Giuseppe Francesco Borri

Giuseppe Francesco Borri (Milan, 4 May 1627 – Rome, 20 August 1695) was an alchemist, prophet and doctor.

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Education

In 1644, together with his brother, Borri entered a Jesuit seminary in Rome. There he was taught by the Jesuit scholar Athanasius Kircher, who had an important influence on him. His intolerance of ecclesiastical authority deteriorated his relationship with his teachers (Borri even led a collective rebellion of seminarists, provoking the replacement of the Rector), and in 1650 Borri was expelled from the seminary.
He started his activity as a physician and alchemist among the pilgrims flocking to Rome for the Holy Year. In this period he met the Marquis Massimiliano Palombara, himself an alchemist, and in 1653 he took service with Count Federico Miroli, as physician and alchemist.

Prophecy

Borri also began his propaganda, both messianic and political, with the purpose of returning to an evangelically pure religion. Borri believed religion to be the foundation of every science and scientifical investigation. For him the whole world (Christian and non-Christian) should be conquered and ruled by a Papal theocracy, that should trailblaze the Kingdom to come: a sort of heavenly world, a new Golden Age, where the values of a renewed and universal Christianity would triumph. Borri considered himself (at least according to the later Inquisition’s records) Prochristus, that is prophet and herald of the new era.

The Legend

In a morning in 1657, a stranger is caught gathering herbs in the garden of Marquis Massimiliano Palombara; brought to the Marquis by the servants, he declared himself to be an alchemist, to have knowledge of the Marquis’ alchemical researches and to be able to show him the feasibility of transmutational work, without any request or reward, and to be interested in knowing Palombara’s methods and researches. The unknown stranger, after having performed various operations under Palombara’s eyes, asked for hospitality in a room near the laboratory, to be able to watch his own work; then he asked the Marquis to give him the keys to the laboratory, promising that he would explain everything to the Marquis after having completed his work; but for the moment he needed solitude and peace. Early next morning, Palombara knocked in vain at the laboratory’s door, and then at the pilgrim’s room. During the night, the latter had sneaked away through a window, leaving in the adjoining laboratory only an upside down crucible and, on the floor, a streak of gold, and a sheaf of papers covered with notes and hermetic symbols on the Great Work. Palombara ordered these symbols to be carved in several places in his mansion, and on the famous Porta Alchemica, the only surviving feature of the architectural beauties of Villa Palombara. The mysterious alchemist was claimed to be Borri. Discounting the legends, it is unthinkable that in the city of Rome devoted to hermetical studies, Borri and Palombara, both already rather famous, did not establish a relationship that would continue for all of Borri’s adventurous life.

The Court of Queen Christine of Sweden

In 1655, Borri met and probably frequented Queen Christine of Sweden and her court. The newly-converted catholic Queen had abdicated, coming to Rome to live there. In a cabinet transformed into a laboratory, the very learned Christine, a devoted alchemist, gave hospitality to alchemists and cabalists of different value and provenance. In 1657, the plague broke out in Rome (spreading very fast in central and southern Italy and in Genoa). Christine fled quickly from the city, as well as Borri, who went back to his hometown, Milan.

Milanese Affair

In Milan, Borri contacted the Quietist milieu, which was very diffused in Lombardy and gathered itself around Saint Pelagio’s church and the prophetic charisma of Giacomo Filippo Casola, a layman who was accused of heresy by the Inquisition and shortly after died in jail. Very soon Borri became the figurehead of the Milanese movement and the fervour generated by his predication culminated in a public gathering in the square of Milan cathedral in 1658. He was prosecuted for heresy and poisoning (the latter accusation refers to his alchemical knowledge). Meanwhile, the Inquisition arrested his followers, mostly low clergymen, many of them as young and fervent as Borri.
In 1659, he was called before the Roman Inquisition, while the Milanese Inquisition was still prosecuting his followers. He fled to Switzerland, was sentenced by default and was informed of the public abjuration of his Milanese followers. In January 1661, Borri’s effigy, after the verdict was read in public, was brought in procession to Campo de' Fiori, in Rome, the same place where, 60 years before, Giordano Bruno had been executed. Here it was hung, and burned together with the fugitive Borri's writings.

The Fame

Borri moved to Strasbourg, where the Protestant milieu welcomed him with enthusiasm. Borri was surrounded by a circle of fervent admirers, who glorified his ability as a physician and iatrochemist. Soon he became famous among the local noblemen, and his fame began to grow rapidly. In 1660, he moved to Amsterdam. His fame as a therapeutist and alchemist became European, was consecrated by royal and official honours. From all over Europe, princes and merchants flocked to consult the physician-alchemist. He extended his interests besides medicine and alchemy to several other fields: magic, cosmetics, engineering.
During this period, he met the famous scientist and Danish alchemist, Olaus Borrichius, then living in Amsterdam for his studies, who became an admirer of Borri and his knowledge. Borri even dedicated to Borrichius a book ([[Chymie Hippocraticae Specimina Quinque]], Köln, 1664). The character of the wise cabalist (The Great Dane) that we find in La Chiave del Gabinetto, Geneva, 1681, is perhaps inspired by Borrichius. In the same years, the Amsterdam city senate conferred on him honorary citizenship; in Europe several writings praising his wonder healings circulated since then.

According to Michael White in Isaac Newton: The Last Sorcerer, Sir Isaac Newton attempted to contact Borri in 1669, through Newton's friend Francis Ashton.

At the height of the fame, in debt from his luxurious lifestyle, and probably due to the obscure manoeuvres of envious rival physicians, Borri was forced to flee Amsterdam to avoid arrest.

The Arrest and the End

Borri sought refuge in Copenhagen as an alchemist at Frederick III’s court, which subsidised him liberally.

In Denmark, Borrichius’ homeland, Borri had many friends and helpers and, anyway, he came preceded by a solid reputation as a scientist. Meanwhile, other subsidies came from the former Queen Christine, then residing in Hamburg, interested in the mysteries of the Philosopher's Stone. At Frederick III’s court, Borri regained fame and honours, becoming a most trusted King’s councillor.

In 1670, when Christian V ascended to the throne, Borri’s fortune began to decline, so he resolved to leave Denmark and to move to Turkey. While journeying, he was arrested in Moravia, and thanks to Pontificial pressure, was given by Leopold I, Emperor of Austria, into the hands of the Vatican. Convicted to a life sentence, Borri, like his followers, was forced to perform a public act of abjuration and atonement.
Borri stayed in jail until 1678. His noble friends (in particular the French ambassador, the Duke of Estrées, who was healed by Borri under a papal dispensation that permitted him to visit the sick nobleman in his mansion) obtained for him a sort of semi-liberty. Borri lived in Castel Sant'Angelo, where he furnished a laboratory to continue his studies, and was able go out to practise his art in the mansions of his noble friends.

In this period he met again his old friends, Palombara and Queen Christina, and despite captivity, his fame as a healer and thaumaturge regained its old splendour in the Roman court.

In 1689 Christine of Sweden died, and the new Pope Innocent XII revoked the privileges granted to Borri. In 1691 he was imprisoned in Castel Sant'Angelo, where he was to die of disease in 1695. Having caught a fever, the great physician had prescribed himself quinquina’s bark, the most advanced cure then available. But the bark arrived too late, and on 16 August the fever claimed the life of Borri, at the age of 68.

Works

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See also