Tuesday, August 09, 2011
15 Weird and Mysterious Books
The list, care of Business Pundit.
From the piece (and pictured above)...
The Book of Soyga
John Dee was a famed Elizabethan scholar, mathematician, astrologer, occultist, and alchemist. He was a consultant to the court of Queen Elizabeth, and — even more impressively at the time — owned the largest library in England, some 3000 volumes.
Dee believed the Book of Soyga, also called Aldaraia by the magician, to have been revealed to Adam in the garden of Eden by God’s angels. The book itself was a 16th century treatise on magic, and about as likely to be celestially derived as this article is (Hint: it’s not). The mystery of this book actually starts after Dee’s death. Dee’s fantastic library had been ransacked during his several years spent on the European continent, and he was forced to sell much of the remaining volumes to support himself at the end of his life. The Book Of Soyga was presumed to be lost until 1994, when the scholar Deborah Harkness discovered two copies, in embarrassingly obvious places: the British Library in London, the Bodleian Library in Oxford.
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I doubt the graphic above is from the Book of Soyga or the Aldaraia. Instead, it looks to me to be a page out of the Voynich manuscript. The Soyga is a completely translated, thoroughly studied Latin treatise on magic that indeed has much to do with John Dee. The Voynich has yet to be cracked, and any supposed tie with a known author appears tenuous at best. Not that you've done this, but lumping very different books together simply because they're strange may be human nature. However, the assumptions born of that action can lead only to blind alleys. The Voynich seems to suffer this fate quite a bit. http://voynichbirths.blogspot.com
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