Basil Valentine

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18th century illustration to 3rd key, in Duodecim Claves
18th century illustration to 3rd key, in Duodecim Claves

Basilius Valentinus, also known under the Anglicized version of his name, Basil Valentine, was a 15th-century alchemist. He was the Canon of the Benedictine Priory of Sankt Peter in Erfurt, Germany. Even his name cannot be corroborated; during the 18th century it was suggested that he was Johann Thölde. The year given for his birth in Mainz, 1394, is also uncertain.

Valentine showed that ammonia could be obtained by the action of alkalies on sal-ammoniac, and how hydrochloric acid could be produced from acidizing brine.

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[edit] The Valentine/Paracelsus connection

Hermetic student Joshua Arent suggests that Basil Valentine was merely a nom de plume of German physician and alchemist Paracelsus, their works having a very close correspondence in philosophy, methodology and demeanor. Neither Valentine nor Paracelsus mentioned the other even though they shared exactly the same perspective on Alchemical and Spagyric philosophy. Both alchemists lived in roughly the same time frame, were native to Germany, shared the same religious preference (Benedictine Christianity) and shared an extreme disapproval of the medical establishment which they vocalized in their writings. It should be noted that early in his life Paracelsus was getting used to the monastic life whilst living with his father in a Benedictine cloister studying Alchemy and Latin.[1] The name Paracelsus was also a self chosen nom de plume of his real name Philippus Theophrastus Aureolus Bombastus von Hohenheim. Although there is controversy over when Basil Valentine existed, Waite points out that it can only be between the invention of printing and the time his works were published, i.e. from late 15th Century to the very beginning of the 1600’s. This is because of Valentine’s line in the ‘Triumphal Chariot’, “You should know that Antimony is used for a good many purposes besides those of the typographer.”

This possible double identity allows for a clearer contextual understanding between both Paracelsus' and Valentine's works.

[edit] Bibliography

Basilius Valentinus wrote dozens of important publications on alchemy in Latin and German. They have been translated into many Western European languages, including English, French, and others.

Most famous works (in Latin)
  • Currus Triumphalis Antimonii (The triumphal chariot of antimony)
  • Duodecim Claves philosophicæ (The twelve philosophical keys)
Many other works (in Latin and German)
  • Porta sophica
  • The Medicine of Metals
  • Of things natural and supernatural
  • Of the first tincture, root and spirit of metals
  • De microcosmo deque magno mundi mysterio, et medicina hominis, (Of the microcosm, of the great secrecy of the world, and the human medicine)
  • Libri quattuor de particularibus septem planetarum, (Book four : Of the features of the seven planets)
  • Experimenta chymica
  • Practica
  • Azoth
  • Compendium veritatis philosophicum (German)
  • Last will and testament

Valentinus had connections to the esoteric Freemasonry as his work Azoth proves (VA05, REBIS with the freemasonry square and compasses in the hands). Behind his works stood the secret knowledge of spiritual alchemy, the Opus Magnum.

[edit] External links

[edit] References

  • Paracelsus article by Alan G. Hefner
  • Waite, Arthur Edward (1992). Secret Tradition in Alchemy. Kessinger Publishing.