The most sacred trinosophy
The Most Sacred Trinosophy is an 18th century French esoteric manuscript and is attributed to the Count of Saint Germain . It was owned by Alessandro Cagliostro and was confiscated by the Inquisition during his imprisonment in 1789. It is an initiatory alchemical revelation with explanatory occult symbols. The original MS 2400 is richly illustrated and is in the Troyes library . No other versions of the manuscript are currently known.
The book reveals a very good knowledge of the Talmud and the Hebrew Bible and is full of Hebrew and Aramaic words. However, according to Raphael Patai, not all of these words are legible because the copyist did a poor job. According to Patai, the author also had some knowledge of Arabic and knowledge of Yiddish.
expenditure
- The Most Holy Trinosophia of the Count of Saint-Germain , Los Angeles, The Philosophical Research Society, 1933 (reprints), with an introduction by Manley Palmer Hall
- La Très sainte trinosophie. Édition intégrale du texte du manuscrit unique de la Bibliothèque de Troyes et des variantes des “Annales maçonniques”, 1808, précédée d'une enquête bibliographique et historique par René Alleau , Paris, Denoël, 1971
- Most Holy Trinosophia. Translated and explained by Konrad Dietzfelbinger. Königsdorfer Verlag 2010. ISBN 978-3-938156-19-3
Web links
- La Très Sainte Trinosophie large copies of almost all of the paintings
- The Most Holy Trinosophia: French and English web version
- The Most Sacred Trinosophy ( Memento from February 26, 2012 in the Internet Archive )
Individual evidence
- ^ Patai, The Jewish Alchemists, Princeton UP, 1994, p. 476