Egyptian Alchemy
Egyptian Alchemy
Egyptian Alchemy
Throughout history, the ancient Egyptians have been known to be innovative thinkers, producing
works across all manner of the scientific world. They built the tombs and pyramid temples of
pharaohs. They produced hieroglyphs and created the method of preservation--the embalming
and mummification processes. They synthesized a monarchy whose royal line can be said to be
descended from their pantheon of gods. All in all, the civilization had a hand in many mediums.
It is no surprise, then, that alchemy is believed to have originated from a place filled with myth
and magic. Most ancient Egyptians believed that their knowledge of the arcane came
predominantly as gifts from their god of wisdom, Thoth. In fact, legend even has it that Thoth
put forth the works of alchemy in an Emerald Tablet.
Egyptian alchemy gained its importance due to two things: metallurgy and mummification.
The chartomi drew up a link between body and spirit through the use of the metals and the
celestial bodies of the planets. For the Egyptian alchemists, the seven metallurgic elements
became linked with the seven "planets".
Greek Alchemy
The Greeks have a lot to boast about regarding alchemy as well. In fact, they're probably
attributed with naming half the terms in the alchemical universe. Hermes Trismegistus, hermetic
art, and Khemia (Black Art) are only some of the alchemical terms that have endured for almost
two millennia.
One major cause of this spread of alchemy from Egypt to Greece was Alexander the Great. So
in love with Egyptian culture, he adopted quite a few practices of the civilization, one of which
was alchemy. By the time alchemy mixed with Greek thinking, it developed further through the
studies of the Greek philosophers (or as Pseudo-Demokritos the alchemist calls them, his
fellow-prophets).
The Elements
As opposed to the previous numbers (seven, nine, five...yikes, we're getting so many sacred
numbers at this point!) mentioned in the lessons, the Greeks discarded all of them and followed
their predecessors in the classical thinking. Greek classical thinking attributes the four elements
(okay, five, really) to Aristotle and Plato. These four elements (Fire, Air, Water, and Earth)
produce a balance in the physical, natural world. I say five because while the philosophers
acknowledge that the four elements are observable manifestations in nature, the fifth, Aether, is
not. When mixed, the four elements can produce hot, dry, moist, and cold properties, whereas
Aether (also called the quintessence, for quint) removes itself from the physical world. When the
four "physical" elements are at a balance, so is the fifth.
Greek Fire
One of the most fascinating alchemical works done by the Greeks would have to be Greek fire, a
mixture of incendiary materials. This commodity was coveted by even the Arabs, who sought to
conquer the west by way of the Bosphorus (a strait between Europe and Asia). The Byzantines
utilized Greek fire to the best of their ability, often the weapon made the difference between
victory and defeat. Between the 9th and 10th centuries, the Arabs attacked Constantinople
(what is now known as Istanbul) through the use of warships. As the Arab fleet approached the
Byzantine city, Greek fire was poured into the Bosphorus, setting the ships aflame. The damage
was heavy, and the Arab fleet was destroyed. This happened several times during the course of
the centuries (though by 1453, Byzantium ceased to exist). Even as the Arabs finally did take
over the city, Greek fire was a lost recipe to them, for the alchemists carried the secret to their
graves. In fact, Callinicus of Heliopolis, the Byzantine alchemist thought to have created Greek
fire, had smuggled the recipe out of Constantinople before the city's demise. To this day, debate
on what substances were used to create Greek fire continues on, though there has been no
definite answer to the mystery.
"As the sun is, so to speak, a flower of the fire and (simultaneously) the heavenly sun, the right eye of the world, so copper when it blooms—that is when it
takes the color of gold, through purification—becomes a terrestrial sun, which is king of the earth, as the sun is king of heaven."
- Zosimos of Panopolis -
Likely the most prolific of the Greek alchemists, Zosimos has even undergone the task of
compiling an encyclopedia of alchemy. By the end of his life, his alchemy encyclopedia reached
28 volumes, one for each letter of the Greek alphabet, plus an extra four for the added Byzantine
letters during the era.
Zosimos made a number of contributions to alchemy, one of which was the isolation of arsenic
(kids, don't try this at home). The other was perhaps the more important bit: the realization that
chemical reactions can be induced by the use of a catalyst. Of course, this now borders into the
science of chemistry, but for Zosimos, such catalysts were called "tinctures," and most of the
time, these catalysts are found within the confines of the four elements.
Zosimos believed in the higher power, following in the footsteps of Maria the Jewess. In his
accounts of the origin of alchemy, the secret knowledge came from the angels of heaven. Upon
falling in love with mortal women, the angels alighted onto earth and married these women,
gifting them with the secret knowledge of nature. From the knowledge of the women came the
book "chema," from which alchemy was born (and, later on, chemistry would develop).