Who Was Hermes
Trismegistus?
So many thousands of
years have passed and so many scholars have written about the ancient gods and
deities that it is difficult to decipher the being known as Hermes Trismegistus
and separate fiction from fact.
Unfortunately, conflicting views exist on
whether Hermes Trismegistus was a man or a god. Frances A. Yates suggests those
living in Renaissance times believed he was a man: "It was on excellent
authority that the Renaissance accepted Hermes Trismegistus as a real person of
great antiquity and as the author of the Hermetic writings." A city known
as Hermopolis that existed in Egypt in ancient times strengthens the claim.
Other scholars
conjecture that different individuals completed the Hermetic writings over
several hundred years. Perhaps the most important piece of evidence to back up
this claim is the Syrian philosopher Iamblichus crediting Hermes with writing
over 20,000 books and an Egyptian priest named Manetho crediting him with
writing more than 36,000 books. Both of these men lived around 250-300 BC.
Iamblichus went on to state he had seen forty-two of these books, thirty-six of
which contained "the whole of human knowledge".
Many scholars have long
held Hermes Trismegistus to be the equivalent of the Egyptian god Thoth, which
certainly suggests he was not a real person. Frans A. Janssen subscribes to
this view, describing Hermes Trismegistus as a "fictitious author" in
his essay Dutch Translations of the Corpus Hermeticum. Anecdotal evidence
suggests that Hermes was a man elevated to deity status and even if Hermes
Trismegistus did not write the texts attributed to him, it is likely that a
priest of the Egyptian god Thoth did. Others, such as Stock, state that Hermes
Trismegistus was actually the grandson of the Hellenistic god Hermes, the
messenger of the gods.
The word Trismegistus
literally means "thrice-greatest" and some believe Hermes’ title may
actually come from the Rosetta Stone. There are many theories on the
acquisition of the name Trismegistus, but most academics believe Hermes
acquired his name from the epithet used for the Egyptian god Thoth –
"greatest and greatest god, great Hermes." Another popular and widely
accepted interpretation of the term "Thrice Great" comes from Hermes’
reputation as the greatest philosopher, king and priest in the entire world.
The Emerald Tablet
The Emerald Tablet or
Tabula Smaragdina is Hermes’ most famous legacy and his best known work among
modern-day practitioners of alchemy. Many legends exist regarding the discovery
of the Emerald Tablet, although the most popular seems to be the story of
Alexander the Great unearthing the text in Hermes’ tomb. The original Emerald
Tablet, however, is lost to time.
The content of the
Emerald Tablet is quite short and deals with the nature of magic and the
creation of life and matter by one God. Philosophical in nature, the text is
often ambiguous and requires abstract interpretation. Hermes may have also
derived his moniker "Thrice Great" from the tablet, its twelfth entry
stating: "Therefore am I called Hermes Trismegistus, possessing the three
parts of the philosophy of the whole world." It is difficult to identity
the "three parts of the philosophy of the whole world". It may have
been in reference to the process of deifying a mortal. Others apply a more
literal meaning, stating he was the greatest philosopher of various
intellectual disciplines, such as natural science.
The Corpus Hermeticum
Whereas the Emerald
Tablet remains lost to modern civilization, the Corpus Hermeticum presents a
different tale. The texts of the Corpus Hermeticum remained comparatively
obscure until 1460, when Cosimo de Medici received them as a gift. He
immediately commanded the texts be translated into Latin so he might read them
for himself. Almost two hundred years later, in 1650, a man by the name of John
Everard translated the texts into English.
Much of the Corpus
Hermeticum is theoretical in nature, but the teachings often clearly set out
the nature of alchemy. Hermes’ writings also recorded accurate scientific
observations, such as the polarity of objects and the principle of cause and
effect.
The repressive
Inquisition had a terrible effect on uncovering the knowledge of Hermeticism,
however a number of cathedrals – including the one in Sienna, Italy – bear
depictions of Hermes Trismegistus. It is important to remember that Hermes
Trismegistus (assuming he was not a god himself) was a monotheist and one of
his disciples was actually reputed to have been the Biblical Moses. Some
believe that Hermes even prophesied that a man from the "lower social
classes" would lead the Jews to freedom.
In the Corpus
Hermeticum, there are accounts of the creation of mankind, although in this
creation theory man is somewhat more power than in the Biblical version: he
creates the animals of Earth after traveling through the "seven levels of
reality" (keeping in mind that seven is a holy number) and becoming
subject to the vagaries of fate.
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