Friday, 18 June 2010 | By: wicca

Occult Artifacts The Mirror Of John Dee

Occult Artifacts The Mirror Of John Dee
This mirror was hand-me-down by the Elizabethan mathematician, fortune-teller and magician John Dee (1527-1608/9) as a 'shew-stone', one of visit urbane sunny or pensive textile which he hand-me-down as tools for his occult research. The mirror, ended of highly-polished obsidian (volcanic space), was one of visit Mexica cult textile and raw materials brought to Europe at the rear of the overthrow of Mexico by Cort'es in the midst of 1527 and 1530. Mirrors were together with Tezcatlipoca, the Mexica god of rulers, warriors and sorcerers, whose name can be translated as 'Smoking Think about. Mexica priests hand-me-down mirrrors for insight and conjuring up visions. Dee had an suitability in optics and optical mirrors or eyeglasses as described in his unfettered life story and works. he was to boot inquisitive in psychic phenomena and, from 1583, worked with Edward Kelly as his medium. Kelly would see visions in the 'shew-stones' of 'angels' that communicated by pointing to one poise at the rear of discrete in tables of parcels and odd symbols, which Dee and Kelly transcribed.The comprise, ended to fit the obsidian mirror with its projecting position, has a paper label with the play of the English antiquary Sir Horace Walpole, who acquired the mirror in 1771. The script begins 'The Black Germ during which Dr Dee hand-me-down to dub his spirits...'. He has bonus later 'Kelly was Dr Dee's Relate and is mentioned with this very stone in Hudibras [a bitter poem by Samuel Butler, introductory published in 1664] Part 2. Verse 3 v. 631. Kelly did all his feats upon The Devil's Looking-glass, a Germ.'The British Museum has other textile together with John Dee (see Concurrent Bits and pieces and Information).*The motherland and culture we know as 'Aztec' referred to themselves as the Mexica (close by Me-shee-ka).J. Scarlet, 'Medieval and Complex Antiquities' in "Sir Hans Sloane: collector, sc" (London, The British Museum Bundle, 1994), pp. 119-221H. Tait, 'The Devil's Looking Glass: the magical speculum of Dr John Dee' in "Horace Walpole: writer, politi" (Yale University Bundle, 1967), pp. 195-212, "Prag um 1600: Kunst und Kultur", exh. cat. (Wien, Kunsthistorisches Museum; Freren, Luca Verlag, 1988)N.H. Clulee, "John Dees natural philosophy:" (London and New York, Routledge, 1988)

Reference: religion-events.blogspot.com