This is a seventeenth-century copy of a fifteenth-century translation and re-working of the Rosarius Philosophorum, one of the most important texts in the corpus of alchemical works that circulated under the name of Arnald of Villanova (c.1240-1311). Villanova was a Catalan physician; his authentic writings include important medical treatises, as well as numerous works of theology. His ties with the spiritual Franciscans and beliefs concerning the imminent coming of the Antichrist led to the condemnation of his writings by the theology faculty of the University of Paris.
The work is extant in only two known copies. This particular copy is notable for its detailed illustrations of alchemical equipment and contemporary marginal notes; there are ninety-four pen-and-ink drawings added to spaces left blank by the scribe and introduced by captions. Blank spaces for drawings never completed are found on three folios. The illustrations likely depict actual contemporary alchemical equipment due to the care and realistic detail with which they have been rendered.
The work is bound in contemporary limp vellum stretched over pasteboard. The smooth spine is inscribed with a title in ink, “Petit Rosaire d’Arnaud de Villeneuve.” Rubbed, darkened and slightly soiled, ties missing, covering at top and bottom corners and bottom of spine slightly damaged. Work is digitized in its entirety.
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1. Written c. 1600-1640, most likely in Northeastern France in the area of Arras or Cambrai, or Rouen.
2. Signed J. Gilbert, the physician of the Archbishop of Rouen (n.d.) 1743: “J. Gilbert, adr[?] l’archeveque medic. Rothomag. 1743.”
3. Signed “B.D. Delevue[?], 18th or 19th century.
4. Unidentified early engraved heraldic bookplate, inside front cover, lion rampant azure.
5. Modern cataloguing notes in pencil.
6. Belonged to Joost R. Ritman (b. 1941); acquired in 1999 from Chastenay; Bibliotheca Philosophia Hermetica MS 204 (bookplate, inside front cover).
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- (Verso of the last blank leaf) "“Qui philosophorum secretum quaerit et non est philosophus fatuus est. Nam hoc secretum est abditis et obscuris naturae” (He who seeks the secret of the philosophers [the philosophers’ stone] and is not a philosopher is a fool, for this secret lies among the hidden and obscure things of nature)"
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Public Domain Mark 1.0
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- Courtesy of Science History Institute
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“Le Petit Rosaire,” circa 1600–1640. https://digital.sciencehistory.org/works/oqapiil.
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