Everyone knows that alchemy is the art of turning base metals into gold. It was also seen as a pursuit of divine knowledge and immortality. From its very beginning in the ancient world, alchemy was seen either as a glorious search for truth or as a means for charlatans to hoodwink money out of gullible patrons. Such dabblers in the art were known unkindly as 'puffers' - from the bellows often used in alchemy in the heating of substances - and were despised by the more serious students of alchemy.
In my new book, A Knight's Enchantment, the heroine, Joanna, is an alchemist. From earliest times, when the strange ‘science’ of alchemy developed, women became alchemists. They were as respected as men in this profession and several were particularly revered. Many powerful and influential women studied alchemy, including the countess of Pembroke Mary Sidney, Queen Christina of Sweden and even Marie Curie.
Why were women drawn to alchemy? Famous and successful alchemists tended to be long-lived - usually far longer than the average life-span. That and the prospect of riches may have drawn some, though alchemical thinking also attracted the religious and mystical such as Hildegard of Bingen. In part, too, women may have been intrigued by alchemy because they were accepted and respected in it. The feminine principle was acknowledged in alchemy - many saw nature itself as female and today doctors still used the alchemical symbol for copper, a soft, malleable metal, for woman.
Women were also given credit for their alchemical work and inventions. One of the most famous, called the 'Mother' of alchemy, was Maria the Jewess, who lived in the first or second century AD, possibly in Alexandria. She recognized the importance of changes in color in chemical and alchemical reactions and is credited with inventing a still used for distillation and also the balneum mariae (bain-marie); a water bath that is kept at a constant heat via a kettle or cauldron. A contemporary of Maria was Kleopatra, who likened the growth and progress of alchemical work to a baby growing in a womb.
Women could also be married to alchemists and help them in their work. Nicholas Flamel, a famous medieval alchemist who lived for a time in Paris, was assisted in his work by his wife Perenelle and, when their experiments in alchemy brought them wealth, they jointly founded hospitals.
When so many professions were closed to women in the past, perhaps it is not surprising that some chose to pursue this most secret and at the same time most fascinating of arts.
A Knight's Enchantment is published today, June 1st. Details and an excerpt are here.
Lindsay
[Colour picture from The Alchemy Website, others from Wikimedia Commons.]
7 comments:
Congrats on your release, Lindsay! Hope you have tons of sales.
Interesting article on alchemists. I didn't know women had been alchemists.
Lindsay, what a fascinating topic - alchemly and how they treated it back then. Weren't women also the primary healers because they had the knowledge about herbs and roots?
Your new book has me very curious. hehe. Congrats on the release and I hope you have great sales.
Smiles
Steph
Congratulations on your release. i hope it does really well for you.
And a wonderful interesting post. Thank you.
Thank you, Linda, Steph and Anne - the more I researched the topic, the more interesting the whole issue of women's role in alchemy became. It gave me some wonderful moments to exploit in the novel!
Very interesting post!
Hello Lindsay, this was fascinating, and an area I am particularly interested in.Your book sound great, Congratulations and hope it does well. By the way, have you read Lindsay Clarke's "The Chymical Wedding"?It also features a female alchemist and is one of my favourite books of all time.
Hi Liz - thank you!
Hi Deborah - no, I've not read 'The Chymical Wedding.' When I'm writing a particular novel, I try not to read other novels with similar themes or ideas. I may look out for it now, however.
Thanks for the kind comments.
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