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The Jewish Alchemists [Paperback]

Raphael Patai (Author)
4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0691006423 978-0691006420 October 16, 1995
In this monumental work, Raphael Patai opens up an entirely new field of cultural history by tracing Jewish alchemy from antiquity to the nineteenth century. Until now there has been little attention given to the significant role that Jews played in the field of alchemy. Here, drawing on an enormous range of previously unexplored sources, Patai reveals that Jews were major players in what was for centuries one of humanity's most compelling intellectual obsessions.

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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

This scholarly work is the first attempt to trace the role of Jews in the field of alchemy from biblical times through the 19th century. A helpful introduction defines alchemy as more than the effort to transmit base metals into gold. The chronological presentation devotes several chapters to individual alchemists, while other chapters cover key manuscripts, treatises, and movements in the history of Jewish alchemy. In an especially absorbing chapter, the author describes the relationship of alchemy and kabbalism, with the latter introducing a mystical and spiritual context for alchemical theories. The conclusion asserts that pre-Enlightenment Jewish alchemists saw in alchemy a connection to their religious observance. Here alchemy comes to be seen as one of the few fields of intellectual endeavor where Jews were allowed to interact with gentiles on an equal basis. For larger Jewish studies collections.
Mark Weber, Kent State Univ. Lib., Ohio
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Kirkus Reviews

A long and quirky look at 1,800 years of minimal Jewish involvement with a pseudoscience, adding little of use either to Jewish history or to the history of science. As he did with The Hebrew Goddess (not reviewed), Patai offers an oxymoronic title and a strained thesis: in this case, that Jews played a major role in the pursuit of the chimerical science of alchemy. While he admits that a only tiny minority of alchemists were Jews, Patai goes on to suggest--but never to prove--that ``the [Jewish] people at large may have believed in the reality of alchemy.'' He dredges up the belief of Hellenist and Muslim adepts of the early Middle Ages that biblical figures were alchemists. Such claims regarding the patriarch Jacob, for example, merely rest on his longevity (a prime alchemical goal) and the mention of a stone on which he props his head (inexplicably associated with the philosopher's stone). With an assortment of obscure charts, tables, and doctrines, the book moves from centuries of Hellenist and Muslim domination of alchemy (with only a Jew or two on the periphery) to 14th-century European Christendom. Apparently the only legitimate reason to connect Judaism to alchemy is that a few curious Jews recorded the ``science'' of their time in Hebrew and ``saved originally non-Jewish alchemical writing for posterity.'' Instead of attempting to establish a link between alchemy and Judaism, Patai might have explored centuries of Christendom's superstitious association of Jews with magical, esoteric, and dark arts. Moreover, he doesn't back up his claim that medieval alchemists were ``the forerunners of modern chemistry,'' so we can't even salvage something for the history of science from this wasteland of bizarre and rather useless information. The real alchemy here is the magical way academics can turn a simple thesis into a 587-page book and a gold mine of research grants. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 633 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (October 16, 1995)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691006423
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691006420
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,037,813 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Ian Myles Slater on An Interesting Experiment, September 22, 2003
By 
Ian M. Slater "aylchanan" (Los Angeles, CA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Jewish Alchemists (Paperback)
The "Kirkus Review" description (quoted as part of the Amazon listing) seems to miss the point. Although historians of both Alchemy and Judaism have been in agreement that the Jewish role in the development and spread of alchemy was either non-existent or tiny, the alchemical texts themselves insist otherwise. The main lines of development have been traced from Hellenistic Egypt, through the Islamic world, and into Christian Europe, with little or no need for Jewish sources or transmitters, and most Jewish historians have been satisfied (or delighted) to agree.

Indeed, in influential writings on the psychological meanings of alchemical symbolism, C. G. Jung went so far as to reclassify the several Jewish alchemists cited and quoted in Alexandrian Greek documents as really Jewish Christians. (He had a theory that transmutation was a material metaphor for transubstantiation, which required a Christian origin before alchemy reached Islam.)

The late Raphael Patai amassed a huge amount of information, including alchemical manuscripts in Hebrew (translated with commentaries herein), and set about to consider the cases of supposed alchemists described as Jewish, and real alchemists supposed by someone to be Jewish, in detail. While many particular instances are unconvincing, the interplay he demonstrates between medicine and alchemy on the one hand, and alchemical and mystical circles on the other, does suggest that at least a minor theme in Jewish intellectual life has been ignored by modern scholarship.

The main problem with the book is that it really requires backgrounds in both Jewish and alchemical studies to follow and judge Patai's arguments. However, to be fair, it does not offer itself as a primer in either subject. You will have to look elsewhere, and there is ample bibliographic information.

A few examples of what it offers:

Harry Potter fans will here encounter the real Nicholas Flamel of Paris (a real man, if not necessarily really an alchemist), and his supposed Jewish source-book for the philosopher's stone. Patai does not seem to me to advance the argument much, but he does demonstrate that the legend is part of a larger body of material about Jewish books falling into Christian hands. He also has some useful comments on the obliviousness of English and European scholars to each other's writings on Flamel, and some deeply embedded errors of translation in English-language treatments.

Patai's argument for a genuine Hebrew original of the "autobiography" of the magician and alchemist "Abramelin" is interesting, but he manages to misrepresent Gershom Scholem's changes of mind on the subject. Scholem, in a note in "On the Mystical Shape of the Godhead" (German edition 1962, English translation 1991; pages 314-315, note 24 to "Tselem: The Concept of the Astral Body"), which Patai does not cite, explains that since first treating it as Jewish in 1925 he had found Renaissance Christian sources for the book's Jewish concepts and post-biblical Hebrew and Aramaic. However, it is worthwhile to have Patai's citations of the German version, in addition to that translated from French into English by MacGregor Mathers in 1898 (reprinted some years ago by Dover). (Also, some of A.E. Waite's reasons for rejecting the Jewish origin of the text, in his "Ceremonial Magic," such as the paternal blessing of children and the concept of guardian angels, are actually minor evidences for it!)

There is an interesting, and to my mind inconclusive, reconsideration of some the works formerly attributed to the Christian mystic Ramon Lull (various spellings), and their possible Jewish background.

Working notes of actual alchemists, including a multi-lingual dictionary of instruments and materials which is valuable evidence of cross-cultural influences in several directions.

All in all, a useful book for anyone already familiar with basic works on the history of alchemy, or with an interest in Jewish studies, and a good addition to a library with at least basic collections in both these subjects.
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12 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Essential Resource, July 14, 2000
By 
Willa Keizer (Santa Cruz, CA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Jewish Alchemists (Paperback)
I was very pleased to find that, like Patai's HEBREW GODDESS, this book combines thorough and excellent scholarship with translations of rare sources that are otherwise impossible to find. Patai does not claim the Jewish Patriarchs were alchemists, but in his broad chronological exploration of the topic begins with the historical development of later attributions of the Alexandrian alchemist Miriam by Arabic and other alchemists to one of the biblical Miriams of the New Testament or to Miriam, wife of Moses. The Alexandrian alchemist Mirian, like Cleopatra, was considered by Zosimos and others to be one of the great founders. As one would expect, her identity was eventually attributed to legendary times by medieval practitioners. Her Jewish name implies to Patai and other scholars that the earliest historical Jewish practice of alchemy developed in the heterodox Hermetic and Gnostic schools of Alexandria during the second to fourth centuries of the Common Era. Patai's voluminous research thoroughly explores the Jewish-Islamic stream of alchemy through early and late medieval periods. It provides, for the first time, a basis for students of the Western mystery tradition to understand the Jewish-Egyptian-Spanish esoteric stream that derived from the Pythagorean and Gnostic school of Akhmim near Nag Hammadi and Thebes in Upper Egypt, which indirectly produced such mysterious literary figures as "Abramelim the Mage." A good supplement for Patai's absolutely essential work would be Peter Kingsley's research on the survival of Neo-Pythagroean and Hermetic tradition in Akhmim, from which the Arabic Hermetic scientists, philosophers, and alchemists derived their knowledge.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Jewish Alchemists, November 16, 2009
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Despite the bulk of this volume and the considerable amount of material it presents, it should not be considered more than a prolegomenon to the history of the Jewish work in alchemy and the role of Jews in contributing to its theory and practice. For one thing, the author was not able to consider all the existing alchemical writings, especially the material still in manuscript and scattered in many libraries all over the world. Although a great number of alchemical manuscripts written in Hebrew or in Judeo-Arabic and Ladino (in Hebrew characters) are accessible, no such collection exists of alchemical manuscripts written by Jews in characters other than Hebrew. Those are still buried in hundreds of libraries all over the world, and wait to be discovered and identified. Hence the impression created by the material in this book, that the Jews wrote most of their alchemical works in Hebrew characters, is probably wrong, and will have to be corrected by locating, evaluating, and publishing Jewish alchemical writings in other languages - a truly Herculean task.

Another reason why this book must be considered merely a prolegomenon is that the author was able to refer only very occasionally to the personal relationships between Jewish and non-Jewish alchemists (such as those between the Greek Zosimus, the Arab Avicenna, and the French Flammel and their respective Jewish masters), and the literary influences between Jewish alchemical writings on the one hand, and the many times more numerous alchemical works produced in the Muslim and Christian worlds from the end of antiquity to modern times, on the other. Thorough studies comparing the alchemical theories and practices of the Jews with those of the Muslims and Christians, and investigating the contacts between them, will be needed before one can write a truly authoritative history of Jewish alchemy and its role in the development of the "Royal Art" since Hellenistic times.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
SCHOLARS who have written about alchemy are far from agreeing about what alchemy actually is (or was). Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
abovementioned water, alchemical mastery, alchemical expertise, pulverized gold, sal ammoniac water, prepared antimony, aforementioned water, alchemical prescriptions, tint crystal, kabbalistic sefirot, distilling vessel, chemica curiosa, alchemical authors, warm dung, ammoniac salt, sensate things, alchemical circles, purified silver, alchemical subjects, supernal mystery, alchemical recipes, quinta essentia, fifth essence, alchemical procedures, white herb
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Abraham Eleazar, Maria the Jewess, Raymund de Tarrega, King Solomon, Middle Ages, Great Art, Jesus Christ, Children of Israel, Hellenistic Egypt, King Edward, Hayyim Vital, Holy Scripture, Grand Priest, Royal Art, Comte de Saint-Germain, Judah Halevi, Ibn Sind, Moses de Leon, Raymund Lull, Baron de Donop, Mestre Ventura, Pope Gregory, Uraltes Chymisches Werck, Abraham the Jew, King David
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