First Alchemists

Regular price €31.99
3RD-4TH CENTURY EGYPTIAN FEMALE ARTISAN THEOSEBEIA
A01=Tobias Churton
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ALCHEMISTS
APPARATUS
Author_Tobias Churton
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BAIN MARIE
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HRQC
Category=HRQX2
Category=QRYC
Category=QRYX2
Category=VXWM
CHEMICAL PROCESSES
CLEOPATRA
COP=United States
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FIRST ALCHEMIST RECIPES
IMPORTANCE OF CHANGING THE COLOR OF MATERIALS IN FIRST ALCHEMY
INGREDIENTS OF FIRST ALCHEMISTS
JEWESS MARIA THE PROPHETESS
Language_English
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Price_€20 to €50
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THE PHILOSOPHER'S STONE
THE PHILOSOPHER’S STONE
TRANSMUTING BASE MATERIALS INTO GOLD

Product details

  • ISBN 9781644116838
  • Weight: 515g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Jan 2024
  • Publisher: Inner Traditions Bear and Company
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
Delivery/Collection within 10-20 working days

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Explores the origins and practices of early alchemy.

Investigating the origins of alchemy and the legend of the Philosopher’s Stone, Tobias Churton explores the oldest surviving alchemical texts, the original purpose of the “Royal Art,” and the first alchemists themselves. He reveals the theories and philosophies behind the art and how early apparatus and methods were employed by alchemists through the ages.

Showing how women dominated early alchemy, Churton looks at the first known alchemist, the Jewess Maria the Prophetess, inventor of the bain marie, still in use worldwide today. He also looks at early alchemist Cleopatra (not the well-known Egyptian queen) and 3rd–4th century Egyptian female artisan Theosebeia, who had a guild of adepts working under her. He examines in depth the work of Zosimos of Panopolis and shows how Zosimos’s historic work inspired the medieval view of alchemy as an initiatory path whose stages follow the transmutation of base metals into gold.

Exploring the latest research on early practices in Upper Egypt, the author discusses the political and industrial realities facing the first alchemists. He examines the late antique “Stockholm” and “Leiden” papyri, which offer detailed knowledge of the first known Greco-Egyptian chemical recipes for gold and silver dyes for metal and stone, and purple dyes for wool. He emphasizes how changing color in early alchemy was misinterpreted to imply transmutation of one metal into another. He reveals how the alchemical secrets for working with the “living statues” of the Egyptian temples was jealously guarded by the priesthood and how secrecy helped to reinforce beliefs that alchemical knowledge came from forbidden, celestial sources. He also investigates the mysterious relation between alchemy, spiritual gnosis, Hermeticism, and the Book of Enoch.

Revealing the hidden legacy of the early alchemists, Churton shows how their secret workings provided a transmission line for ancient heretical doctrines to survive into the Renaissance and beyond.
Tobias Churton scholar, lecturer, composer, and religious TV director, is author of 27 published books, including biographies of William Blake, Aleister Crowley, G. I. Gurdjieff, and Elias Ashmole. A theology graduate of Brasenose College, Oxford, he was appointed Honorary Fellow in 2005 to lecture in Western Esotericism at Exeter University and is Britain’s leading scholar in the field, specializing in Gnostic, Hermetic, Rosicrucian, biblical, and Masonic studies. Invited to join Professor Boccaccini’s Enoch Seminar in 2019, his most recent books include Aleister Crowley in Paris and The Lost Pillars of Enoch.