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See also: Egyptian See also: Hermes, i.e
.
See also: Thoth (q.v.), the See also: god of wisdom
.
In See also: late hieroglyphic the name of Thoth often has the epithet " the twice very See also: great," sometimes " the thrice very great "; in the popular language (demotic) the corresponding epithet is " the five times very great," found as early as the 3rd century n.c
.
See also: Greek See also: translations give 6 peyas Kai peyas and peyrrros: rpiQµeyas occurs in a late magical text
.
6 TpuvpeywQTOS has not yet been found earlier than the 2nd century A.D., but there can now be no doubt of its origin in the above Egyptian epithets
.
Thoth was " the scribe of the gods," " See also: Lord of divine words," and to Hermes was attributed the authorship of all the strictly sacred books generally called by Greek authors Hermetic
.
These, according to Clemens Alexandrinus, our See also: sole See also: ancient authority (Strom. vi. p
.
268 et seq.), were See also: forty-two in number, and were subdivided into six divisions, of which the first, containing ten books, was in See also: charge of the " See also: prophet" and dealt with See also: laws, deities and the See also: education of priests; the second, consisting of the ten books of the stolistes, the official whose duty it was to dress and See also: ornament the statues of the gods, treated of sacrifices and offerings, prayers, See also: hymns, festive processions; the third, of the " hierogrammatist," also in ten books, was called " hieroglyphics," and was a repertory of cosmographical, See also: geographical and topographical information; the four books of the " horoscopus " were devoted to astronomy and See also: astrology; the two books of the " chanter " contained respectively a collection of songs in honour of the gods and a description of the royal See also: life and its duties; while the See also: sixth and last division, consisting of the six books of the " pastophorus," was medical
.
Clemens's statement cannot he contradicted
.
See also: Works are extant in papyri and on See also: temple walls, treating of geography, astronomy, ritual, myths, See also: medicine, &c
.
It is probable that the native priests would have been ready to ascribe the authorship or inspiration, as well as the care and See also: protection of all their books of sacred See also: lore to Thoth, although
there were a goddess of writing (Seshit), and the ancient deified See also: scribes Imuthes and Amenophis, and later inspired doctors Petosiris, Nechepso, &c., to be reckoned with; there are indeed some definite traces of such an attribution extant in individual cases
.
Whether a See also: canon of such books was ever established, even in the latest times, may be seriously doubted
.
We know, however, that the See also: vizier of Upper See also: Egypt (at See also: Thebes) in the eighteenth dynasty, had 40 (not 42) See also: parchment rolls laid before him as he sat in the See also: hall of
See also: audience
.
Unfortunately we have no hint of their contents
.
Forty-two was the number of divine assessors at the See also: judgment of the dead before See also: Osiris, and was the See also: standard number of the nomes or counties in Egypt
.
The name of Hermes seems during the 3rd and following centuries to have been regarded as a convenient pseudonym to place at the See also: head of the numerous syncretistic writings in which it was sought to combine Neo-Platonic philosophy, Philonic Judaism and cabalistic theosophy, and so provide the See also: world with some acceptable substitute for the See also: Christianity which had even at that See also: time begun to give indications of the ascendancy it was destined afterwards to attain
.
Of these pseudepigraphic Hermetic writings some have come down to us in the See also: original Greek; others survive in Latin or Arabic translations; but the majority appear to have perished
.
That which is best known and has been most frequently edited is the HotµavSplls sive De potestate et sapientia divina (Hotµav&prlc being the Divine Intelligence, rotµily avbpwv), which consists of fifteen chapters treating of such subjects as the nature of God, the origin of the world, the creation and fall of See also: man, and the divine See also: illumination which is the sole means of his deliverance
.
The editio princeps appeared in See also: Paris in s554; there is also an edition by G
.
Parthey (1854); the See also: work has also been translated into See also: German by D
.
See also: Tiedemann (1781)
.
Other Hermetic writings which have been preserved, and which have been for the most See also: part collected by Patricius in the Nova de universis philosophia (1593), are (in Greek) 'Iarpoµafhguartica srpos "Aµµwva Atyiirrtov, Ilepl xaraKMC!EWS voa'ouvrwv aeptyvwartxa, 'Ex rift AaBrfµartxils E>rtvrifµrls rpos Aµµwva: (in Latin) Aphorismi sive Centiloquium, Cyranides ; (in Arabic, but doubtless from a Greek original) an address to the human soul, which has been translated by H
.
L
.
Fleischer (An die menschliche Seek, 1870)
.
The connexion of the name of Hermes with See also: alchemy will explain what is meant by hermetic sealing, and will account for the use of the phrase " hermetic medicine " by See also: Paracelsus, as also for the so-called " hermetic See also: freemasonry " of the See also: middle ages
.
Besides Thoth, Anubis (q.v.) was constantly identified with
Hermes; see also See also: Host-us
.
See See also: Ursinus, De Zoroastre, Hermete, &c
.
(See also: Nuremberg, 1661); Nicolas Lenglet-Dufresnoy, L'Histoire de la philosophie hermetique (Paris, 1742); Baumgarten-Crusius, De librorum hermeticorum origine atque See also: indole (See also: Jena, 1827); B
.
J
.
Hilgers, De Hermetis Trismegisti Poemandro (1855); R
.
M6nard, Hermes Trismegiste, traduction See also: complete, precedee d'une etude sur l' origine See also: des livres hermetiques (1866) ; R
.
Pietschmann, Hermes Trismegzstus, nach dgyptischen, griechischen, and orienlalischen fberlieferungen (1875); R
.
Reitzenstein, Poimandres, Studien zur griechisch-agyptischen and fr2lhchristlichen Literatur (See also: Leipzig, 1904) ; G
.
R
.
S
.
Mead, Thrice Greatest Hermes (1907), introduction and See also: translation
.
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