Thaddaeus Hagecius, or Hájek, 1526-1600
Title
Thaddaeus Hagecius, or Hájek, 1526-1600
Subtitle
Bohemian Polymath of the Rudolfine Period
Price
€ 128,99
ISBN
9789048565818
Format
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Number of pages
308
Language
English
Publication date
Dimensions
15.6 x 23.4 cm
Also available as
Hardback - € 129,00
Table of Contents
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Introduction: Hagecius, a Renaissance Man - Martin Jemla
I. Medicine: Hajek's Lifelong Practice - Bohdana Divisova
II. Social Role: Physician in Renaissance Society - Zdenek Kalivoda
III. Botany: Mattioli, Handsch, and Hajek - Lucie Strnadova
IV. Astrology: The Hermetic Context of Hajek's Work - Vojtech Hladky
V. Metoposcopy: Cardano, Physiognomy, and the Signatura Rerum - Jakub Hlavacek
VI. Alchemy: The Czech Lands and Rudolfine Prague - Ivo Purs
VII. Chymiatry: Hajek's Way into Alchemy - Ivo Purs
VIII. Astronomy: New Cosmology and Lutheran Theology - Tomas Nejeschleba
Resume - Martin Jemla
Works of Tadeas Hajek
General Bibliography
Index
Note on the Authors

Martin Zemla (ed.)

Thaddaeus Hagecius, or Hájek, 1526-1600

Bohemian Polymath of the Rudolfine Period

Tadeas Hajek of Hajek (1526–1600), Latinized as Thaddaeus Hagecius ab Hagek/Hayek, was a key figure in early scientific debates not only in his native Bohemia. A versatile scholar and polymath, he was prolific in medicine, botany, mathematics and astronomy. Modern interpreters tended to point out his astronomical interpretations to emphasize his greatest achievements and his “modernity.” However, Hajek also drew extensively on traditional arts such as alchemy, astrology and metoposcopy. In this volume, the contributors study various aspects of Hayek’s thought to present a less tendentious intellectual portrait of him in the context of his times. Even from this more adequate perspective, he remains an important figure in the dialectical process of transmitting ideas whose influence extended far beyond the Czech lands.
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Editor

Martin Zemla

Mgr. Ing. Martin .emla, PhD, research fellow at the Centre for Renaissance Texts, Palacky University, Olomouc, and head of the publishing department OIKOYMENH at the Institute of Philosophy, Prague. He has been working on German Mysticism, Renaissance Platonism and Paracelsianism.