Michael Maier a jeho spis De medicina regia (1609)

His attack on fraudulent alchemists, Examen Fucorum Pseudo-chymicorum (1617), was analysed recently. De medicina regia, his early work, was recently discovered in the Royal Library in Copenhagen, which holds what seems to be the book’s only surviving copy. This book was printed 1609 in Prague, where...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inActa Universitatis Carolinae. Historia Universitatis Carolinae Pragensis Vol. 58; no. 1; pp. 85 - 96
Main Author Karpenko, Vladimír
Format Journal Article
LanguageCzech
English
Published Univerzita Karlova v Praze, Nakladatelství Karolinum 06.09.2018
Charles University in Prague, Karolinum Press
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Summary:His attack on fraudulent alchemists, Examen Fucorum Pseudo-chymicorum (1617), was analysed recently. De medicina regia, his early work, was recently discovered in the Royal Library in Copenhagen, which holds what seems to be the book’s only surviving copy. This book was printed 1609 in Prague, where Maier stayed for a short time between 1608 and 1610, joined the court of Emperor Rudolf II, and was elevated to the rank of Count palatine. De medicina, chemical aspects of which are the subject of this paper, turns out to be important also because its first part describes Maier’s life. It helped fill certain gaps in his previously rather incomplete biography. Although Maier claimed that his aim was to prepare a universal medicine, the main part of the work deals with alchemy. Maier claims that his efforts to produce a panacea were successful, but the recipe is not found in the book. Instead, he deals with transmutational alchemy, discusses various theories of matter, and describes laboratory practices. Especially in this field, Maier draws extensively on Pseudogeber’s Late Medieval Summa perfectionis magisterii. This attests to the importance of this treatise in Early Modern alchemy. Some recipes described in the De medicina are rather complicated, but all focus on achieving transmutation. References to Maier’s universal medicine are limited to several case reports.
ISSN:0323-0562
2336-5730
DOI:10.14712/23365730.2018.21