Alchemy and Authority in the Holy Roman Empire

Alchemy and Authority in the Holy Roman Empire

  • Tara Nummedal
Publisher:University of Chicago PressISBN 13: 9780226608570ISBN 10: 0226608573

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Alchemy and Authority in the Holy Roman Empire is written by Tara Nummedal and published by University of Chicago Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 0226608573 (ISBN 10) and 9780226608570 (ISBN 13).

What distinguished the true alchemist from the fraud? This question animated the lives and labors of the common men—and occasionally women—who made a living as alchemists in the sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Holy Roman Empire. As purveyors of practical techniques, inventions, and cures, these entrepreneurs were prized by princely patrons, who relied upon alchemists to bolster their political fortunes. At the same time, satirists, artists, and other commentators used the figure of the alchemist as a symbol for Europe's social and economic ills. Drawing on criminal trial records, contracts, laboratory inventories, satires, and vernacular alchemical treatises, Alchemy and Authority in the Holy Roman Empire situates the everyday alchemists, largely invisible to modern scholars until now, at the center of the development of early modern science and commerce. Reconstructing the workaday world of entrepreneurial alchemists, Tara Nummedal shows how allegations of fraud shaped their practices and prospects. These debates not only reveal enormously diverse understandings of what the "real" alchemy was and who could practice it; they also connect a set of little-known practitioners to the largest questions about commerce, trust, and intellectual authority in early modern Europe.