Background for Ars Magica sagas
Appendix I: Inventory and Chronology of Hermetic
Literature
To Thoth, the inventor of writing, the ancient Egyptians
attributed all sorts of books, especially magical writings, secret
techniques employed in temple workshops, and theological writings
recopied or composed by the priests in the "house of
life" (pransh; Nag Hammadi codex
6.61.20). Thus the Greek Hermetica that has come down to us can be
divided into two categories: works of occult sciences and
philosophical works.
- Among the works of occult sciences, A.-J. Festugiere
(1942-1953, vol 1, pp. 77, 240, 280) distinguishes three kinds: (1)
astrology, beginning in the third or second century BCE; (2)
alchemy, beginning in the second or first century BCE; and, (3)
magic, recorded in papyri of the fourth to seventh centuries CE
that reproduce sources obviously much more ancient.
- The philosophical works were originally grouped as collections
of the discourses of Hermes with his various disciples or of them
among themselves. Of this undoubtedly once abundant literature,
still preserved are only some fragments and the texts of a few
discourses that have come to us through subsequent intermediaries.
These may be grouped into chronological order as follows:
- Fragmenta Hermetica 1-36 (Nock and
Festugiere, 1945-1954, vol. 4): various fragments quoted in Greek,
Latin or Syriac by several authors, from Tertullian (second-third
century CE) to Bar Hebraeus (1226-1286). To these fragments should
be added the papyri Vindobonenses Graecae 29456r
and 29828r,as well as an Armenian fragment[144] and several Syriac
fragments.[145]
- Asclepius 1-41: a Latin adaptation of Logos
Teleios, finished probably after 320 and before 410.
- Nag Hammadi codex 6 (c. 340-370 CE)
containing Coptic translations of three treatises:
- Nag Hammadi codex 6.6, preserved without
title and currently called The Discourse on the Eight and
Ninth;
- Nag Hammadi codex 6.7, The Prayer That
They Spoke, parallel to Aclepius 41 and to the
Papyrus Mimaut of Paris;
- Nag Hammadi codex 6.8, without title, a
fragment of Logos Teleios parallel to Asclepius 21-29 and
to three Greek quotations cited by Lactantius around 320, Cyril of
Alexandria around 435, and Joannes Stobaios around 500. The
allusions of John Lysdus(sixth century CE) to this same text can
hardly be regarded as mere quotations.
- Stobaei Hermetica 1-29: fragments or treatises quoted
in Greek by Joannes Stobaios in his Florilegium, which he
compiled around 500 for the education of his son.
- Definitions of Hermes Trismegistos for Asclepius,
translated from Greek into Armenian, probably in the second half of
the sixth century CE Definitions 10.7 repeats Stobaei
Hermetica 19.1; Definitions 11 is an interpolation
drawn from Nemesius (c. 390 CE)
- Corpus Hermeticum 1-14 and 16-18: a compilation of
Hermetic treatises done after Stobaios and before Michael
Constantine Psellus (eleventh century CE).
As for dating the various treatises, the Logos Teleios
(Asclepius, Nag Hammadi codex 6.7, 6.8) is scarcely older
than the thrid century CE Most of the Greek texts seem to have been
written in the second century BCE, yet they seem to rest on even
older sources. Indeed, it is sometimes a case of works or
compilations which we no longer possess, such as the Sayings of
Agathodemon, the General Discourses, or the
Diexodica. The Papyri Vindobonenses
Graecae, copied at the end of the second century CE,
informs us that at that a time a collection of the logoi
of Hermes to Tat, comprising at least ten treatises, had already
been made. Strabo on a visit to Egypt in 24-20 BCE, mentions some
Hermetic literature that was not only astrological but
philosophical. Finally, since the Corpus Hermeticum 1.31
contains precise allusions to Jewish liturgy, it probably precedes
the expulsion of Jews from Egypt after the revolt of 115-117. Yet
since Definitions of Hermes Trismegistos for Asclepius 9.4
is the source of Corpus Hermeticum 1.18, it dates at the
latest from the first century CE and could well go back even
further.[146]
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