Gaffarel, James. Unheard-of Curiosities: Concerning the Talismanical Sculpture of the Persians; The Horoscope of the Patriarkes; And the Reading of the Stars.

AUCTION 66 | Thursday, November 19th, 2015 at 1:00
Fine Judaica: Printed Books, Manuscripts, Ceremonial Objects and Graphic Art

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Lot 260
(KABBALAH).

Gaffarel, James. Unheard-of Curiosities: Concerning the Talismanical Sculpture of the Persians; The Horoscope of the Patriarkes; And the Reading of the Stars.

<<FIRST EDITION IN ENGLISH.>> Occasional appearance of Hebrew. Translated from the French by Edmund Chilmead. Three fold-out plates of the “Celestial Constellations Expressed by Hebrew Characters.” pp. (40), 433, (1). Lightly stained, two of the folding plates defective with loss. Contemporary calf, rubbed and rebacked. 8vo. Wing G105; Wellcome III, 80.

London: By G.D. for Humphrey Moseley 1650

Est: $2,000 - $2,500
One of the chief exponents of 17th-century Christian Kabbalism, French Catholic Jacques Gaffarel (1601-81) was a scholar of Oriental languages who defended the Kabbalah against attacks by Mersenne and others. Librarian to Cardinal Richelieu he was a also a respected astrologer. This, Gaffarel’s most celebrated work is most wide-ranging. It includes a defense of the Jews against several classic calumnies and a positive examination of astrology from the Persian tradition. Within his account of minerals, Gafarrel launches into an examination of the concept of the “talisman,” a figure or image engraved within a mineral which has the ability to tap the power of a celestial constellation. Much discussion is present concerning the suggested mystical powers of the Hebrew letters as well as the theory that the constellations have been arranged in the form of letters, and by knowing how to “read” the heavens, one may foretell the future. Hence the presence in the volume of woodcut celestial maps upon which stars have been depicted in the form of Hebrew letter