I learned Alchemy from Medieval Manuscripts. Here's how it works:
Summary
TLDRThe video explores an ancient Egyptian recipe found in the Leiden Papyrus X, an Egyptian text stolen by grave robbers and later studied in the 19th century at Lieden University in the Netherlands. This recipe, involving three simple ingredients, creates a liquid that can tarnish silver, giving it a golden hue. This process resembles early alchemical practices aimed at imitating precious materials. The recipe releases toxic fumes, highlighting the dangerous yet elegant nature of early crafting science. The papyrus contains over 200 recipes, similar to those in the Stockholm Papyrus, used for creating fake natural treasures. These practices reflect the beginnings of alchemy, blending Egyptian craftsmanship with early Greek philosophical concepts. The history and evolution of alchemical ideas from ancient to medieval times are traced through various pseudo-epigraphic figures like Democritus and manuscripts like the Marcianus Graecus 299. Later, alchemical processes in the Middle Ages further developed these foundational ideas, influencing how materials were categorized and manipulated.
Takeaways
- đź“ś The Leiden Papyrus X holds over 200 alchemical recipes from 3rd century Egypt.
- 🔍 The recipe turns silver a golden color, mimicking precious metals.
- 🚧 The process is hazardous due to toxic sulfur fumes.
- 🧪 Three common ingredients make this ancient preparation work.
- 🏛️ The Papyrus mixes Egyptian craft with Greek philosophy, creating early alchemy.
- đź“– The text is part of a tradition of pseudoepigraphy in alchemy's history.
- ⚗️ Alchemy involves understanding substance qualities: hot, cold, wet, dry.
- 🌌 Pseudo-Democritus texts immensely influenced alchemical traditions.
- 🧱 Alchemical lore speaks about combining substances' attributes artfully.
- đź”® Medieval alchemists expanded on Greek-Egyptian methods, developing new processes.
Timeline
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
The ancient recipe from the lien Papyrus X, at least 1,700 years old, was stolen and made its way to Leiden University in the 1800s. The recipe uses three simple but dangerous ingredients, releasing poisonous sulfur fumes and tarnishing silver with a golden hue. It's one of over 200 recipes imitating treasures in the Leiden and Stockholm papyri, showcasing early alchemical practices.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
The recipe is linked to the early Greek-Egyptian period of alchemy, blending Greek philosophy with Egyptian craft traditions. The recipes are mostly practical without extensive theoretical explorations, serving as a formulary. They reflect early, simpler stages of alchemical practice before the idea of a Philosopher’s Stone or deep matter investigation emerged.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
One Stockholm Papyrus recipe credits 'Democratus,' a figure of pseudo-authorship in alchemy, suggestive of a narrative linking philosophy and Eastern mystical learnings. This pseudo-democratus claimed roots in ancient Greek thought and was a notable figure for false attributions in alchemical manuscripts, broadening the narrative lineage of alchemical practice.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
The earliest Greek-Egyptian alchemical texts come from 'Physica Kisa,' ascribed to Democratus, dating to the first century. This document, though fragmented, shows more theoretical reflection than the later papyri, positing that substances can transmute and claiming an essential oneness underlying all material diversity, a core idea in alchemy.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
Pseudo-Democratus’s view of alchemy focused on the combination and manipulation of substances' natures rather than their distinct identities. Alchemsits looked for qualities—like a metal’s ability to mimic gold's color or nobility—and aimed to achieve desired qualities through synthetic transformations, describing alchemy as an art of combining different natures.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
The chemical qualities of substances, such as fire-like quicklime, were key in alchemical processes. Alchemists leveraged the heating of substances to abstract elements, using tools like calcination to understand and manipulate matter's qualities, indicating a deep experimental foundation behind alchemical transformations and manipulations.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Medieval alchemy evolved into a systematic framework with processes like calcination and sublimation to isolate and combine different elemental qualities. The heat separated elements into groups; similarly characterized materials were sublimated together, reflecting an attempt to bring theoretical cohesion, indicative of evolving sophisticated understanding.
- 00:35:00 - 00:40:00
Alchemists synthesized materials to understand elemental combinations, with substances like salammoniac revealing compounds that seemed to defy straightforward elemental categorization. These syntheses showed that even contradictory elemental characteristics could coexist, emphasizing how foundational experimentation was for determining alchemical properties.
- 00:40:00 - 00:45:00
Developing into a refined craft, alkali demonstrated practical alchemical applications. By calcining and processing tartar and lime, alchemists created potent substances for experimentation. Energy and dissolution processes illustrated how alkalis served as solvents and unifiers in elemental transmutation, showcasing alchemical skill in unifying opposing principles.
- 00:45:00 - 00:51:02
Alchemy’s legacy influenced modern chemistry, laying groundwork with concepts from alkali to metal isolation. Potassium’s lilac spectral glow, unnoticed until modern chemistry's advent, marks alchemical roots in elemental science. Further exploration of alchemical tradition, philosophy, and misconceptions promises more insights into its enduring intrigue and historical impact.
Mind Map
Faqs
- What is the Leiden Papyrus X?
The Leiden Papyrus X is an ancient Egyptian text containing over 200 recipes, believed to be from Thebes, and related to early alchemy.
- What was the purpose of the recipe found in the papyrus?
The recipe tarnishes silver with a golden hue to imitate natural treasures, revealing early alchemy's craft.
- What safety precautions are needed to perform the ancient recipe?
A well-ventilated environment and a respirator rated for sulfur fumes are necessary due to the release of toxic fumes.
- How is the recipe linked to alchemy?
The recipe illustrates an early form of alchemy by simulating precious materials using simple ingredients, reflecting the art's transmutational goals.
- Who was Democritus in relation to alchemy?
Pseudo-Democritus was a figure attributed with ancient alchemical writings, often under the guise of the famous philosopher.
- What does the term 'al-kimiya' signify?
'Al-kimiya' is the Arabic term for alchemy, which later evolved into the Western term 'alchemy' through translations and mispronunciations.
- What are the foundational qualities of substances in alchemy?
Substances are defined by qualities like dry, wet, hot, and cold, which underpin alchemical transformations.
- What is Alkali, as mentioned in alchemical practices?
Alkali is a water-dissolvable fiery substance made by combining quicklime with substances like potash; it's a key element in transmutations.
- What role did pseudoepigraphy play in alchemy's history?
Many alchemical texts were attributed to famous figures under false pretenses, helping to propagate and preserve the knowledge through historical narratives.
- What was the theoretical basis of early Egyptian alchemy?
It was based on combining natural substances' qualities to mimic desired properties, such as making base metals gold-like.
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- 00:00:01this recipe comes from a Papyrus that
- 00:00:03was buried with its owner in Egypt
- 00:00:05sometime in the 3rd Century from 200 to
- 00:00:08300 ad making it at least over
- 00:00:121,700 years old the Papyrus called the
- 00:00:16lien Papyrus X probably came from
- 00:00:18somewhere in thieves the Egyptian
- 00:00:21thieves not the Greek thieves it was
- 00:00:23stolen from its resting site by grave
- 00:00:26robbers and sold on to a collector in
- 00:00:28the 1800s only eventually making its way
- 00:00:31to lien University in the Netherlands
- 00:00:34where it was first translated and
- 00:00:36researched because of this the details
- 00:00:38of its Discovery and exactly where or
- 00:00:40with whom it was buried are not
- 00:00:43known the recipe is strikingly simple
- 00:00:46and highly refined making use of only
- 00:00:48three ingredients all of which are very
- 00:00:51common and without any one of which the
- 00:00:53recipe will not
- 00:00:57work admittedly the combin comination of
- 00:01:00these three ingredients is a little
- 00:01:02gross in practice and releases poisonous
- 00:01:04sulfur fumes for me to do this safely a
- 00:01:07well ventilated environment and
- 00:01:09respirator rated for these fumes is a
- 00:01:11bare minimum I imagine the Egyptian
- 00:01:13Workshop that made this stuff would have
- 00:01:15had quite an odor to it I really would
- 00:01:18not try this at home despite its
- 00:01:20off-putting fumes and strange
- 00:01:22ingredients it's an elegant preparation
- 00:01:25and works just as described ominously
- 00:01:28the Papyrus tells us we've completed the
- 00:01:30recipe as soon as it begins to look a
- 00:01:32little like
- 00:01:34blood now watch as I dip this
- 00:01:37silverplated spoon into the fowl
- 00:01:39concoction wherever the solution touches
- 00:01:42the silver the spoon is tarnished a sort
- 00:01:45of glimmering golden color almost as
- 00:01:48though the mysterious liquid has the
- 00:01:49mightest
- 00:01:50touch this is the 89th recipe of the
- 00:01:54lighten Papyrus X just one of over 200
- 00:01:58recipes contained within it and its
- 00:02:00sister the Stockholm Papyrus all with
- 00:02:03similar aims of imitating natural
- 00:02:06Treasures I've been working off of Earl
- 00:02:09kayle's translation of the lien and
- 00:02:11Stockholm papy which is a dated
- 00:02:14translation but freely available online
- 00:02:16from the University of Cincinnati with
- 00:02:19informative commentary from William B
- 00:02:21Jensen which I'll link to in the
- 00:02:23description the liquid I've made here is
- 00:02:26called sulfur water or possibly Divine
- 00:02:29water is the Greek word used Theon means
- 00:02:32both sulfur and divine silver smiths in
- 00:02:35the audience might recognize it as the
- 00:02:37tarnish you get when you mix liver of
- 00:02:39sulfur with a little dilute ammonia and
- 00:02:42like any other silver tarnish it can be
- 00:02:45easily removed with a light abrasive the
- 00:02:48author undoubtedly knew this but they
- 00:02:51also knew most regular folk couldn't
- 00:02:54tell the Stockholm Papyrus contains
- 00:02:56similar recipes for mimicking precious
- 00:02:59stones like emeralds and rubies and
- 00:03:02plenny the Elder mentions this countery
- 00:03:05of nature in his natural histories
- 00:03:08telling us that there is no other kind
- 00:03:10of fraud practiced by which larger
- 00:03:12profits are made the Traditions these
- 00:03:15recipes reflect were the beginnings of
- 00:03:17The Craft of alchemy the mysterious and
- 00:03:21greatly misunderstood art of
- 00:03:25transmutation this recipe along with
- 00:03:27many others across the history of
- 00:03:29alchemy has been previously reproduced
- 00:03:32by Professor Lawrence pipe at John's
- 00:03:34Hopkins University pipe is a professor
- 00:03:37of both history and also organic
- 00:03:40chemistry at John Hopkins and as you
- 00:03:43might imagine his focus is the history
- 00:03:46of alchemy I first learned of the
- 00:03:48lighten Papyrus a number of years ago
- 00:03:50from pipe's phenomenal overview of
- 00:03:53alchemy entitled the secrets of alchemy
- 00:03:56if you're looking for a good book to
- 00:03:58read about the history of alchemy there
- 00:03:59there's none better to start with than
- 00:04:01this
- 00:04:02one in this video I'd like to explore
- 00:04:05the craft tradition of alchemy a little
- 00:04:08and reproduce some alchemical processes
- 00:04:11to show how this Arcane art worked and
- 00:04:13what it looked like however to really
- 00:04:16understand how Alchemy worked we have to
- 00:04:18try to get at its theoretical component
- 00:04:20too how Alchemists understood what they
- 00:04:22were doing how they concocted their
- 00:04:24recipes and made use of the Art's
- 00:04:26fascinating abilities this is UN
- 00:04:29intimidating topic as Alchemy existed
- 00:04:32across Millennia and went through a
- 00:04:34constant evolution of ideas and
- 00:04:36Frameworks of which we can only hope to
- 00:04:39scratch the surface of in this video to
- 00:04:42start I'd like to look at that recipe I
- 00:04:44just performed a little closer and try
- 00:04:47to understand its context within the
- 00:04:49wider
- 00:04:51tradition the lien and Stockholm papy
- 00:04:54are the oldest artifact examples of
- 00:04:56writing associated with the Greek
- 00:04:58Egyptian period of Alchemy centered
- 00:05:00around Egypt in the first Millennium ad
- 00:05:03it's called Greek Egyptian because it
- 00:05:06was strongly influenced by the Greek
- 00:05:08culture of Egypt introduced during its
- 00:05:10long rule by the Greek pharaohs of the
- 00:05:12toic dynasty for example despite the
- 00:05:16fact that they were likely written by an
- 00:05:18Egyptian scribe the lien and Stockholm
- 00:05:21papy are written in the Greek language
- 00:05:24Professor pipe suggests Alchemy
- 00:05:26essentially arose out of an application
- 00:05:28of ancient Greek philosophy to ancient
- 00:05:31Egyptian craft traditions and from the
- 00:05:34evidence I've seen this certainly holds
- 00:05:36true these papy come about so early in
- 00:05:39the historical record that they are
- 00:05:41generally considered Proto Alchemy being
- 00:05:44that they lack many of the definitive
- 00:05:46theoretical ideas of the later
- 00:05:47alchemical Traditions there's no
- 00:05:50Philosophers Stone at this point nor is
- 00:05:53there really any clear underlying
- 00:05:55investigation of matter in these papy
- 00:05:58there's a few sparse refer references to
- 00:06:00theory that we'll get to in a minute but
- 00:06:02for the most part it's essentially just
- 00:06:04a collection of recipes meant to mimic
- 00:06:06precious substances this doesn't mean
- 00:06:09the author didn't have theories or
- 00:06:11wasn't interested in that kind of thing
- 00:06:13we really can't jump to that conclusion
- 00:06:16it's very likely that these papy were
- 00:06:19intended to be used as a reference text
- 00:06:21for someone who already knows the
- 00:06:23workings of the field essentially making
- 00:06:25it an Egyptian alchemical formulary or a
- 00:06:28book of recipes you wouldn't really
- 00:06:31expect a formulary to explain to you the
- 00:06:33workings of nature because of this if we
- 00:06:36want to actually learn how to do alchemy
- 00:06:38we'll have to look elsewhere the papy
- 00:06:40have no original title and list no
- 00:06:43author we'd have basically nothing to go
- 00:06:46off of for where these recipes came from
- 00:06:48if it weren't for one interesting
- 00:06:51exception recipe 2 of the Stockholm
- 00:06:53Papyrus is otherwise much like the other
- 00:06:56recipes in the papy except that it it
- 00:06:59references its source it tells us the
- 00:07:02recipe came from democratus and was
- 00:07:04transmitted through an axilus this is
- 00:07:07undoubtedly a reference to the famous
- 00:07:09ancient Greek philosopher democratus of
- 00:07:12abdur the philosopher who developed
- 00:07:14Greek atomic theory however democratus
- 00:07:18of abidur never wrote about alchemy and
- 00:07:21alchemical texts won't mention atomism
- 00:07:24for many centuries it was a common
- 00:07:27practice at this period of time to write
- 00:07:29under the name of democratus pretending
- 00:07:31to be the famous Greek philosopher
- 00:07:34spreading your work under their guise
- 00:07:36the recipe in the papy almost certainly
- 00:07:39came from a pseudo
- 00:07:41democratus people attributing their work
- 00:07:44to the name of a famous figure is called
- 00:07:46a pseudo graphic tradition and the
- 00:07:49history of alchemy is filled with pseudo
- 00:07:52graphic Traditions only very rarely do
- 00:07:55alchemical authors ever write with their
- 00:07:57actual names and often times Alchemists
- 00:08:00who belong to the same school of alchemy
- 00:08:02or who adhere to the same theoretical
- 00:08:04system will all write under the same
- 00:08:06name this was especially true in the
- 00:08:09Islamic period of alchemy where
- 00:08:11literally centuries worth of writing was
- 00:08:14all said to be written by one pivotal
- 00:08:16Alchemist jabir iban hyen at the time
- 00:08:20the LI in Papyrus was written the pseudo
- 00:08:22graphic tradition around democratus was
- 00:08:25especially Rich it had concocted a
- 00:08:28popular narrative of the philosopher
- 00:08:30traveling to Egypt and the near East
- 00:08:33learning about magic and the secrets of
- 00:08:35nature from Persian Magi specifically
- 00:08:38the Great Sage
- 00:08:41tines writing under the name democratus
- 00:08:43this way was especially popular among
- 00:08:46people writing about magical topics
- 00:08:49Richard Gorden who wrote book three of
- 00:08:51the textbook Witchcraft and magic in
- 00:08:53Europe ancient Greece and Rome tells us
- 00:08:55that this pseudepigraphy around
- 00:08:57democratus spawn a sort of of natural
- 00:09:00magic tradition unlike some other forms
- 00:09:02of magic that c their power by invoking
- 00:09:05demons or deities this mer natural magic
- 00:09:09was inherently based on the powers
- 00:09:10innate within nature and natural
- 00:09:13substances because of this
- 00:09:15pseudepigraphy the democratus mentioned
- 00:09:18in the Papyrus could be pretty much
- 00:09:20anyone their real identity will probably
- 00:09:22always be a mystery however we have an
- 00:09:25interesting lead though the lien and
- 00:09:28Stockholm pap irus of the earliest
- 00:09:30artifact texts of the alchemical
- 00:09:32tradition they're not the earliest known
- 00:09:35writing on the subject this is a page
- 00:09:38from marcianus grus 299 it's a codex
- 00:09:41compiled by Byzantine scribes around the
- 00:09:4411th century ad and contains an
- 00:09:47assortment of copies of earlier Greek
- 00:09:50Egyptian alchemical texts some of which
- 00:09:53were originally authored before the lien
- 00:09:56and Stockholm Papyrus these aren't whole
- 00:09:58text texts just fragments the scribes
- 00:10:01chose to preserve but what is preserved
- 00:10:03reflects the vast majority of our
- 00:10:05knowledge of early Greco Egyptian
- 00:10:07Alchemy the earliest text preserved in
- 00:10:10the Codex is ascribed to none other than
- 00:10:12democratus it is entitled physica Kisa
- 00:10:16which is Greek for something along the
- 00:10:18lines of natural and secret which I have
- 00:10:21here translated into English by
- 00:10:24Professor Mato Martelli in his critical
- 00:10:26Edition Professor Martelli is a
- 00:10:29brilliant historian and has used the
- 00:10:31book's mineral terminology to date the
- 00:10:34original writing of the physica chisa to
- 00:10:37around the first century a nearly 2,000
- 00:10:41years ago and he has suggested the
- 00:10:43author may have lived in the city of
- 00:10:45Alexandria in Egypt this is one of the
- 00:10:49longest and most complete texts
- 00:10:51preserved in marcianus graus 299 though
- 00:10:54it's still missing some pieces its fth
- 00:10:57book on the making of of precious stones
- 00:11:00has been lost
- 00:11:02entirely in my personal opinion what
- 00:11:04remains of the physa Kisa might be one
- 00:11:07of the most fascinating texts ever
- 00:11:09written on first glance it appears much
- 00:11:12like the lien in Stockholm Papyrus a
- 00:11:14list of recipes the techniques
- 00:11:16demonstrated are technologically similar
- 00:11:18to those in the lien Papyrus and are
- 00:11:20undoubtedly from the same craft
- 00:11:22tradition however unlike the lighten
- 00:11:24Papyrus that gives very little in the
- 00:11:26way of underlying Theory the recipes in
- 00:11:29the physica KSA are interrupted by the
- 00:11:32author's rants on the working of the art
- 00:11:35it's in no way a textbook this is
- 00:11:37clearly meant to be read by someone who
- 00:11:39already understands the craft just as
- 00:11:41with the ltin Papyrus but pseudo
- 00:11:43democratus is enamored by the workings
- 00:11:45of Nature and can't help himself from
- 00:11:48waxing lyrical about the beauty and
- 00:11:51power of His craft all will dropping
- 00:11:53hints about how it works he tells us not
- 00:11:57just that gold and silver and Stones can
- 00:11:59be made this way but that anything at
- 00:12:02all can be made through an understanding
- 00:12:03of this art he takes it a step further
- 00:12:06and uses his art to make Grand
- 00:12:08statements about the nature of the
- 00:12:10universe he tells us that this art
- 00:12:12demonstrates that all things are in
- 00:12:14reality made of the same thing claiming
- 00:12:17that the plurality of matter is an
- 00:12:19illusion or that beneath all things
- 00:12:22there is one thing taking on different
- 00:12:24firms this idea is essential to Alchemy
- 00:12:28it's what makes transmutation or the
- 00:12:30changing of a substance's identity
- 00:12:33possible but it isn't original to pseudo
- 00:12:36democratus Greek philosophers had been
- 00:12:38toying with something along these lines
- 00:12:41for a long time which the historian G ly
- 00:12:45covers in his book early Greek science
- 00:12:48thees to Aristotle in it he discusses
- 00:12:51the so-called problem of change or how
- 00:12:54can one thing turn into another even
- 00:12:57some of the very early prec atic
- 00:12:59philosophers had suggested there must be
- 00:13:01one underlying thing anaximander
- 00:13:04suggested that there must be some IND
- 00:13:06definite thing he called boundless that
- 00:13:10firms all other things later on
- 00:13:12Aristotle had suggested an idea known as
- 00:13:15the proton elay Greek for first matter a
- 00:13:19notion later medieval Alchemists would
- 00:13:22refer to in Latin as the Prima Materia
- 00:13:25finding and understanding the nature of
- 00:13:28this first first matter would become
- 00:13:30known as an alchemical Arcanum a sort of
- 00:13:33goal for Alchemists to achieve amongst
- 00:13:36other Arcanum like the closely related
- 00:13:39philosopher
- 00:13:40stone these strange rants are only a
- 00:13:43small piece of what the physa kimsa has
- 00:13:46to offer and I'm definitely going to
- 00:13:48cover more of this book's contents in
- 00:13:50future videos but because I want to get
- 00:13:52back to doing some practical Alchemy
- 00:13:54before too long I'd like to specifically
- 00:13:57focus on just one component of of the
- 00:13:58physica chisa for now the makeup of
- 00:14:03substances I should say pseudo
- 00:14:06democratus never calls this stuff
- 00:14:08Alchemy at this point in history this
- 00:14:10craft had no name a few hundred years
- 00:14:13after writing the physic chisa The
- 00:14:16Alchemist zoos of Panopoulos who
- 00:14:18directly references the physa chisa in
- 00:14:21his work would refer to the craft as
- 00:14:24chemia which is our earliest known
- 00:14:26account of a name for the art when the
- 00:14:29books on chya made their way to the
- 00:14:31Islamic empire the Islamic practitioners
- 00:14:33added the Arabic article Al terming it
- 00:14:37alchemia then when alchemia made its way
- 00:14:40into Medieval Europe medieval European
- 00:14:42scribes mispronounced alchemia as
- 00:14:45Alchemy I mention all of this because
- 00:14:47this means pseudo democratus can't just
- 00:14:50tell us he does Alchemy when he tells us
- 00:14:52what the book is about he has to instead
- 00:14:55Define the art he tells us he strove to
- 00:14:59combine Natures or essentially to
- 00:15:01combine the qualities of substances to
- 00:15:04pseudo democratus to make a desired
- 00:15:06substance you search for the qualities
- 00:15:08of that substance scattered throughout
- 00:15:10nature collect together substances that
- 00:15:13each reflect one or more of the desired
- 00:15:15qualities and use the art to join them
- 00:15:18together into one substance in a way
- 00:15:20that maintains those desired qualities
- 00:15:23to pseudo democratus gold isn't
- 00:15:25necessarily A distinct substance as much
- 00:15:28as it is a combination of the qualities
- 00:15:30that make it metallic yellowish flexible
- 00:15:32fusible and perhaps most importantly
- 00:15:35Noble or resistant to fire base metals
- 00:15:38like lead are already metallic so you
- 00:15:40just need to alter their other qualities
- 00:15:42until they match Gold his gold mimicking
- 00:15:44comes on a spectrum the simplest recipes
- 00:15:47aren't meant to make gold as much as
- 00:15:49they're meant to just make a metal look
- 00:15:50yellow more complex ones aim to imitate
- 00:15:53more of Gold's qualities and the most
- 00:15:56complex try to imitate Gold's ability to
- 00:15:58resist fire without rusting it's not at
- 00:16:01all clear if he thinks this means he's
- 00:16:03actually made gold or if more so he sees
- 00:16:06his work is having overcome the
- 00:16:08undesirable or corrupt Natures of Base
- 00:16:11Metals making them more gold like it's
- 00:16:15important to recognize that these early
- 00:16:16Greco Egyptian Alchemists weren't
- 00:16:18underground criminals or anything but
- 00:16:21more likely they were Temple Crafts
- 00:16:23People and Artisan priests building off
- 00:16:26of older craft traditions the way they
- 00:16:29categorized matter was heavily
- 00:16:31influenced by their artistic aims one of
- 00:16:34the most striking differences between
- 00:16:36the physic kysa and the lien Papyrus is
- 00:16:39that the lien Papyrus almost always
- 00:16:41specifies exactly what substance to use
- 00:16:45whereas pseudo democratus will often
- 00:16:47times tell us to use any substance of a
- 00:16:49specific class he's categorized his
- 00:16:52reagents based on how they act and the
- 00:16:54qualities they confer to matter that
- 00:16:57sulfur water I made earlier here that's
- 00:16:59the kind of thing pseudo democratus
- 00:17:00would call a yellowing medicine its
- 00:17:03whole purpose is to transfer a golden
- 00:17:05gleam to a substance and it's just one
- 00:17:07of many yellowing agents at the artist's
- 00:17:10disposal his coloring agents and
- 00:17:12processes seem to be divided into groups
- 00:17:15based on the ancient primary colors
- 00:17:18black white yellow and red just as
- 00:17:21painters could make whatever color they
- 00:17:23desired from a few pigments Pudo
- 00:17:25democratus tried to create a sort of
- 00:17:26pallet of reagents for creating any
- 00:17:29desired substance pseudo democratus
- 00:17:31attempts to classify matter in a similar
- 00:17:34way to how I've seen painters categorize
- 00:17:36their pigments or Potters categorize
- 00:17:38their glazing minerals these ideas
- 00:17:41almost certainly didn't originate with
- 00:17:43pseudo democratus but rose out of those
- 00:17:45long-standing craft
- 00:17:47Traditions Professor Shannon Grimes in
- 00:17:49her book becoming gold demonstrates the
- 00:17:52strong connections between Greek
- 00:17:54Egyptian gold making processes and
- 00:17:56Egyptian statue making traditions
- 00:17:58and in their article near Eastern
- 00:18:00origins of Greco Egyptian Alchemy Melina
- 00:18:03Rumer and Mato Martelli point out a
- 00:18:06clear connection between the ston making
- 00:18:08recipes of the Stockholm Papyrus and an
- 00:18:11earlier recipe found on a Babylonian
- 00:18:13clay tablet it would seem the Greco
- 00:18:15Egyptian Alchemist was a
- 00:18:17multi-disciplinary artist who aimed to
- 00:18:19unify the lessons of a diverse number of
- 00:18:22crafts systematizing them to create a
- 00:18:24universal framework for manipulating
- 00:18:27matter all of this is just to say that
- 00:18:30the theory of the physicai mystica and
- 00:18:32the alchemical tradition that evolved
- 00:18:34out of it rely heavily on the qualities
- 00:18:37or nature of a substance so how do we go
- 00:18:40about understanding the nature of a
- 00:18:42substance Soo democratus tells us in one
- 00:18:45rant that we must experimentally test
- 00:18:48our ingredients to understand their
- 00:18:50qualities after all he says elsewhere
- 00:18:52that some substances true Natures are
- 00:18:55hidden and only come out when joined to
- 00:18:57other substan es so we have to explore
- 00:19:00matter through experiment to learn how
- 00:19:02it acts interestingly he says to do this
- 00:19:05the way Physicians test their medicines
- 00:19:08to see if they are hot cold wet or dry
- 00:19:11this is a clear reference to the medical
- 00:19:13theory of his time especially the far
- 00:19:16principal qualities of dry hot wet and
- 00:19:19cold these principles would be used in
- 00:19:21Alchemy for centuries upon centuries
- 00:19:25they're a crucial part of ancient Greek
- 00:19:27philosophy especially in Aristotle's
- 00:19:30theory of elements wherein each of the
- 00:19:32four elements fire water air and earth
- 00:19:36is made up of two of the four qualities
- 00:19:39fire which ascends is hot and dry and is
- 00:19:42represented by a triangle water which
- 00:19:46descends is cold and wet and is
- 00:19:48represented by an inverted triangle air
- 00:19:52which ascends is hot and wet and is
- 00:19:54represented by a struck through triangle
- 00:19:57and Earth Earth which descends is cold
- 00:20:00and dry and is represented by an
- 00:20:02inverted struth through
- 00:20:05triangle the use of these fur
- 00:20:07fundamental qualities in medicine goes
- 00:20:10back to the ancient Greek Hippocratic
- 00:20:12Physicians those following Hippocrates
- 00:20:15the Hippocratic text on the nature of
- 00:20:17man describes the far bodily humors as
- 00:20:20each being composed of two of the
- 00:20:22primary qualities mirroring the makeup
- 00:20:25of the Aristotelian elements but they
- 00:20:28were used in all sorts of other fields
- 00:20:30as well Aristotle uses the qualities and
- 00:20:33elements to describe the weather in his
- 00:20:35meteorology the astronomer tmy applied
- 00:20:38the qualities to each Celestial body the
- 00:20:41Greek philosopher theopus uses the
- 00:20:44qualities to describe the makeup and
- 00:20:46behavior of minerals in his book on
- 00:20:49Stones it's really the use of these
- 00:20:51qualities in medicine and in minerology
- 00:20:54that would be the most influential to
- 00:20:56the history of alchemy
- 00:20:59these fur qualities can sound kind of
- 00:21:01silly but in practice it's actually a
- 00:21:04much more developed system than first
- 00:21:06meets the eye hot cold wet and dry were
- 00:21:09associated with those Sensations but
- 00:21:12also with a list of other physical
- 00:21:14qualities for example theopus in his
- 00:21:17book on Stones notes that any wet
- 00:21:20substance can melt whereas a dry
- 00:21:22substance won't melt along with this we
- 00:21:25can expect Airy substances to be able to
- 00:21:27evaporate
- 00:21:28Galen a physician who lived shortly
- 00:21:31after pseudo democratus wrote that to
- 00:21:33understand the principles we have to use
- 00:21:35our senses to taste and touch and
- 00:21:38observe chemicals both as they are but
- 00:21:40also as they combine with other
- 00:21:44substances to explore this I want to try
- 00:21:47to understand one of the ingredients in
- 00:21:49the sulfur water recipe from an
- 00:21:51alchemical perspective specifically this
- 00:21:54white stone quick lime the lien and
- 00:21:57Stockholm papy make it clear quick lime
- 00:21:59is a fiery substance and interestingly
- 00:22:02states that the fire of quick lime is
- 00:22:04easily transmissible to other substances
- 00:22:07a property the Papyrus makes use of in
- 00:22:10multiple
- 00:22:12recipes this is lime Stone calcium
- 00:22:15carbonate otherwise known as chalk a
- 00:22:17white stone you're probably familiar
- 00:22:19with as it can be found in one fir or
- 00:22:22another pretty much anywhere on Earth's
- 00:22:24surface the word chalk and the word
- 00:22:26calcium both come from the Stone's old
- 00:22:28Latin name Cal to make quick lime we
- 00:22:31just have to roast this Cal at a very
- 00:22:33high temperature as I'm doing here with
- 00:22:35my old school blowtorch a tool
- 00:22:38Alchemists made frequent use of from the
- 00:22:40Renaissance period
- 00:22:42onwards a good sign the conversion is
- 00:22:45taking place is when the Limestone
- 00:22:47begins to Glow brilliantly in the
- 00:22:49intense Heat this incandescence is
- 00:22:52called Limelight and it can get
- 00:22:54astonishingly bright before electric
- 00:22:57lighting lime light was used in theater
- 00:22:59spotlights lime won't really ever melt
- 00:23:03it will just get hotter and hotter and
- 00:23:05glow brighter and brighter until its
- 00:23:07temperature reaches an equilibrium with
- 00:23:09the
- 00:23:11fire not being able to melt would make
- 00:23:14this a dry substance to Greek
- 00:23:16philosophers like theophrastus this
- 00:23:18process of roasting a substance in the
- 00:23:20open air came to be known as calcination
- 00:23:23and the matter that remained after
- 00:23:25calcination was called the Cals of that
- 00:23:27sub substance as you might imagine
- 00:23:30normally the Cals would be some kind of
- 00:23:32Ash calcination was typically done in a
- 00:23:35charcoal furnace like the one I used to
- 00:23:37make the quick line for the sulfur water
- 00:23:39earlier medieval Alchemists called these
- 00:23:41furnaces of calcination calories and
- 00:23:45they were one of the alchemist's
- 00:23:46essential
- 00:23:48tools once removed from the fire and
- 00:23:50allowed to cool the stone looks more or
- 00:23:52less the same it's still just a chalky
- 00:23:55white lump but watch what happens when I
- 00:23:57toss the stone into
- 00:24:02water it instantly disintegrates the
- 00:24:05stone almost certainly tastes very
- 00:24:08bitter now though I'm not going to put
- 00:24:10it in my mouth and I'll show you why if
- 00:24:13I grind up a decent amount of this
- 00:24:15roasted lime into a powder then
- 00:24:18carefully drip water onto the
- 00:24:20powder you'll see that the water that
- 00:24:23touches it instantly boils into steam
- 00:24:27this heat release is part of what makes
- 00:24:29quick lime fiery and Alchemists
- 00:24:31recognize that a similar heat could be
- 00:24:33found in pretty much any Cals the heat
- 00:24:37from lime is particularly intense and
- 00:24:40with a little more water the powder
- 00:24:42begins to smoke as the paper below it
- 00:24:44begins to smolder quick lime has been
- 00:24:47known to burn down buildings this way
- 00:24:49and has always been notorious for
- 00:24:51causing fires not only does this
- 00:24:54substance become very hot but it also
- 00:24:56becomes very CTIC when when mixed with
- 00:24:58water and is able to cause chemical
- 00:25:00burns even when fully
- 00:25:04cool if we have a fiery Cals how do we
- 00:25:08join that to another substance what
- 00:25:10about this fiery element is
- 00:25:12transmissible as the Papyrus claims to
- 00:25:16understand that we have to understand
- 00:25:18how they thought elements could be
- 00:25:19joined together a crucial component of
- 00:25:22this theory of elements and qualities is
- 00:25:24that opposite qualities are not mutually
- 00:25:28exclusive a substance could be
- 00:25:31simultaneously Earthly and Airy or even
- 00:25:34fiery and watery based on what
- 00:25:37combination of physical qualities it has
- 00:25:41Aristotle makes it clear many substances
- 00:25:43including us humans and our Myrtle flesh
- 00:25:46are some combination of all for elements
- 00:25:49to explore this idea further I'd like to
- 00:25:52jump forward to the medieval
- 00:25:54period by the time the first alchemical
- 00:25:56manuscript to read reach Medieval Europe
- 00:25:58was translated from Arabic into Latin in
- 00:26:021144 ad this basic theory for
- 00:26:05interpreting substances had already
- 00:26:07grown into a sophisticated and elegant
- 00:26:10practical system through its time in the
- 00:26:13hands of the Islamic Alchemists all of
- 00:26:16which hinged on essentially one crucial
- 00:26:18idea that dates back to our Greek
- 00:26:21philosophers which I'll quote from the
- 00:26:23medieval natural philosopher albertus
- 00:26:25Magnus in his book of minerals it's the
- 00:26:29heat of the fire that brings together
- 00:26:31things of the same kind and separates
- 00:26:34things of different kinds essentially
- 00:26:37fire can break apart a single substance
- 00:26:40into its constituents and constituents
- 00:26:42of similar qualities are brought
- 00:26:44together for example the Earthly things
- 00:26:47that make up a substance collect
- 00:26:49together in the ashes the Cals whereas
- 00:26:52the Airy things that make up a substance
- 00:26:54collect together in the smoke and Vapors
- 00:26:56released the spirits to be collected by
- 00:26:59distillation this ability of fire to
- 00:27:01abstract matter into its pieces enabled
- 00:27:04Alchemy this was the essential operating
- 00:27:07principle of jabir IB Hy's alchemical
- 00:27:10school of thought which Drew off the
- 00:27:12Greek Egyptian idea of all substances
- 00:27:15having a spirit and body or Numa and
- 00:27:18Soma that can be separated by
- 00:27:21fire Islamic Alchemists had figured out
- 00:27:24that the spirit and body could be broken
- 00:27:26down into subgroups groups by applying
- 00:27:28other alchemical processes meant to
- 00:27:30further isolate the principal qualities
- 00:27:33for example calcination can separate a
- 00:27:36Cals from crude matter but that Cals can
- 00:27:39be further broken down through mer
- 00:27:41processing into a dry Earthly Cals and a
- 00:27:45wet watery Cals this wet Cals was called
- 00:27:49the salt by the time Alchemy made its
- 00:27:52way to the medieval Latin World there
- 00:27:54were many such processes though what
- 00:27:57those process processes were differed at
- 00:27:58least slightly from one alchemical
- 00:28:00school to
- 00:28:02another just as many Islamic Alchemists
- 00:28:05wrote Under the name jabir as soon as
- 00:28:08Alchemy made its way into Medieval
- 00:28:10Europe European Alchemists began writing
- 00:28:12under the name of jabir as well
- 00:28:15contributing to the pseudo graphic
- 00:28:16tradition around him but of course they
- 00:28:19totally mispronounced his name leading
- 00:28:22to a distinct pseudo graphic tradition
- 00:28:24around the name jber which contain
- 00:28:27contain some of the most essential
- 00:28:29European alchemical texts such as the
- 00:28:31famous Suma pereus which I have here as
- 00:28:35a reprint of Richard Russell's 17th
- 00:28:38century translation edited by homeyard
- 00:28:41in the 20th century though a much more
- 00:28:44recent translation and critical Edition
- 00:28:46by Professor William Newman can be found
- 00:28:49on the internet archive which I'll link
- 00:28:51to below jra's Alchemy in the Suma
- 00:28:54perfectionis hinges on eight essential
- 00:28:57alchemical processes these are
- 00:28:59calcination distillation sublimation
- 00:29:03dissension solution coagulation fixation
- 00:29:07and sertion four of these processes
- 00:29:10calcination and distillation sublimation
- 00:29:13and coagulation seem to be about
- 00:29:15separating elements or qualities while
- 00:29:18the other fur seem to be about combining
- 00:29:20them these processes were clearly a
- 00:29:23development of the Islamic period and
- 00:29:25the Islamic Alchemist Al Z lists seven
- 00:29:29similar processes in his katab alasar or
- 00:29:32book of secrets for him cination and
- 00:29:36distillation were combined into a single
- 00:29:39process of
- 00:29:40purification each alchemical process
- 00:29:43targeted either a particular quality or
- 00:29:45set of qualities to be isolated or
- 00:29:48joined and each process can also be
- 00:29:50broken down into subcategories looking
- 00:29:53at each one of those in close detail
- 00:29:55will have to be the subject of a a
- 00:29:57series of videos rather than just this
- 00:30:01one for now I want to look at how this
- 00:30:03Theory could join together opposite
- 00:30:05elements like air and Earth or Fire and
- 00:30:08Water this is salammoniac a powder of
- 00:30:11snowy white crystals salammoniac gets
- 00:30:14its name from its home the kingdom of
- 00:30:16amone where it could be found naturally
- 00:30:19in the Kingdom's deserts medieval
- 00:30:21Alchemists learned how to make it
- 00:30:23themselves however jbr's invention of
- 00:30:26Varity contains a recipe for salammoniac
- 00:30:28that uses of all things urine and human
- 00:30:33sweat chemically speaking that should
- 00:30:36work but I just made this sample using
- 00:30:38modern chemistry in my lab partially
- 00:30:41just because I have no idea how they
- 00:30:44harvested that much sweat watch what
- 00:30:47happens when I heat some of the crystals
- 00:30:49in the flame of a blow TCH rather than
- 00:30:52melting like snow or glowing like quick
- 00:30:55lime the much more mischievous
- 00:30:57salammoniac vanishes into a vapor and
- 00:31:00flies away being able to evaporate makes
- 00:31:03the substance a spirit but Alchemists
- 00:31:06recognized that this Spirit wasn't being
- 00:31:09separated from the salt but that the
- 00:31:12spirit actually was the SALT by holding
- 00:31:15a smaller vial of ice water within the
- 00:31:18test tube I can condense The Vapor back
- 00:31:20into ass salt on the walls of the cold
- 00:31:23tube the salammoniac has reformed just
- 00:31:27as it was before because it condenses as
- 00:31:30a solid instead of a liquid I have to
- 00:31:33scrape it off to collect
- 00:31:36it this process of evaporating and
- 00:31:39condensing a solid is what the
- 00:31:40Alchemists called sublimation which they
- 00:31:43typically performed in something called
- 00:31:44an
- 00:31:47aluel because salammoniac doesn't melt
- 00:31:50this fits the definition of a dry
- 00:31:52substance but because it evaporates it's
- 00:31:54Airy which requires it to be hot and wet
- 00:31:58a strange contradiction but nonetheless
- 00:32:00still real and something alchemical
- 00:32:02Theory had to contend with however
- 00:32:05instead of ignoring this exception
- 00:32:07Alchemists embraced this exception in
- 00:32:09the Suma perfectionist jber Heralds
- 00:32:12sublimation is one of the most crucial
- 00:32:14alchemical processes which he says
- 00:32:16isolates the dry Spirits not only could
- 00:32:19contradictory elements exist together in
- 00:32:21nature but because Alchemists could make
- 00:32:24things like salammoniac themselves they
- 00:32:26knew that could combine them
- 00:32:28synthetically similarly the alchemical
- 00:32:31processes should allow us to join the
- 00:32:33Fire of our quick lime to the wet
- 00:32:34principle of something else to make a
- 00:32:37simultaneously fiery and watery
- 00:32:39transmutation agent there are many
- 00:32:41alchemical recipes for this type of
- 00:32:43substance including one in the Stockholm
- 00:32:46Papyrus but I'm going to go off a recipe
- 00:32:49in the medieval alchemical manuscript
- 00:32:51known as the libellus de alchemia or
- 00:32:54little book of alchemy a favorite of
- 00:32:56mine written by by P sudo albertus
- 00:32:58Magnus which I have here translated by
- 00:33:00Virginia Hines to start we need ashes
- 00:33:04the book specifies a few different kinds
- 00:33:06of Ashes we can use but the most common
- 00:33:09is wood ash so that's where all
- 00:33:12start by burning wood to Ash we
- 00:33:15essentially K sign it however unlike the
- 00:33:17Cals of limestone that is entirely
- 00:33:20Earthly being unable to melt or dissolve
- 00:33:23Alchemists recognized that the ash of
- 00:33:25wood was a mixture of different calses
- 00:33:29some of which were just as Earthly as
- 00:33:31lime and some that were a little more
- 00:33:33watery and could be readily dissolved
- 00:33:35into water as I mentioned earlier to
- 00:33:38Alchemists a water soluble Cals was
- 00:33:41called a salt with the insoluble Cals
- 00:33:45being the true Cals that epitomized
- 00:33:48earthliness to isolate the salt from
- 00:33:50this ash I have to make use of its
- 00:33:52affinity for water and dissolve it then
- 00:33:55use filtration to isolate the solution
- 00:33:58from the insoluble Earthly cks this
- 00:34:01combined process of dissolution and
- 00:34:03filtration was known as
- 00:34:06lixiviation you'll notice my filter here
- 00:34:08isn't a funnel Alchemists did use
- 00:34:11funnels too but these filters made by
- 00:34:13draping a towel over the edge of a
- 00:34:15vessel pop up a lot in medieval
- 00:34:18depictions of Alchemists so I thought
- 00:34:20I'd give it a go for this
- 00:34:25lixiviation
- 00:34:33once filtered I'm left with a crude
- 00:34:35yellow lixivium of Ash the next step is
- 00:34:39to coagulate this solution which just
- 00:34:42means to evaporate it back into a solid
- 00:34:44the yellow color indicates there's quite
- 00:34:47a number of impurities and sure enough
- 00:34:50when coagulated I'm left with a yucky
- 00:34:52brown powder this salt was called potash
- 00:34:56because it was collected from ashes
- 00:34:58dissolved in pots of water there's a
- 00:35:00sort of popular myth that Alchemists
- 00:35:03thought yellow contaminants were good as
- 00:35:06they looked golden but that's mostly
- 00:35:09just made up even as early as the
- 00:35:11physica chisa such impurities were seen
- 00:35:14as just that impurities and pseudo
- 00:35:17democratus tells us that if a solution
- 00:35:19turns yellow when it's not supposed to
- 00:35:22that we've messed
- 00:35:23up certainly Alchemists thought color
- 00:35:26change were important and many believed
- 00:35:28there to be a specific sequence of color
- 00:35:30changes in the process of making the
- 00:35:32Philosopher's Stone but that was
- 00:35:34specifically for the preparation of the
- 00:35:36philosopher stone and in any other
- 00:35:38recipe the color most Alchemists will be
- 00:35:41going for is based on what they expect
- 00:35:44from the process for example the
- 00:35:47libellus de alemia tells us we're going
- 00:35:49for a white powder in this recipe so I'm
- 00:35:52going to have to purify this pot as I've
- 00:35:55prepared here as to to avoid disgrace
- 00:35:58unlike today where I might do this with
- 00:36:00recrystallization or even just by
- 00:36:02filtering through some activated carbon
- 00:36:05the Alchemists preferred to absolutely
- 00:36:07annihilate their impurities and wipe
- 00:36:09them out of existence if they thought
- 00:36:12something was impure they like to throw
- 00:36:14it in a crucible and calcify it with
- 00:36:16intense heat they called this intense
- 00:36:18fire ignition and it was one of the most
- 00:36:21severe tments you could give a substance
- 00:36:24Alchemists actually invented the word
- 00:36:26word Crucible which means little
- 00:36:29crucifier to reflect the tment of the
- 00:36:31caled body within
- 00:36:38it after a while you can see the powder
- 00:36:41is beginning to whiten but is also
- 00:36:44starting to Clump together almost as
- 00:36:46though it wants to melt but just can't
- 00:36:51quite after a good deal more roasting
- 00:36:54I'm left with a substantially whiter
- 00:36:56salt
- 00:36:57now I just weigh my potes to determine
- 00:36:59how much I have to work with this Lial
- 00:37:02salt is the wet substance I need to join
- 00:37:04to Quick lime the recipe recommends a
- 00:37:07specific proportion of ingredients so
- 00:37:10next I weighed some freshly prepared
- 00:37:12quick lime to the proportion the recipe
- 00:37:14recommends then I just ground the two
- 00:37:17ingredients together to get them nicely
- 00:37:25mixed
- 00:37:32the next day I dissolved the mixture in
- 00:37:35water resulting in a nice clear solution
- 00:37:37with a chalky
- 00:37:42sediment now I just have to filter this
- 00:37:44solution to remove the sediment which I
- 00:37:47did with a regular funnel this time due
- 00:37:48to the small volume of water once
- 00:37:51filtered I have to boil down the
- 00:37:53solution to a powder I'm doing this in a
- 00:37:55steel vessel rather than a glass one
- 00:37:58because though it may not look as though
- 00:38:00much has changed what we've created here
- 00:38:02is actually an incredibly potent solvent
- 00:38:05and will dissolve the glass of the
- 00:38:07beaker if I'm not careful after
- 00:38:09coagulating the solution I'm left with a
- 00:38:12sort of gross brown powder again and yet
- 00:38:15again I'm just going to have to caline
- 00:38:17the stuff to be rid of this feculent
- 00:38:19corruption as Alchemists would say this
- 00:38:23time I'm going to use a silver Crucible
- 00:38:25who no ility will be able to withstand
- 00:38:28the fiery element within this salt this
- 00:38:31time I'll also use my Renaissance blow
- 00:38:33torch to caline the salt as I go I'm
- 00:38:37going to carefully add a drop of water
- 00:38:39and allow the water to evaporate until
- 00:38:42I'm left with a white salt again don't
- 00:38:45try this at home along with glass this
- 00:38:48salt will happily dissolve human
- 00:38:53flesh once I've got it where I want it I
- 00:38:56I bathed it directly in the flame of the
- 00:38:58blow
- 00:39:00tarch as you can see the salt began to
- 00:39:03Ren and flow together like candle wax
- 00:39:06just as the recipe describes seeing the
- 00:39:08substance melt like this tells me I've
- 00:39:11succeeded at my goal the fiery Cals has
- 00:39:14become a watery substance that can melt
- 00:39:16and dissolve the combination of the
- 00:39:18corrosive fire of quick lime with the
- 00:39:20watery nature of potash because it's
- 00:39:23made out of caled Ashes the Islamic Al
- 00:39:26ists named it caled Ash which in Arabic
- 00:39:30was
- 00:39:32alkal there were two main kinds of
- 00:39:35alkali this kind made of Poes was called
- 00:39:38potash Alkali by medieval Alchemists but
- 00:39:41another kind was made specifically from
- 00:39:43a plant that grows in saltwater a plant
- 00:39:46known as SOA of course as always the
- 00:39:49European Alchemists mispronounced SOA as
- 00:39:53soda and so they called The Alkali made
- 00:39:56from it
- 00:39:56soda Alkali you'll notice I've only made
- 00:40:00a little alkal even though I started
- 00:40:02with quite a lot of Ashes to make a
- 00:40:04useful quantity of alkali this way I'd
- 00:40:07have to process a whole lot more ashes
- 00:40:09back in the day when every facet of Life
- 00:40:11relied on fire ashes were easier to come
- 00:40:15by however even then Alchemists had a
- 00:40:17trick up their sleeves to make the
- 00:40:19process much more effective rather than
- 00:40:22starting with wood ash the libis D
- 00:40:24alchemia tells us we can instead Cal
- 00:40:26sign this stuff this is tartar you
- 00:40:30probably know it as cream of tartar
- 00:40:32which is commonly used in baking it
- 00:40:35typically comes from grapes forming as a
- 00:40:37crystal in grape juice Vineyards end up
- 00:40:40with quite a bit of the stuff Alchemists
- 00:40:43made great use of Tartar and the humble
- 00:40:45powder would actually end up being
- 00:40:47instrumental in overturning some of
- 00:40:49Aristotle's theories in the 1500s as
- 00:40:52well as being instrumental in the
- 00:40:53formation of acid base theory in the 60s
- 00:40:561600s however for now we're going to
- 00:40:59ignore all of that and throw it in The
- 00:41:00Crucible to face
- 00:41:02ignition as you can see unlike potash
- 00:41:05tartar releases fumes when heated this
- 00:41:08is what Alchemists would call a spirit
- 00:41:11it's crucial to do this in a very well
- 00:41:13ventilated environment where the fumes
- 00:41:15can be quickly extracted as these fumes
- 00:41:18can easily catch fire as demonstrated
- 00:41:20here this was considered evidence of a
- 00:41:23fiery element within a spirit
- 00:41:26as you might imagine Alchemists were
- 00:41:29famous for exploding and personally I
- 00:41:32don't want to end up remembered like
- 00:41:33that that said I think this is a really
- 00:41:36good example of how calcination can
- 00:41:38separate a calx from a spirit you'll
- 00:41:40notice the tartar is melting and
- 00:41:42undulating like a fluid Alchemists could
- 00:41:45use a process called dissension to
- 00:41:48isolate fluids like this which in this
- 00:41:50case was called the oil of tartar
- 00:41:53however for now I'm going to keep
- 00:41:55roasting until the fluid resolidifies
- 00:41:57and burns down to
- 00:41:59Ash the resultant Cals takes the form of
- 00:42:02fused lumps they look a little like
- 00:42:04pebbles now I have to extract the salt
- 00:42:07from the
- 00:42:09Cals just like with the wood ash the
- 00:42:12salt is extracted by dissolving the Cals
- 00:42:14into water this is where tartar shows
- 00:42:16its secret unlike wood as where only a
- 00:42:19small amount of the Cals dissolve with
- 00:42:21tartar everything but the so and carbon
- 00:42:24dissolves the entirety of the Cals is a
- 00:42:27watery salt kind of like it's the
- 00:42:29opposite of how the entirety of the
- 00:42:31quick lime was a dry
- 00:42:36Earth to clear away the soot I filtered
- 00:42:39my salt of tartar the salt has a
- 00:42:41corrosiveness to it but it's not yet as
- 00:42:43potent as quick lime so to make sell
- 00:42:46Alkali I just have to combine it with
- 00:42:47some fresh quick lime which produces a
- 00:42:50cloudy sediment this sediment is
- 00:42:52filtered
- 00:42:55off and then I coagulate the solution in
- 00:42:58a sand bath with a steel dish and left
- 00:43:01with a nice little pile of Sal alkal
- 00:43:04though this is still just a small amount
- 00:43:06bear in mind that I started with just a
- 00:43:08spoonful and a half or so of cream of
- 00:43:10tartar as opposed to the full bowl of
- 00:43:12Ashes required for a similar quantity of
- 00:43:15regular pot as
- 00:43:17Alkali just like last time this Alkali
- 00:43:20can be easily melted In the Heat of a
- 00:43:21blow TCH fusing together to create a
- 00:43:24waxy molten salt this Alkali is a potent
- 00:43:28solvent I'm melting it in silver because
- 00:43:30it's able to dissolve glass and sand and
- 00:43:33clay and most other things crucibles are
- 00:43:36made of along with this it can lower the
- 00:43:38melting point of sand by acting as a
- 00:43:41flux which is why ash is used in glass
- 00:43:44making albertus Magnus in his book of
- 00:43:47minerals claims that Alchemists are able
- 00:43:49to melt Stones by adding wet substances
- 00:43:52to them which is likely a reference to
- 00:43:55the fluxing ability of watery ashes
- 00:43:59though I may be wrong to me this seems
- 00:44:01to suggest Alkali was seen as
- 00:44:04transmitting its wateriness a little
- 00:44:06like how the Stockholm Papyrus claimed
- 00:44:08quick lime could transmit its
- 00:44:11firness so what is this Alkali from a
- 00:44:15modern chemical perspective this poach
- 00:44:18Alkali is a mixture of quite a few
- 00:44:20things including some potassium chloride
- 00:44:23along with some potassium carbonate but
- 00:44:26but mostly it's the all important
- 00:44:28pottassium
- 00:44:29hydroxide the salt of tartar Alkali
- 00:44:32should be mostly potassium hydroxide
- 00:44:34with some potassium carbonates mixed in
- 00:44:37if you've heard that fruit is high in
- 00:44:39potassium this is the potassium they're
- 00:44:41talking
- 00:44:42about potassium is a metal a metal no
- 00:44:45one knew existed until 1807 in the 1700s
- 00:44:50chemists like Antoine lavier had began
- 00:44:53to theorize it might exist but it wasn't
- 00:44:56until after the invention of the battery
- 00:44:59by alesandro Volta that potassium metal
- 00:45:03was first isolated by Sir Humphrey Davy
- 00:45:06Davey ran electricity through molten
- 00:45:09poach Alkali apparently when he did this
- 00:45:12it burst into flames however he says
- 00:45:15when he reversed the polarity of the
- 00:45:17circuit he was able to isolate what he
- 00:45:20called The Peculiar inflammable
- 00:45:22principle the basis of Poes with which
- 00:45:26he named pottassium after potash what a
- 00:45:30clever cookie was he then he tried the
- 00:45:33same experiment with soda Alkali and
- 00:45:36isolated a different metal he called y
- 00:45:39beum I'm kidding he called it sodium
- 00:45:42these became known as the alkal metals
- 00:45:46he also tried the same experiment on
- 00:45:48quick lime but it was much harder quick
- 00:45:51lime being Earthly doesn't melt and
- 00:45:54Davey noticed electricity could only
- 00:45:57pass through the alkal when it was
- 00:45:59molten eventually Davy's contemporaries
- 00:46:03Jean's Jacob berselius and Magnus Martin
- 00:46:06AF pontin beat him to it by using a
- 00:46:09technique involving Mercury to isolate
- 00:46:12the metal from quickline which Davey
- 00:46:14termed
- 00:46:15calcium calcium along with the metals
- 00:46:18isolated from other Earthly substances
- 00:46:21make up the alkaline Earths on the
- 00:46:23periodic table yes believe it or not
- 00:46:26they are actually called Earths in
- 00:46:28reference to the elemental Theory
- 00:46:30Alchemists used before the periodic
- 00:46:32table Alkali compounds are normally more
- 00:46:36soluble and easier to melt than Earth
- 00:46:39metal compounds primarily because the
- 00:46:42alkal metals are much more likely to
- 00:46:44form polar salts than earth metals are
- 00:46:47because water is polar these polar salts
- 00:46:50have a greater affinity for water
- 00:46:52despite having no way of knowing this
- 00:46:55Alchemists have had still managed to S
- 00:46:57matter into extremely useful categories
- 00:47:00just by observing how nature transformed
- 00:47:03interestingly Sir Humphrey Davy also
- 00:47:06tried to isolate a metal from ammoniacal
- 00:47:08compounds like salammoniac and ammonia
- 00:47:11solution he was so sure he could he
- 00:47:14named the metal he thought he'd find
- 00:47:18ammonium however uring to his entry in
- 00:47:20the philosophical transactions he was
- 00:47:23unable to isolate it the mischi
- 00:47:26and Elusive ammonia just kept turning
- 00:47:29into nitrogen and hydrogen gas we know
- 00:47:32today there is no ammonium metal
- 00:47:35nitrogen and hydrogen just combine in
- 00:47:38such a way as to imitate the way Metals
- 00:47:41form ions this was so perplexing to
- 00:47:44Davey he suggested that maybe nitrogen
- 00:47:47and hydrogen themselves are actually
- 00:47:51Metals just as greo Egyptian Alchemists
- 00:47:54were able to convince people people they
- 00:47:56had made gold when they hadn't nature
- 00:47:58had pulled one over on Davey convincing
- 00:48:01the par chemist that Metals existed
- 00:48:03where they didn't this is what I love
- 00:48:06about alchemy just as pseudo democratus
- 00:48:08says these substances when dissolved
- 00:48:11produce everything if you ask me even if
- 00:48:14there's something they can't make they
- 00:48:16can come so close you'll never tell the
- 00:48:18difference nature is a tricky and
- 00:48:21mysterious thing even though Humanity
- 00:48:23had no idea potassium even existed for
- 00:48:26Millennia pottassium has always been
- 00:48:29there if you look closely at this Alkali
- 00:48:32in the flame of the spirit lamp you'll
- 00:48:34see it has a sort of lilac glow to it
- 00:48:37this is the spectral emission of
- 00:48:40potassium each element's spectral
- 00:48:42emission is unique to it a little like a
- 00:48:45signature the element's true name
- 00:48:47written in light itself believe it or
- 00:48:50not I've been intentionally showing you
- 00:48:52potassium spectral glow throughout this
- 00:48:55whole video
- 00:48:56here it is in the Ethereal flame of the
- 00:48:59charcoal furnace the lilac color of this
- 00:49:02charcoal flame is caused by the
- 00:49:04potassium within the ashes that have yet
- 00:49:08to firm even though humans wouldn't see
- 00:49:11pottassium metal with their own eyes
- 00:49:13until the 1800s we've been seeing its
- 00:49:16name amongst Embers ever since the
- 00:49:18invention of
- 00:49:20fire thanks for watching I'm going to
- 00:49:23end this video here even though there's
- 00:49:25much much more to be said about the
- 00:49:27craft of alchemy we haven't even had a
- 00:49:29chance to talk about how they thought
- 00:49:30the metals formed or how they thought
- 00:49:32the Philosophers Stone could be made or
- 00:49:35about all the wonderful things they
- 00:49:37could do with human hair there will
- 00:49:39definitely be more videos on Alchemy
- 00:49:41coming to this channel hopefully sooner
- 00:49:43than later but in the meantime I'm going
- 00:49:45to link in the description to some other
- 00:49:47great videos and lectures on alchemy
- 00:49:50that can be found right here on YouTube
- 00:49:52if you're interested in learning more
- 00:49:54about alchemical Theory
- 00:49:56Dr Justin Sledge over on the channel
- 00:49:58esoterica has recently released a
- 00:50:01phenomenal video on the elemental theory
- 00:50:03in Aristotle's meteorology that does a
- 00:50:06really good job explaining alchemical
- 00:50:08theory if you're curious about what
- 00:50:10happened to Alchemy after the 1700s
- 00:50:12there's some fantastic lectures folks
- 00:50:14have uploaded by Lawrence Principe
- 00:50:16himself which I'll link to as well if
- 00:50:19like me you find yourself enamored by
- 00:50:21Greek Egyptian Alchemy all linked to a
- 00:50:24lecture by Mato Martell
- 00:50:26on the subject I had a ton of fun making
- 00:50:28this and I hope to have some more videos
- 00:50:30on Alchemy and other old crafts sooner
- 00:50:32than later so if you've enjoyed this
- 00:50:35video please subscribe if you know
- 00:50:37anyone who you think would enjoy this
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- 00:50:46helpful in making these videos so if you
- 00:50:48have any questions comments or
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- 00:50:51below thanks again and happy transmuting
- 00:51:00for
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