vol 40 Turnhout Brepols pp 681 696 doi 10 1484 M IPM EB 4 00121 ISBN 978 2 503 51616 5 Mandosio Jean Marc 2005 La creation verbale dans l alchimie latine du Moyen Age Archivum Latinitatis Medii Aevi 63 137 147 doi 10 3406 alma 2005 894 S2CID 166127275 Newman William R 2019 Newton the Alchemist Science Enigma and the Quest for Nature s Secret Fire Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691174877 Norris John 2006 The Mineral Exhalation Theory of Metallogenesis in Pre Modern Mineral Science Ambix 53 1 43 65 doi 10 1179 174582306X93183 S2CID 97109455 Parri Ilaria 2011 Tra ermetismo antico ed ermetismo medievale l Asclepius In Arfe Pasquale Caiazzo Irene Sannino Antonella eds Adorare caelestia gubernare terrena Atti del Colloquio Internazionale in onore di Paolo Lucentini Napoli 6 7 Novembre 2007 Instrumenta Patristica et Mediaevalia Vol 58 Turnhout Brepols pp 43 58 ISBN 978 2 503 53490 9 Pearson Birger A 1981 Jewish elements in Corpus Hermeticum I in Vermaseren M J van den Broek Roel B eds Studies in Gnosticism and Hellenistic Religions Presented to Gilles Quispel on the Occasion of his 65th Birthday Brill pp 336 348 doi 10 1163 9789004295698 020 ISBN 978 90 04 06376 1 Piperakis Spyros 2017 Decanal Iconography and Natural Materials in the Sacred Book of Hermes to Asclepius Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies 57 1 136 161 Piperakis Spyros 2022a Plants Full of Signs Herbal Lore in the Sacred Book of Hermes to Asclepius I Classical Philology 117 1 163 178 doi 10 1086 717566 Piperakis Spyros 2022b Plants Full of Signs Herbal Lore in the Sacred Book of Hermes to Asclepius II Classical Philology 117 3 480 494 doi 10 1086 720286 Plessner Martin 1954 Hermes Trismegistus and Arab Science Studia Islamica 2 2 45 59 doi 10 2307 1595141 JSTOR 1595141 Principe Lawrence M 2013 The Secrets of Alchemy Chicago The University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0226103792 Raggetti Lucia 2021 The Treasure of Alexander Stories of Discovery and Authorship In Brinkmann Stefanie Ciotti Giovanni Valente Stefano Wilden Eva Maria eds Education Materialised Reconstructing Teaching and Learning Contexts through Manuscripts Studies in Manuscript Cultures Vol 23 Berlin De Gruyter pp 279 314 doi 10 1515 9783110741124 015 ISBN 9783110741124 Robinson James M 1990 The Nag Hammadi Library in English 3th revised edition New York HarperCollins ISBN 978 0060669355 Roig Lanzillotta Lautaro 2021 The Discourse on the Eighth and the Ninth NHC VI 6 the Prayer of Thanksgiving NHC VI 7 and the Asclepius NHC VI 8 Hermetic Texts in Nag Hammadi and Their Bipartite View of Man Gnosis Journal of Gnostic Studies 6 1 49 78 doi 10 1163 2451859X 12340102 Ruska Julius 1926 Tabula Smaragdina Ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der hermetischen Literatur Heidelberg Winter OCLC 6751465 Saif Liana 2021 A Preliminary Study of the Pseudo Aristotelian Hermetica Texts Context and Doctrines Al ʿUṣur al Wusṭa 29 1 20 80 doi 10 52214 uw v29i1 8895 S2CID 244916418 Van Bladel Kevin 2009 The Arabic Hermes From Pagan Sage to Prophet of Science Oxford Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780195376135 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 537613 5 Van den Kerchove Anna 2012 La Voie d Hermes Pratiques rituelles et traites hermetiques Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies 77 Leyde Brill doi 10 1163 9789004223653 ISBN 978 90 04 22345 5 Van den Kerchove Anna 2017 Hermes Trismegiste Le messager divin Paris Editions Entrelacs ISBN 979 1 09 017447 4 Vereno Ingolf 1992 Studien zum altesten alchemistischen Schrifttum Auf der Grundlage zweier erstmals edierter arabischer Hermetica Vol Islamkundliche Untersuchungen band 155 Berlin Klaus Schwarz Verlag ISBN 978 3879972067 Weisser Ursula 1980 Das Buch uber das Geheimnis der Schopfung von Pseudo Apollonios von Tyana Berlin De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110866933 ISBN 978 3 11 086693 3 Editions of Hermetic texts edit Greek edit Kaimakis Dimitris 1976 Die Kyraniden Meisenheim am Glan Hain ISBN 9783445013347 Greek text of the Cyranides Mahe Jean Pierre 1984 Fragments hermetiques dans les papyri Vindobonenses graecae 29456r et 29828r In Lucchesi Enzo Saffrey Henri Dominique eds Memorial Andre Jean Festugiere Antiquite paienne et chretienne Geneva Cramer pp 51 64 OCLC 610335292 Vienna fragments Mahe Jean Pierre 2019 Hermes Trismegiste Paralipomenes Grec copte armenien Codex VI de Nag Hammadi Codex Clarkianus 11 Oxoniensis Definitions hermetiques Divers Vol V Paris Les Belles Lettres ISBN 9782251006321 Nock Arthur Darby Festugiere Andre Jean 1945 1954 Corpus Hermeticum Vol I IV Paris Les Belles Lettres ISBN 9782251001371 Greek text of the Corpus Hermeticum and of the Stobaean excerpts various fragments and testimonies Paramelle Joseph Mahe Jean Pierre 1991 Extraits hermetiques inedits dans un manuscrit d Oxford Revue des Etudes Grecques 104 495 496 109 139 doi 10 3406 reg 1991 2504 JSTOR 44264627 Oxford fragments Armenian edit Mahe Jean Pierre 1978 1982 Hermes en Haute Egypte Vol I II Quebec Presses de l Universite Laval ISBN 9780774668170 contains Armenian text of the Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius Mahe Jean Pierre 2019 Hermes Trismegiste Paralipomenes Grec copte armenien Codex VI de Nag Hammadi Codex Clarkianus 11 Oxoniensis Definitions hermetiques Divers Vol V Paris Les Belles Lettres ISBN 9782251006321 Armenian text of the Definitions of Hermes Trismegistus to Asclepius and French translation Arabic edit Badawi Abdurrahman 1947 al Insaniyya wa l wujudiyya fi l fikr al Arabi Beirut Dar al Qalam OCLC 163528808 pp 179 183 contain a small fragment from the Kitab al Isṭamakhis Badawi Abdurrahman 1955 al Aflaṭuniyyah al muḥdatha ʿinda al ʿarab Dirasat islamiyya 19 Cairo Maktabat al nahḍa al miṣriyya OCLC 976547332 pp 53 116 contain an edition of the Kitab fi zajr al nafs Bardenhewer Otto 1873 Hermetis Trismegisti qui apud Arabes fertur De castigatione animae libellum Bonn Marcus Arabic text of the Kitab fi zajr al nafs with a Latin translation by Bardenhewer Bonmariage Cecile Moureau Sebastien 2016 Le Cercle des lettres de l alphabet Da irat al aḥruf al abjadiyya Un traite pratique de magie des lettres attribue a Hermes Leiden Brill doi 10 1163 9789004321540 001 ISBN 978 90 04 31584 6 Arabic text and French translation Kunitzsch Paul 2001 Liber de stellis beibeniis In Bos Gerrit Burnett Charles Lucentini Paolo eds Hermetis Trismegisti Astrologica et Divinatoria Corpus Christianorum CXLIV Hermes Latinus IV IV Turnhout Brepols pp 7 81 ISBN 978 2 503 04447 7 Arabic and Latin text of the Liber de stellis beibeniis Turab ʿAli M Stapleton H E Hidayat Ḥusain M 1933 Three Arabic Treatises on Alchemy by Muḥammad bin Umail 10th century A D Memoirs of the Asiatic Society of Bengal 12 1 1 213 OCLC 29062383 contains Hermetic fragments with a o a commentary on the Emerald Tablet translated in Stapleton Lewis amp Taylor 1949 Toral Niehoff Isabel 2004 Kitab Giranis Die arabische Ubersetzung der ersten Kyranis des Hermes Trismegistos und die griechischen Parallelen Munchen Herbert Utz ISBN 3 8316 0413 4 Arabic translation of the first book of the Cyranides Ullmann Manfred 1994 Das Schlangenbuch des Hermes Trismegistos Wiesbaden Harrassowitz ISBN 978 3447035231 Arabic text of the Book of the Wise Hermes on the Properties of Snakes and Scorpions Ullmann Manfred 2020 Die arabischen Fragmente der Bucher II bis IV der Kyraniden Studia graeco arabica 10 49 58 Arabic translation of fragments from books 2 4 of the Cyranides Weisser Ursula 1979 Buch uber das Geheimnis der Schopfung und die Darstellung der Natur Buch der Ursachen von Pseudo Apollonios von Tyana Sources and Studies in the History of Arabic Islamic Science Aleppo Institute for the History of Arabic Science OCLC 13597803 Arabic text of the Sirr al khaliqa including a version of the Emerald Tablet Coptic edit Mahe Jean Pierre 2019 Hermes Trismegiste Paralipomenes Grec copte armenien Codex VI de Nag Hammadi Codex Clarkianus 11 Oxoniensis Definitions hermetiques Divers Vol V Paris Les Belles Lettres ISBN 9782251006321 text of Nag Hammadi VI with French translation Latin edit Burnett Charles 2001 Aristoteles Hermes Liber Antimaquis In Bos Gerrit Burnett Charles Lucentini Paolo eds Hermetis Trismegisti Astrologica et Divinatoria Corpus Christianorum CXLIV Hermes Latinus IV IV Turnhout Brepols pp 177 221 ISBN 978 2 503 04447 7 Latin text of the Liber Antimaquis a translation from the Arabic Kitab al Isṭamakhis Delatte Louis 1942 Textes latins et vieux francais relatifs aux Cyranides Paris Droz OCLC 901714095 Latin translation of the Cyranides Hudry Francoise 1997 1999 Le De secretis nature du Ps Apollonius de Tyane traduction latine par Hugues de Santalla du Kitaeb sirr al haliqa Chrysopoeia 6 1 154 Latin translation of the Sirr al khaliqa including a version of the Emerald Tablet Kunitzsch Paul 2001 Liber de stellis beibeniis In Bos Gerrit Burnett Charles Lucentini Paolo eds Hermetis Trismegisti Astrologica et Divinatoria Corpus Christianorum CXLIV Hermes Latinus IV IV Turnhout Brepols pp 7 81 ISBN 978 2 503 04447 7 Arabic and Latin text of the Liber de stellis beibeniis Nock Arthur Darby Festugiere Andre Jean 1945 1954 Corpus Hermeticum Vol I IV Paris Les Belles Lettres ISBN 9782251001371 Latin text of the Asclepius Steele Robert 1920 Secretum secretorum cum glossis et notulis Opera hactenus inedita Rogeri Baconi vol V Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 493365693 Latin translation of the Sirr al asrar pp 115 117 contain a version of the Emerald Tablet Steele Robert Singer Dorothea Waley 1928 The Emerald Table Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine 21 3 41 57 485 501 doi 10 1177 003591572802100361 PMC 2101974 PMID 19986273 contains Latin translation of the Emerald Tablet as it occurs in the Liber dabessi External links editThe Gnostic Society Library hosts translations of the Corpus Hermeticum the Asclepius the Stobaean excerpts and some ancient testimonies on Hermes all taken from Mead George R S 1906 Thrice Greatest Hermes Studies in Hellenistic Theosophy and Gnosis Vols 2 3 London Theosophical Publishing Society note that these translations are outdated and were written by a member of the Theosophical Society modern scholarly translations are found above as well as translations of the three Hermetic treatises in the Nag Hammadi findings reproduced with permission from the translations prepared by James Brashler Peter A Dirkse and Douglas M Parrott as originally published in Robinson James M 1978 The Nag Hammadi Library in English Leiden Brill Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hermetica amp oldid 1202349364 Arabic alchemical Hermetica, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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