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Jennis, Lucas

Michael Maier, Symbola Aitreae Mensae Duodecim Mationum (Frankfurt Lucas Jennis, 1617), 507-52. The illustration appears on page 509. [Pg.41]

Michael Maier, De Circulo Pfysico Quadrato (Oppenheim Lucas Jennis, 1616), 23. [Pg.51]

Another example of Paracelsian alchemical eschatology is found in Johann Daniel Mylius, Philosophia Reformata (Frankfurt Lucas Jennis, 1622), which contains a precise sequence of images describing the... [Pg.60]

Lambsprinck, De lapide philosophko e germanico latine redditus per Micolaum Bemaudum Delphinatum Modicum. .. (Frankfurt Lucas Jennis, 1625). [Pg.167]

Symbola Aitreae Mensae Duodecim Matiomm (Frankfurt Lucas Jennis, 1617). [Pg.168]

Mylius, Johann Daniel, Philosophia Reformata (Frankfurt Lucas Jennis, 1622). [Pg.168]

Emblem XLIV, Michael Maier, Atalanta Fugiens (Oppenheim Lucas Jennis, 1617 1618). With the permission of the British Library, London. [Pg.208]

This is a well known work which was first published by Nicholas Bamaud in 1599. It consisted of a series of 15 verses outlining the alchemical process. It was later issued by Lucas Jennis as part of Dyas chymica tripartita, 1625, and this was illustrated with a series of 15 engravings, together with a symbolic coat-of-arms and a frontispiece". Illustrations only. Enlarged illustrations available. Links to the 15 individual illustrations... [Pg.132]

Description of the illustrations. "This poem was first printed in Nicolas Barnaud, Triga chemica de lapide philosophico tractatus tres..., Leiden 1599, but without illustrations. This was reprinted in volume III of the Theatrum Chemicum, 1602. It was issued by Lucas Jennis three times in 1625 with a series of 15 emblems. The three books issued were Dyas chymica tripartita, the Musaeum hermeticum, and De lapide philosophico. [Pg.132]

Silentium post Clamores. Frankfurt Luca Jennis, 1617. [Pg.205]

The Royal Society of Chemistry) and (b) Lucas Jennis engraving of the wyrm Ouroboros that swallows its own tail, published on an alchemical emblem-book entitled De Lapide Philisophico (1625). [Pg.633]

As already noted, Maier returned to Germany in summer 1616. He first settled in Frankfort, probably to be near his publishers de Bry and Lucas Jennis the younger (1590- after 1630), who in the next nine years printed the majority of his publications. ... [Pg.135]


See other pages where Jennis, Lucas is mentioned: [Pg.206]    [Pg.206]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.21]    [Pg.40]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.77]    [Pg.119]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.168]    [Pg.148]    [Pg.161]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.136]    [Pg.5]    [Pg.1051]    [Pg.136]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.135 , Pg.136 , Pg.140 , Pg.143 , Pg.144 , Pg.145 , Pg.146 ]




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