Henrici Cornelii Agrippae ab Nettesheym, armatae militae equitis aurati, et iuris vtriusque ac medicinae doctoris Operum pars posterior. : Quorum catalogum exhibibunt tibi paginae sequentes. Vna cum rerum et verborum hoc tomo memorabilium indice, & locuplete & certo. Huic accesserunt epistolarum ad familiares libri septem, & orationes decem ante hoc seorsim edita.
Lugduni: Per Beringos Fratres, 1630. Henrici Cornelii Agrippae ab Nettesheym, armatae militae equitis aurati, et iuris vtriusque ac medicinae doctoris Operum pars posterior. : Quorum catalogum exhibibunt tibi paginae sequentes. Vna cum rerum et verborum hoc tomo memorabilium indice, & locuplete & certo. Huic accesserunt epistolarum ad familiares libri septem, & orationes decem ante hoc seorsim edita
The later part of the works of Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa of Nettesheim, a knight of the golden army, and doctor of both law and medicine. : The following pages will show you a catalog of these. Along with an index of memorable things and words in this volume, both rich and accurate. Added to this are seven books of letters to friends, and ten speeches published separately before this.
Lugduni. Per Beringo's Fratres. (Without year) about 1630.
1156 pp, with title vignette, Velum binding.
Caillet 82, 84; cf. Rosenthal 11. - This is a follow-up work to the 2-volume: "Opera. In Duos Tomos Concinne Digesta accessit Ars norotia." (see Ferguson I,13 for this). The found dates range from around 1530 to 1630, but presumably the latter is correct. - The volume contains, as already the "Opera" did, various works by Agrippa, such as the important writing "De incertitudine & vanitate Scientarum" (On the Vanity of Science), a satirical afterword to the "Occulta Philosophia." Or "In Artem brevem Raymundi Lullij. Commentaria," a commentary on a work by Raymond Lull (see the illustration for this). Further examples: "De nobilitate & praecellentia foeminei sexus"; "De triplici ratione cognoscendi Deum lib un."; "Regime, seu Antidota ad versus pestem." The first part ends with an index, and the second part from page 681 forms "Epistolarum ad Familiares, & eorum ad ipsum libri, now published for the first time." - Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim (1486-1535), Philosopher and Doctor, who led an adventurous life. He fought against the belief in witchcraft and set up a system of Kabbalistic philosophy; in 1533 he was charged with 'black magic.' Agrippa is considered one of the fathers of Western esoteric science. Item #101804
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