02895nam 2200433 n 450 99638598610331620200824121331.0(CKB)4940000000071999(EEBO)2248567569(UnM)99838066e(UnM)99838066(EXLCZ)99494000000007199919901024d1624 uy |engurbn||||a|bb|Nicholas Flammel, his exposition of the hieroglyphicall figures which he caused to bee painted vpon an arch in St. Innocents Church-yard, in Paris. Together with the secret booke of Artephius, and the epistle of Iohn Pontanus: concerning both the theoricke and the practicke of the philosophers stone. Faithfully, and (as the maiesty of the thing requireth) religiously done into English out of the French and Latine copies. By Eirenæus Orandus, qui est, vera veris enodans[electronic resource]Imprinted at London By T[homas] S[nodham] for Thomas Walkley, and are to bee solde at his shop, at the Eagle and Childe in Britans Bursse1624[12], 240, [8] p., folding plateIncludes translations of "Liber secretus artis occultae" by Artephius and "Epistola de lapide philosophorum" by Joannes Pontanus.Printer's name from STC.The space for the dedicatee's name on A2r is left blank. Variant: "the C. D. of E." [the Countess Dowager of Exeter?] is printed in this space.Reproductions of the originals in the British Library and the Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery.Appears at reel 1486 (British Library copy) and at reel 1631 (Henry E. Huntington Library and Art Gallery copy).eebo-0018Figures hierogliphiques.Nicholas Flammel, his exposition of the hieroglyphicall figures which he caused to bee painted upon an arch in St. Innocents Church-yard, in Paris.AlchemyEarly works to 1800Mural painting and decorationFranceParisEarly works to 1800AlchemyMural painting and decorationFlamel Nicolasd. 1418.919720Artephius941739Pontanus Joannesd. 1572.1009604Orandus Eirenaeus1009605Cu-RivESBOOK996385986103316Nicholas Flammel, his exposition of the hieroglyphicall figures which he caused to bee painted vpon an arch in St. Innocents Church-yard, in Paris. Together with the secret booke of Artephius, and the epistle of Iohn Pontanus: concerning both the theoricke and the practicke of the philosophers stone. Faithfully, and (as the maiesty of the thing requireth) religiously done into English out of the French and Latine copies. By Eirenæus Orandus, qui est, vera veris enodans2332042UNISA