ARTICLES
41-50
Another GLADIO
member exposed: Gaetano Saya! (1/6/2007)

Italian Fascist Secret Police Network Uncovered
Italian History X. Gaetano Saya not a lunatic. He is
for real!
Profile: Saya's grandfather joined Mussolini's March
on Rome. Saya is estimed by shadowy fascist figure
Licio Gelli.
Saya was born in Messina in 1956 and was raised by his
grandfather, Matteo Francesco Gesuino, a member of the
pre-WWII Royal Army and a participant in Mussolini's
March on Rome. From the time he was a child Saya felt
attracted by the Movimento Sociale Italiano - Destra
Nazionale [fascist] and at the age of 18 enrolled in
the now defunct Guardians of Public Safety. Later, he
was hired by the NATO Secret Services as an expert in
ISPEG (Information, Sabotage, Propaganda and Guerrilla
Warfare) and specializing in counterespionaage and
anti-terrorism.
Having rose to senior rank, Saya retired in 1997. In
1995 he was recruited into an exclusive Masonic Lodge
by SISMI General Giuseppe Santovito and achieved the
rank of Venerable Master in Lodge No. 1
(International). In November 1997, Saya served as
state's witness for the Italian Republic in the trial
of statesman Giulio Andreotti. After retirement, Saya
decided to launch a fascist political movement,
MSI-National Right, where he became the unchallenged
chairman. Saya holds a university degree in Criminal
Justice and Political Science and is a Knight of the
International Order of Peace. In December 2002, he was
named Honorary President of the National Law
Enforcement Union, the first labor union representing
inter-agency national police. He was recently given
the post of Director-General, Interagency Anti-Islamic
Terrorism Police, Department of Strategic Studies on
Terrorism -
In November 2004, he was charged with disseminating
literature promoting white supremacy and racial
hatred. The trial has been postponed until October
2005.
Negroponte. Ledeen. Boykin. North. These figures have
always made me queasy because nothing stands between
them and their goals, especially values and the law.
The murder of Il Diario reporter Endo Baldoni and the
hit on Giuliana Sgrena which killed Niccola Calipari
smell of the involvment of shadowy organizations
operating on the margins.
An Italian investigation has uncovered an underground,
parallel police network with possible links to the CIA
which may be involved in the slaying of Niccola
Calipari and Il Diario reporter Enzo Baldoni, the
extraordiary rendition of Abu Omar and Nigergate.
The investigation is ongoing. On the surface, it looks
like a scam. But somehow, it has the same perfume of
the deliberate quasi-legality we saw in Iran-Contra.
From Il Corriere della Sera:
Underground police network discovered in Italy.
Investigation by the Genoa Public Prosecutor's Office
reveals anti-terror police staffed by Freemasons and
shadowy CIA operatives. Two are arrested. Dozens of
police and security force personnel involved.
The network is discovered amidst an investigation into
an Italian security contractor slain in Iraq.
A parallel, covert antiterrorism police force has been
uncovered inside the Department of Strategic Studies
on Anti-terrorism. This is the conclusion of the DIGOS
[Divisione Investigazione Generali e Operazioni
Speciali, or Department of General and Special
Operations, a police investigative unit] of the Genoa
Public Prosecutor's Office. So far two individuals
have been arrested and 25 warrants have been issued in
ten regions across the country. Another 24 are being
investigated, including 12 members of the police.
Gaetano Saya and Riccardo Sindoca, both Freemasons and
DSSA directors with links to the extreme right and
intelligence organizations beyond the oversight of
Italian Parliament have been placed under house
arrest. Saya resides in Florence and Sindoca in Pavia.
Officials uncovered the network while investigating
the death of Fabrizio Quattrocchi, an Italian private
security contractor slain in Iraq in 2004. Chief
Public Prosecutor Giuseppe Lalla, Inspector Salvatore
Presenti and DIGOS-Genoa chief Giuseppe Gonan have
excluded any involvement of Quattrocchi with DSSA,
despite a claim in an Italian magazine last May.
Connection to any Italian political figure is also
excluded. It is likely that the name of Quattrocchi
was used by the organization to credential itself as a
parallel intelligence outfit. While investigating
private security contractors working overseas, agents
on Gonan's investigation team crossed paths with a
secret, illegal investigation by the DSSA using
shadowing, investigations, illegal use of badges and
insignia carried by legitimate police.
So far, no subversive activity on the part of the DSSA
in the strictest sense of the word has emerged but the
impression is that the aims of the investigation
launched by the Genoa Public Prosecutors Office is to
prevent further wrongful conduct by the organization
and to identify persons involved from law enforcement
acting as secret agents who even might have joined in
good faith. Saya and Sindoca have been charged with
conspiracy to commit crime and usurpation of public
office in law enforcement. In substance, the
investigation team believes that DSSA (an organization
which does not exist legally) intended to finance its
operations by using funds from domestic and
international agencies.
Four rifles, tasers, a knife, a sabers, machetes,
dozens of outdoor suvivial kits, ID cards, badges and
insignia were found by the Florence branch of DIGOS
during separate searches of the residences of seven
suspected DSSA members in the Florentine capital after
a search warrants were received from the Genoa Public
Prosecutor's office. The residence of Gaetano Saya,
placed under house arrest, was used for meetings of
the network. Among other suspects are a junior officer
with the Fiscal Police in Florence, two prison police
and three civilians, including a construction company
owner and a businessman.
Before the arrests, the DSSA ran a website (taken down
after the arrests) where it described itself as
follows: The Department of Strategic Studies on
Antiterrorism, a institute recognized by Republic of
Italy interagency law enforcement and police, offers
highly-specialized investigation and research support
to the personnel of organizations under a potential
terrorist threat.
Gaetano Saya and Riccardo Sindoca are founders of a
political organization called Destra Nazionale - Nuovo
Msi [The National Right - Italian Socialist Movement]
and claim to be ex-members of Gladio. This is a
right-wing terrorist outfit once funded by the CIA and
thought to be responsible for 1980 Bologna Railway
Station bombing which killed 87 and wounded 177,
including several US students on holiday].
From the website of G.Saya: The evil which has
descended upon us finds in men like George Bush in
America and Gaetano Saya in Italy, an impregnable
bulwark: God-fearing men, harded and pure individuals
who, enlightend by God, have descended into the valley
of the shadow of death to defend the Judeo-Christian
faith and the West. The righteousness which these men
represent will defeat the anti-Christ. God is on their
side. On the website, Saya affirms that his a member
of the exclusive P-2 Masonic Lodge and that in
November 1997 he was state's witness for the Public
Prosecutor of Palermo in the trial of Giulio Andreotti
[Andreotti was an Italian statesman accused of links
to the Mafia] in which Andreotti was accused of
ordering the murder of anti-Mafia investigator General
Dalla Chiesa. Saya testified that he was told that
this was so by fraternal [Masonic] companion and
friend Giusseppe Santovito, a former P-2 Lodge member,
who at the time was Director-General of SISMI
[Servizio Informazioni Sicurezza Militare, or Military
Intelligence Service].
From La Repubblica
The Department of Strategy Studies on Antiterrorism.
This is what the organization, which represented
itself as a parallel law enforcement agency combatting
terrorism, called itself. According to investigators,
the aims of the organization was to credential itself
with major domestic and international agencies,
including foreign intelligence, for funding.
In the early hours of this morning, the DIGOS of Genoa
carried out 28 searches in nine Italian regions
(Liguria, Piedmont, Lombardy, Emilia Romagna, Tuscany,
Lazio, Molise, Sicily and Sardinia). 21 persons
belonging to the National Police, the Carabinieri,
Fiscal Police and the Prison Police are under
investigation. Two individuals who are not members of
law enforcement but who are know to be part of the
organization have been arrested: Gaetano Saya and
Roberto Sindoca, both well-known leaders of the
National Right, which is the present-day incarnation
of the organization MIUS. [Movimento italiano di unità
sociale, or Italian Movement for Social Unity, a
fascist organization] founded by Giorgio Almirante [a
notorious racist and anti-semite, member of
Mussolini's infamous Republic of Salò under Nazi
tutelage]. Saya, an former Freemason, was state's
witness in the trial of Giulio Andreotti. Considered a
figure close to Italian intelligence, he often boasted
of his ties to SISMI. Saya and Sindoca have been
placed under house arrest in Florence and Pavia,
respectively.
Several members from law enforcement joined the secret
network in good faith. The DSSA carried out
surveillance and searches in airports with few
results. Some of the members had direct access to the
Ministry of Interior data banks.
The charges: So far there have been 20 separate
investigations. The crime in question is criminal
conspiracy using money from domestic and foreign
agencies.
The unconfirmed aim of the organization, explains
Genoa Chief Public Prosecutor Giuseppe Lalla, was to
credential DSSA and to run a network which would
obtain financing from foreign nations such as the
United States and Israel or organizations such as
NATO. Among their boasted activities was the tracking
down of fugitive Italian terrorists living abroad,
ex-Red Brigades, or members of other organizations
such as the example of Cesare Battisti.
Several members may have joined the secret network in
good faith. The DSSA carried out surveillance and
searches in airports with little result. Some of the
members had direct access to the Ministry of Interior
data banks.
Name of Fabrizio Quattrocchi is mentioned. The Weekly
News had recently run a story saying mercinary
Fabrizio Quattrocchi, slain in Iraq, was a member but
investigators believe that this was not the case.
While looking into Italian mercenaries working abroad,
Deputy Chief Investigator, Giuseppe Gonan crossed
paths with an illegal investigation run by DSSA
employing shadowing, background investigation, and
illegal use of badges and insignia belonging to
legitimate law enforcement. Thanks to the complicity
of several of its members, the organization was able
to retrieve confidential information directly from
Ministry of the Interior databanks.
Weapons stash in Florence. Seven searches were carried
in the Florentine capital, among theme Saya's. Four
rifles, some tasers, a Rambo knife, sabres and
machetes, dozens of outdoor survival kits, IDs,
badges, insignia and police hats. It was at Saya's
residenc that DSSA held its monthly meetings. The
homes of a junior officer of the Fiscal Police, two
Prison Police and three civilians were also searched.
Searches in Rome. The Rome DIGOS are carrying out five
searches of homes belonging to two law enforcement
officers, two private security workers and a
physician.
Searches in Milan. Seven searches were conducted in a
parallel investigation. Milan DIGOS personnel worked
together with those of Genoa and found material
documents implicating Police and Carabinieri. The
persons investigated were a Deputy Superintendant and
two assistants working for the National Police, a
retired Carabinieri, a retired police officer, a
Carabinieri Marshal and one civilian.
The Milan Public Prosecutor's office is following a
line of investigation slightly different from that in
Genoa. DSSA members impersonated police, displayed
DSSA badges very similar to that of law enforcement,
and used police insignia and automobile lights.
AND NOW?
Obviously nothing all this happened in Italy...nice
pizza, nice pasta and alot of Gladiators.
Mr X
The End Times
Prophecy, 2012 and the London Olympics before war! (1/6/2007)
THE END OF TIMES PROPHECY
The
End-Times Prophecy of the Great Pyramid of Giza an article from
from Rare Insights actualy gives some interesting Insights in the
Christian Gnostic Vision of the end of times , so I decided to put
here a few extracts from this arcticle followed by some more in
depth analysis on this very important subject :
The Giza Pyramid contains a chronology that embraces
approximately 6,300 years. It speaks thereby of two
consummations of fate, namely the fate of mankind in a
liberating sense, and the fate of mankind in a
decaying and destructive sense, because, as previously
mentioned, the same intercosmic radiations will give
rise to different reactions, both positive as well as
negative.
We are here posing a question regarding the immediate
fate of mankind on Earth; the fate of the conversion
or the fate of the aversion. If we react positively to
the intercosmic radiations - indeed, if we are able to
react thus - then they will lead us into the New Life
of which all the true prophets, seers and Avatars have
spoken; if not, then in one way or another we shall be
eliminated from the New Earth. So it is and so it
should always be with every true end-of-a-world-cycle
prophecy. Every analysis of the activity of the
intercosmic radiations is always twofold. For this
reason we may find the following facts expressed in
scripture in various ways: "Whenever the Son of God
appears and the light breaks open and the blessed are
raised up unto Him, then the Judgement immediately
follows; the masses who have not chosen to selflessly
serve the Divine Plan are cut off". Here is alluded to
the fate of those who have definitely refused to react
positively to the intercosmic radiations, or "God's
Call".
Early in the 21st century the epoch of the Great
Pyramid ends. However, it will not then become a thing
of the past, a monument that reminds one of former
times, but then it immediately begins anew from the
bottom up, because there are intercosmic currents and
radiations that have an orbit of 6,300 years.
So let us explore further the nature of God's Call.
God's Call is not one or another holy book, wherein is
recounted God's activities on Earth or about what God
wants from mankind! Neither is God's Call the voice
that sounds to us by means of a Gnostic order, or by
means of one or another ecclesiastic body. No, God's
Call is a radiative plenitude, an intervention of
divine Light via the medium of Christ. That is why in
the Holy Language it is stated that God is Light.
The Gnosis is a radiative intervention, and that
radiative intervention - that Light - is a reality
with direct relevance to every human being on Earth
today. We are born here into this emergency order to
understand the purpose of the fallen world and to
attain victory, or in other words in order to walk the
Path of soul-redemption. If we do not do this, if we
go the way of dualistic phenomena, then we will be
grounded amidst the disaster of the closing phase of
this cycle for Earth. In every new period of existence
or world cycle we receive a chance to answer God's
Call positively. If we refrain from doing this, then
we will be liquidated, then our microcosm - every
unrepentant personality - will be forcefully purified
and emptied through the astral Fire. Our Earth-field
will also be purged, recycled and reorganised, in
order to prepare it for a new Day of Manifestation.
The radiation laws work for us and with us all, yet
they know no pardon. With respect to these activities
there is no compromise. We have the choice between
positive reaction and subsequent Liberation and Glory,
or death. If we do not respond, then God's Mercy shall
give our microcosm another opportunity, so that at
some other time in some other place a personality may
appear in the microcosm who will respond positively.
Until this happens, God's Call will continue to sound
in the emergency order.
In the case of a positive reaction, that is to say, if
we surrender ourselves unconditionally to the higher
powers, then a new birth develops in our microcosm, a
transfiguration, the emergence of a new Man, who is
eternal and who is able to return to the House of the
Father.
If we react negatively and do not walk the Path that
is shown us, then the said radiation powers will empty
our microcosm of this non-responsive, resisting
personality by death, and they will repeat this as
long as is necessary. We have nothing to hold on to,
because our own little world is ever fated to be
periodically eliminated and recycled.
Our emergency order, being a dualistic one, will pass,
and we cannot prevent it. Everything arises and
everything fades away, only in order to rise up again.
Never can this emergency order, this dualistic nature,
be made permanent, for it is fundamentally apt to
change. Personality follows personality, each time in
a new aspect of the world and, thus, there is no end
to the fresh opportunities that the microcosm receives
for a return to the Promised Land. This process
continues life after life and death after death,
until, at the end of a Cosmic Day - a major world
cycle or sidereal year - a radiation law releases a
universal Force that wipes out every kind of fallen,
unintegrated life on Earth.
A Cosmic Night is now setting in during which the face
of the Earth will be entirely changed. Thereupon, as
has been the case cyclically for ages upon Earth, a
new Day of Manifestation dawns and, under altered
conditions, the process is started once more in order
that the remainder of humanity may now react in the
correct manner. Messengers of the Gnosis descend anew,
to once again show mankind the Path of Liberation.
Now, there are various kinds of cosmic nights and,
therefore, also various kinds of days of
manifestation. They can be distinguished in minor and
major days of manifestation; minor developments
relative only to the Earth and major ones bringing on
a number of phenomena and transformations, e.g., in
the whole of the solar system. The zodiacal system is
subjected to similar periods of a still larger extent,
and those reigning the totality of the Milky Way
galaxy even exceed the aforementioned periods.
When we speak of esoteric sidereal years, we mean
approximately 25,200 years. We distinguish in every
such sidereal year twelve periods of about 2,100 years
each, and the Gnosis divides those 2,100 years again
in three periods of 700 years. Every such term of 700
years brings an important change in mankind's
existence. A period of 2,100 years ends in a change of
greater significance and sometimes even in the turmoil
of destruction comprising every aspect of social life,
all mankind and also the Earth or part of the Earth.
Continents may disappear and new continents rise up,
and in this way various geological changes are
periodically taking effect.
The beginning of what we indicate as the Christian era
practically corresponds with the start of such a
period of 2,100 years, and as we are now living in the
year 2006, it is evident that we have entered the
closing phase in which we discover the lines of
situations and possibilities which prove that
destruction and renewal is on the approach.
According to the chronology of the Great Pyramid - to
be precise since the 20th of August 1953 - humanity
entered the period of destruction of this 2,100-year
cycle in which we now live. Since 1953 the rise into
liberation has to take effect, or destruction must
follow. We know that this rise has started and that
the process of destruction also shows in the world.
Now, the chronology of the Great Pyramid speaks of
radiations with a circular course of about 6,300
years, divided into three periods of 2,100 years.
After three such periods of 2,100 years - that is,
after 6,300 years - the developing disaster will be
more radical than after an interim period of 2,100
years; and because the end of such an epoch of 6,300
years is drawing near, we need not ask what fate is to
be expected for the world and for humanity.
But on the other hand, the powerful radiation crisis
that we are facing in these days is also of special
importance for the Gnosis; it will affect us in a
particular sense if our attitude toward this new
development is spiritually positive! The Gnostic
victory of the future years will, therefore, be
greater and more glorious than ever before in the past
6,300 years; in fact, it will be more significant than
any previous Judgement Day in the last sidereal year,
for we are now at the end of a major world cycle.
Let us now imagine that we had lived all through a
sidereal year of 25,200 years; that we were not 30,
40, 50 or 60 years of age, but that we spent 25,200
years in this existence. We would have lived with
humanity through many changes, through major and minor
cosmic nights and days of manifestation. We would have
experienced and suffered right through 36 minor
changes, 12 moderate changes of 2,100 years, and 4
major changes of 6,300 years each. A considerable
amount of knowledge would therefore be ours with
regard to the workings and the consequences (positive
and negative) of the radiation laws prevailing in the
universe; the radiation powers relating to the world
and mankind.
Nothing about the course of those radiations and the
results thereof would be hidden to us. We would know a
good deal about the powers active in the universe; at
any rate our knowledge of them would suffice and
enable us to analyse the next epoch of 2,100 years
with ease. When we would have lived through all the
twists and turns of time, urged by the radiation
powers of the Logos, it would - after a long, long
time - be very easy for us to determine when the new
courses would start; we would know in advance what we
were to expect. Having gathered so much experience we
would then be able to construct, for instance, a
monument like the Pyramid of Giza without a shade of
speculation, forecasting or fortune-telling.
The builders of the Pyramid on the Nile were such
people with an Eternity-consciousness, and that
monument is an analysis in stone of what was to happen
in the period of 6,300 years following its
construction. A complete chronology has been laid down
in it by the usage of various kinds of stone, by the
scheme of construction and by the variation in the
heights and widths of its corridors and halls. The
Great Pyramid is, indeed, a prediction of everything
that was to occur in the next epoch of 6,300 years,
complete with dates, and all this definitely without
any speculation, for the builders constructed it for
that purpose on a strictly scientific basis, and they
were guided by millions of years of investigation!
When we had lived so long and had gathered so much
knowledge and experience in our being, then we would
probably be able, if not to build a monument, then
perhaps to write a kind of story about everything that
is going to happen in the approaching period. As a
means of expression, we could clothe this analysis of
time in some kind of garment; of a myth for example,
or some other romantic form that we could then present
to humanity or to a part of humanity. This would be a
rather lofty story, of course. It would nevertheless
be a record of happenings in many, many former periods
and, therefore, also of events in many times to come.
The recorded facts would be fictitious, but yet true,
for the story would be a positive analysis of the
science of radiation, the consequences and the results
of which had been verified in the course of millions
of years. In full and justified faith everybody could
accept this analysis, for the future would inevitably
provide the proof of the story's veracity.
This is the way in which every Holy Language was
shaped and scripture written. Besides the Pyramid of
Giza, the analysis in stone of the universal science
of radiation, humanity possesses the Holy Language,
which gives the same messages and information.
Every age had its holy tales and will have them for
all races and peoples as long as duality exists;
stories which, indeed, are analyses of past and future
contingencies, based on knowledge of the radiations;
and these stories will always prove to be alike, from
whatever races, peoples or periods they descend.
The central figure may be indicated as Moses, Krishna,
Jesus the Christ, Buddha or anyone else of the Very
Select, but in truth it is always the same analysis of
the universal science of radiation. The tales of all
races and peoples and periods will always be
fundamentally alike, because they are given to
humanity by liberated, absolutely redeemed Entities
who voluntarily assist the non-liberated part of
mankind. As members of the August Body of Christ, they
willingly serve the Divine Plan of Salvation.
Naturally, these Entities have full knowledge of the
universal science of radiation, and from this
knowledge they preach to the non-redeemed people when
a new period is about to begin, telling them how it
will and must be, how they must react in order to be
redeemed; to realise Deliverance.
Whoever forgets the information and advice of the
Select can always reach for the tale, for the storied
analysis of the science of radiation contained
therein. Undoubtedly you will now see the enormous
value of the Bible for all of us. This is why the
enlightened Rosicrucians said of the Bible: "Blessed
is he who possesses it, blessed is he who reads it,
blessed is he who understands it, but blessed above
all is he who comprehends it and obeys!"
The Book of Revelation in the New Testament is also a
revelation of the science of the cyclic radiations.
(end of the
article from RARE INSIGHTS)
2012 AND THE RING OF FIRE
Seismic and volcanic activity in the "ring of fire"
signal the beginning of the apocalypse prophecied for
the year 2012.
This earthquake was located in Indonesia, a country of
17,000 islands that make up the so-called Ring of Fire
around the Pacific Ocean basin where plate boundaries
intersect and volcanoes regularly erupt. Although
scientists cannot predict exactly when seismic events
will occur, seismologists had predicted this quake. In
the March 17 2005 issue of the journal Nature,
researchers at the University of Ulster-Coleraine in
Northern Ireland reported that stress was building in
the Sumatran subduction zone as well as in the
adjacent Sunda Trench. They warned that the stress was
likely to be released in another seismic event. The
faults are part of the Pacific "ring of fire," where
continental plates grind against each other and spark
periodic seismic shocks.
The Ring of Fire has been quoted in many prophesies as
being the first indicator of the end times when the
geologic upheaval begin to increase in frequency. Over
the last century, we have seen many severe
earthquakes, but the frequency in such a concise time
period has increased since the 1990s. Author Nina
Anderson based her novel, 2012 Airborne Prophesy, on
the prophetic Ring of Fire predictions, which alerts
the reader to possible human causes for the
acceleration of the earth’s instability. In the book,
she projects that present levels of wireless
technology are rising and this frequency saturation
will eventually create a harmonic disturbance that
could generate an instability of the earth’s crust.
In 2012 Airborne Prophesy we are warned that the
experiments with targeted ionospheric or subsurface
electromagnetic frequencies disregard any conclusive
evidence of safety to our planet. A illuminati
generated unexpected earthquake two years agol in
Colorado shook residents and stirred controversy. New
powerful ionospheric heaters are working to improve
communications with submarines and to be used as
subterranean radar to locate underground defense
facilities. These frequency-based devices created by
the evil tecnology of the demonic Jinns are unseating
the continental plates and spawning the rash of
earthquakes in the Pacific or and they are part of our
unfolding end-days prophecies.
IN THE MEANTIME 2012 ALREADY CAUSES CONTROVERSY WITH ISLAM
The 2012 London Olympics have been plunged into
controversy by the discovery that the Games will clash
with Ramadan, the most holy month in the Islamic
calendar.
The clash will put Muslim athletes at a disadvantage
as they will be expected to fast from sunrise to
sunset for the entire duration of the Games.
In 2012, Ramadan will take place from July 21 to
August 20, while the Olympics run from July 27 to
August 12.
An anticipated 3,000 Muslim competitors are expected
to be affected.
About a quarter of the 11,099 athletes who took part
in the 2004 Athens Olympics came from countries with
predominantly Muslim populations.
Because the Muslim calendar is based on a lunar cycle,
the ninth month of Ramadan - which runs from the
appearance of one new crescent moon to the next - gets
earlier by around 11 days each year.
The clash will be a huge embarrassment for Lord Coe,
Culture Secretary Tessa Jowell, and London Mayor Ken
Livingstone, who have been keen to ensure the Games
involve all Britain's ethnic communities.
Massoud Shadjareh, chairman of the London-based
Islamic Human Rights Commission, said: "They would not
have organised this at Christmas. It is equally stupid
to organise it at Ramadan.
"It shows a complete lack of awareness and
sensitivity.
"This is going to disadvantage the athletes and
alienate the Asian communities by saying they don't
matter.
"It's not only going to affect the participants it's
going to affect all the people who want to watch the
Games.
"They won't want to travel during Ramadan and they
won't want to watch sport. It's a spiritual time."
Shaykh Ibrahim Mogra, an imam on the Muslim Council of
Great Britain, said: "I'm sure the athletes will seek
advice from their scholars.
"They are obviously going to be at a disadvantage
because other competitors will be drinking and keeping
up their energy levels.
"But they are athletes and I am sure they will train
their bodies to cope with this.
"A Muslim might feel it would have been nice to avoid
this month but life doesn't stop for Muslims during
Ramadan even though they are fasting.
"The best thing for a Muslim is to continue his or her
life as normal. This is the real test."
The British Olympic Association is now planning a
meeting with the organisers of London 2012 to discuss
how the timing will affect UK Muslim athletes.
And Muslim countries such as Turkey are calling for
the date to be changed.
Togay Bayalti, president of the National Olympic
Committee of Turkey, said: "This will be difficult for
Muslim athletes.
"They don't have to observe Ramadan if they are doing
sport and travelling but they will have to decide
whether it is important to them.
"It would be nice for the friendship of the Games if
they had chosen a different date."
n fo
The International Olympics Committee insisted the
Games take place some time between July 15 to August
31, giving more than a week either side of Ramadan.
IOC spokeswoman Giselle Davies said: "We give a window
to the five bid cities. The host city selects the
dates within that window.
"The Games bring together virtually every religion and
creed. How to deal with religious clashes is up to the
athletes."
Joanna Manning Cooper, spokeswoman London 2012, said:
"We did know about it when we submitted our bid and we
have always believed we could find ways to accommodate
it.
"We had lots of things to consider when we submitted
our dates, including the fact that transport will be
less crowded in the summer holiday.
"We also need 70,000 volunteers and this is the best
time to find them.
"We are working with the Muslim Council of Great
Britain to find ways to accommodate Ramadan during the
London Games."
These words by Joanna Manning Cooper show that the
illuminati and their London Brothers organizing
London 2012 are deliberetaly creating this conflict
for their evil psycological war against Islam
especialy in 2012...
THE EYE IN THE PYRAMID OF NONSENSE
On
Raymond Mardyks’ website, (now unavailable), he
decodes the Great Seal of America, which appears on
every dollar bill the infamous seal of the illuminati
Order. The Seal shows a 13-step pyramid with the date 1776 in
Roman numerals, on it. Just as the pyramid of Kukulkcan has 91
steps on each of the 4 sides, making 364 in all, plus the top
level giving the number 365, the Great Seal pyramid also has an
encoded calendrical meaning. Like some Maya pyramids, it has a
date on it, but in the Gregorian calendar. 4 sides of 13 levels
gives 52, which is the number of weeks in our year. However, 13
and 52 are also the key numbers in the Mayan calendar
systems.
In the Great Cycle, there are 13 baktuns of 20
katuns each; each katun consists of 20 tuns, so there are 5200
tuns in the Great Cycle. There are also 52 haabs in a Calendar
Round. Some Mayan groups named cycles after end dates rather than
beginning dates. They would also have seen a series of 13 katuns
as a significant cycle. 1776 was not only the year that the
Declaration of Independence was signed (on the 4th of July), but
was also a special year in the Mayan calendar. Just as the last
katun in the Great Cycle is “katun 2012”, the first katun in
the cycle of 13 was “katun 1776”. In fact, the katun ended 33
days before the signing. So 1776 is the bottom level of the
pyramid, where the date is actually inscribed – the top of the
pyramid is therefore 2012.
The top would also be 2012 if each level
represented one of the 13 baktuns in the Great Cycle, with 3114 BC
at the bottom. The top of the Great Seal pyramid shows as we know
an eye-in-triangle, which has been associated with Sirius, God,
the pineal gland, and the Illuminati. Mardyks goes on to point out
that not only was the Egyptian calendar based on the rising of
Sirius, but that “the Sun is astrologically conjunct Sirius
every year on July 4 for the birthday of the United States of
America”. Also, some Mayan groups froze their New Year to July
26, “when Sirius rises in that part of the world.” On January
1 at midnight, Sirius culminates, reaching its highest point in
the sky, at the only time of year when it is visible all night
long.
For the astrologically minded who understand
that which is above is the same as that which is below, check out
the links between 1776 and 2012 by the positions of Uranus &
Pluto and get ready for some big events in the next 5 years
culminating on the 21st of December 2012 in the GREAT WAR against
what many of you describe today as the Reptilians that we know in
the illuminati as evil Jinns the muslims call HABIS RUH.
More on the coming war against the Reptilian
HABIS RUH in my next article.
Leo Lyon Zagami now Khaled Saifullah Khan
Today Solana
meets puppet master Kissinger (1/9/2007)

Javier Solana is meeting today with good old
Henry
Kissinger.... (Check the time table of Javier Solana)
http://www.consilium.europa.eu/cms3_applications/
applications/solana/index.asp?lang=DE&cmsid=246
TUESDAY 09 JANUARY 2007
Visit to United States
New York City
09:00
Meeting with European Ambassadors
10:00
Address to UN Security Council on the Democratic
Republic of Congo
14:30
Meeting with Henry Kissinger
The Leo Wanta
affair: lawyer letters (1/9/2007)
Note:
copy and paste the images below and enlarge them in order to read them
better


New Grand
Secretary at the United Grand Lodge of England (1/10/2007)

The MW The Grand Master has appointed Brother
CNR
Brown to be Grand Secretary and Grand Scribe E with
effect from 1st February 2007.
Brother Nigel Brown was born in Lusaka in the then
Northern Rhodesia and was educated in Southern
Rhodesia. From the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst he
was commissioned into the Grenadier Guards, retiring
as a Captain. He then spent 15 years in senior
management, and for the past 12 years has been a
business consultant specialising in advising clients
on winning competitive global tenders.
He is married with two adult children, has been a
Freemason for 19 years and is currently serving as a
Deputy Grand Director of Ceremonies.
Big in Japan
.'. (1/10/2007)

Dear Leo,
Thank you for your message and your requirement about
latest development of the Japanese Jesuit legacy.
However, for your information, please have a look at this article
about Japanese Yakuza in which you can find a name of Ryoichi
Sasagawa (already died) with Jean Paul II. This Sasagawa (war
criminal) was a Knight of Malta. Together with Kodama, they were
asset of CIA and as you may know, Japanese current ruling party,
LDP was created and financed by CIA. Sasagawa created the Anti
Communist League and their political influence is still big,
especially via Unification Church of Moon. As for Opus Dei in
Japan, they are "officially" active in Kobe since 1950s,
but we cannot get much information about their real activities at
present in Japan.
http://www.voltairenet.org/article30028.html?
var_recherche=YAKUZA%20KODAMA? var_recherche=YAKUZA%20KODAMA
http://www.voltairenet.org/article30068.html?
var_recherche=YAKUZA%20KODAMA? var_recherche=YAKUZA%20KODAMA
However, as you could see in the Spellman Code (or
Supelman like the one in Nostradums), there seems to be something
related to the conspiracy with Opus Dei in Manila. The guy who was
arrested after the kidnapping was married to Philipino woman and
we believe he was CIA member, although the mass media hided it or
even not
investigated his real identy or what was a real purpose.
The real purpose of this "kidnapping" was said money,
but we believe that it was to hide something or distract the
people's attention from something or to communicate the content of
that strange letter, which was composed by Japanese Hiragana,
Kanji, and Katakana.
As anagram mania, we tried to decode the content using
the part of Katakana. In fact, it was a strange letter without
any important content and just very long. But the
first sentence in Roman alphabet showed us the
terrible content as I have shown and we are convinced
that there is an international network behind this
message to announce a kind of agenda for the future
to their members in Japan.
I have to mention the fact that just before the
kidnapping, Rothschild came to Japan and stayed in Tokyo for quite
a long period and there was also an AEI meeting to discuss about
future war between China and Japan (they said how to make war
between Japan and China but not how to avoid it!). In spring,
there was an annual meeting of
Trilateral Commission in Tokyo.
Immediately after the kidnapping, on 17.1.2006, the
police has suddenly investigated the company Live Door
and next day on 18, a guy related to the scandal (I
believe there was also money laundering behind
together with politicians) found dead in Okinawa, and
announced "suicide". Apparently he was murdered like
Hara-kiri by somebody else with soccer shirt of
JUVENTUS( which was also too strange because this
shirt disappeared after and I found there was also a
message in this Italian soccer team owned in the
past by Agneli of Fiat ).
Mass media never tells us the truth, but just
manipulate people with wrong information. This guy was told that
he was doing some preparation of Casino project in Okinawa.
We found that Casino Austria International (of which
major shareholder is said Vatican), was also preparing
a huge project in Okinawa (was it a conflict of
interests?).
The content in Japanese of the Spellman said "nikete
kudasai=nigete kudasai = please run away" and addressee from
Sendai was Togu (it means otherwise Prince
Naruhito=mason). Run away from what? Run away from
future plots of Nuke terrorism or un attack in Sinai
prepared by Mossad and Queen? Who is Paul, how he
will get 10 millions, for what reason, using Opus Dei
Manila and death at Manila?
Are they all just a matter of coincidence?. No, I
believe, this is really a code for NWO agenda by somebody. Was it
prepared by Opus Dei or Jesuit in Japan or coming from outside
Japan (I believe so) ?
Most of message in these anagram have been realiyed so
far, such as attack by Israel in Lebanon, or Missile from North
Korea etc, except Peking uses nuke on US( may be in a future
"THEY" are preparing ??') But. why Duke of
Kent and why Nassau? (Prince Naruhito and Masako with
Aiko went to visit Holland's Royal Family this summer
and it was quite unusual for the royal tradition,
have they escape something ?)
This story of Spellman or Spellman has not yet
finished and we still continue to examine all aspects and I thank
you for your important information about Gelli and P2 as well as
the relationship between Duke of Kent ,Vatican and Opus Dei. It
was a real key to understand the message in this code. We think
there are "usual suspects" of
writer or commander but we don't know exactly who was
a commander.
So please keep this information secret and not tell
about it at this stage at your radio show, but for you only.
However, you can also discuss with your most confident
and serious people around you, because if these anagrams show the
future plots of agenda for Armageddon, we have to be very careful
and I think there is a network of money
laundering and terrorism such as
Mafia/Yakuza/Unification church /Jesuit or Opus Dei
or Vatican/CIA/P2/Mossad/Mason etc etc for promoting
NWO agenda.
I will continue to check for other events to know who
are the members of this network within Japan (I think most of
mason politicians) and I will appreciate your information if you
could find some hints or important news related to this code.
Sincerely yours,
Sarah
Illuminati Confessions Correspondent from Japan
Between the
demonic and the miraculous (1/10/2007)
Jesuit Athanasius Kircher and the Baroque culture of
machines

In the photo the Sanctuary of the Mentorella dedicated
to the Black Mary (Isis) were many key Jesuits
including Athanasius Kircher got their heart burried
under the altar. It is a very important Santuary for
the Jesuits were all Pope's go in pilgrimage
including Ratzinger to worship the Great Mother Godess
and the heart of the Great Jesuit Master and
alchemist Athanasius Kircher.
Unabridged draft of essay published in abridged form
in The Great Art of Knowing: The Baroque Encyclopedia
of Athanasius Kircher, ed. Daniel Stolzenberg,
Stanford: Stanford University Libraries, 2001, pp.
59-70
Introduction: Serious jokes
From the magnetic Jesus walking on water described in
his very first published book, the 1631 Ars Magnesia,
to the unfortunate cat imprisoned in a catoptric chest
and terrified by its myriad reflections shown to
visitors to his famous museum, the peculiar
mechanical, optical, magnetic, hydraulic and pneumatic
devices constructed by Athanasius Kircher (1602-1680)
continue to defy the analytical categories used in
both traditional museum history and history of
science.[1] Although Filippo Buonanni (1638-1725)
later attempted to reduce the machines of the
Kircherian museum to the status of mechanical
demonstrations, even adding some of his own[2], it is
clear that for Kircher and his immediate entourage,
these machines were, in some real sense, magical. Far
from being trivial addenda to a collection of
antiquities and naturalia, the documents suggest that
Kircher’s machines were utterly central to any
seventeenth century visit to the Musaeum Kircherianum.
But, from the point of view of traditional histories
of science, Kircher’s machines remain defiantly
perplexing. Their emblematic, ludic, and deceptive
connotations sit ill with any attempt to place them
within grand histories of “experimental science”
emphasizing the demise of Aristotelianism through the
triumph of an “experimental method” during precisely
the period in which the Kircherian museum enjoyed its
exhuberant heyday. From the point of view of the
history of collections, the machines accumulated by
Kircher and his disciples in Rome cannot merely be
treated as objects removed from circulation, or from
their original context of usage, as these machines had
no original context of usage, and did not circulate
prior to their display in the museum.[3] Rather, we
are dealing with purpose-built installations,
constructed ad hoc by Kircher and his changing body of
assistants, technicians and disciples in the Collegio
Romano.
So what are we to make of these magical machines? This
article attempts to situate Kircher’s machines in a
Baroque culture of artificial magic. Using
contemporary accounts of visits to Kircher’s museum
and other documents, it aims to recover the purpose of
these devices, to understand how they worked, not only
by peering inside them to examine their secret
workings, but also by looking outside them at how
people responded to them, and at how Kircher and his
Jesuit companions placed this part of their output in
a rich tradition of artificial magic that has commonly
been overlooked or trivialised by historians of
science. We will argue that Kircher’s machines found
their meaning in a flourishing Baroque culture of
special effects. In the same way that “inside jokes”
confirm the identity of a particular social group,
while excluding the majority of people who are not
privy to the assumptions on which the joke is based,
the machines of Kircher and his disciples provided an
elite social group with self-defining puzzles and
enigmas.
The game of deducing the natural causes behind the
strange effects produced by Kircher’s magical
machines, such as a clepsydra apparently pouring water
upwards into a “watery heaven”, really caused by a
hidden mirror, was somewhat akin to fox-hunting or
golf in our society: if you could play the game, your
identity as part of a particular social elite was
confirmed. If you could not play the game, and had to
assume that demonic forces were responsible for the
strange effects you were witnessing, you were doomed
to the ranks of the vulgar masses. In this respect,
Kircher’s machines had much in common with courtly
emblems and enigmas, and the culture of “sprezzatura”
which countless behaviour-manuals vainly attempted to
divulge in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.[4]
Like many types of joke, Kircher’s machines are, we
argue, inherently conservative. They rest on a shared
mystery – the hidden causes behind the visible
effects. To challenge the received picture of the
causes operating in the natural world in response to
such a machine would thus amount in a strong sense to
spoiling the joke for everybody else.[5]
At the core of Kircher’s marvellous machines, then,
lies a robust epistemological conservatism. Kircher’s
machines thus offer us an alternative to conventional
stories of the inevitable collapse of Aristotelian
natural philosophy through direct experimentation, and
require us to refine our understanding of the roles
played by machines, experiments and instruments in
seventeenth century natural philosophy. The culture of
the elite audience for which Kircher’s machines were
designed is inscribed graphically on the machines
themselves – one need only consider such items as the
water-vomiting two-headed Imperial Eagle (fig. 1, see
also fig. 2), or the perspectival trick unjumbling an
image of Pope Alexander VII. Indeed, one could
arguably take this further and view the Musaeum
Kircherianum as a whole as something of a
self-portrait of an elite, primarily a Roman Catholic
elite centered around the twin poles of the courts of
Rome and Vienna. This elite was not a “given” quantity
when Kircher’s museum came into existence – rather the
museum helped to construct and consolidate the elite
while the elite helped to construct the museum by
corresponding with Kircher and providing him with
portrait medals, natural curiosities and other objects
for his collection.
At the centre of a vast correspondence network, and
increasingly famous through his lavishly illustrated
encyclopedic publications, Kircher wielded
considerable power to shape the social group
represented in his museum. Limited only by his
religious poverty, Kircher extended his network at
will to include powerful Protestants such as Duke
August of Brunswick-Lüneburg or Queen Christina of
Sweden, prior to her conversion. In a revealing letter
to Duke August’s librarian Johann Georg Anckel,
Kircher wrote that he had immediately had Duke
August’s portrait “framed in gold and put up in my
Gallery as a Mirror of the magnanimity, wisdom and
generosity of the high-born prince”, adding that “my
Gallery or museum is visited by all the nations of the
world and a prince cannot become better known in hoc
Mundi theatro than have his likeness here. And if the
expense were not so great I would do this for all
Germans, but I must cut my coat according to my
cloth”.[6]
As well as holding up a trick-mirror to an elite
audience, Kircher’s museum also emblematized the
Jesuit order itself. Many of the curious natural
objects and artefacts of remote cultures present in
the museum were sent to Kircher by Jesuit
missionaries, who constitute the single most numerous
group of his correspondents. Some of Kircher’s
machines provide striking emblematic depictions of his
order – his universal catholic horoscope of the
Society of Jesus was a large sundial representing the
Jesuit order as an olive tree, with the different
Assistancies or administrative divisions of the order
represented as branches, and the different colleges
represented as leaves. Tiny sundials placed in each
province give the local time, and the shadows of the
gnomons of the sundials, when aligned, spelled “IHS”,
the abbreviated name of Jesus and symbol of the Jesuit
order, which appears to “walk over the world” with the
passing of time (fig. 3).[7] In Kircher’s museum,
visitors were also shown “a large crystalline globe
full of water representing the resurrection of the
Saviour in the midst of the waters”.[8] One of the
aims of this article is to understand the relationship
between such artefacts and Kircher’s position in the
Jesuit Collegio Romano. The moment of the creation of
the Musaeum Kircherianum coincided with a disciplinary
crisis in Jesuit education that led the superiors of
the order to condemn departures from Aristotle in
philosophy, including natural philosophy or physics,
and from Thomas Aquinas in theology. The works of
Jesuit authors on natural philosophy during this
period were closely scrutinized for anti-Aristotelian
views.[9] The exotic publications of Kircher and his
disciples seem to contradict this doctrinal
fundamentalism, but we will suggest that the
contradiction is only apparent. The treatment of
machines and instruments, even those associated with
criticisms of Aristotle, in the works of Kircher and
his Jesuit apprentices in magic was designed to avoid
conflict with fundamental Aristotelian principles.
The machines
Before taking a look at the the magical and
mathematical traditions from which Kircher’s machines
emerged and the functions, mechanical and social, that
they performed, it might be opportune to have a first
glance at the machines themselves. In 1678 Giorgio de
Sepibus (fl. 1678), Kircher’s “assistant in making
machines” published the first catalogue of the Musaeum
Kircherianum.[10] Little is known about De Sepibus,
from the Wallis (Valesia) canton in Switzerland, who
seems to have been an intermittent companion of
Kircher, and is first mentioned ten years earlier in a
letter from the Oratorian priest Francesco Gizzio to
Kircher. In 1670 Kircher sent De Sepibus to Naples,
where he brought a number of machines to perfection,
with the exception of a “versatile pulpit” that was
left incomplete. It is not clear when De Sepibus left
Kircher’s service, but by 1674 Kircher seems to have
feared him dead, so with all likelihood the catalogue
was completed well before its publication.[11] De
Sepibus provides us with a summary list of the
machines present in Kircher’s museum, which may serve
as our starting point:
1. Two helical spirals most skilfully measuring
cycles with the twisted coils of snakes. An organ,
driven by an automatic drum, playing a concert of
every kind of birdsong, and sustaining in mid-air a
spherical globe, continually buffetted by the force of
the wind.
2. A hydrostatic-magnetic machine, representing
the hours, zodiac, planets and the whole fabric of the
heavens. The hours are described by means of a very
simple motion, in which images of the Sun and Moon
alternately ascend and descend vertically. The
divisions of the hour are marked by the sympathetic
motion of the flight of small birds.
3. A magnetic-hydraulic machine displaying the
time all over the world, as well as the astronomical,
Italian, Babylonian and ancient hours.
4. A little fountain moving the globe weighing
down on the head of Atlas in a circle by hidden
movements.
5. A fountain lifts a genie fixed in the water up
and down, with a perpetual motion of tossing about and
turning.
6. A fountain in which the Goddess Isis, contained
in a crystalline sphere, is sustained, and greets
guests by spraying water everywhere.
7. A hydraulic machine that apes perpetual motion,
recently invented by the Author, consisting of a
clepsydra that flows out when it is inverted, and
again when it is turned the right way up, wetting a
watery heaven with its spray.
8. A hydraulic machine most skilfully representing
the Primum Mobile, and violently impelling a brass
snake resting on top of the water in twists and turns
by water.
9. A water-vomiting hydraulic machine, at the top
of which stands a figure vomiting up various liquids
for guests to drink.
10. A hydraulic clock urging or carrying globes or
genies up and down inside crystal tubes of five palms
in height, indicating the different times.
11. A hydraulic machine, which supports a crystal
goblet, from one side of which a thirsty bird drinks
up water, that a snake revomits from the other side
while opening its mouth
12. A hydrotectonic machine moving armed knights from
one place and a crowd returning from another by means
of continual drops.
13. A two-headed Imperial Eagle, vomitting water
copiously from the depths of its gullets.
14. A crowd of dancing genies driven by the silent
approach of water
15. The dove of Archytas reaching towards a
crystalline rotunda and indicating the hours by its
free flight.
16. The catoptric theatre, completely filled with a
treasure of all sorts of delicacies, fruits, and
precious ornaments
17. An architectural perspective representing the
arrangement of the rooms inside a magnificent palace.
18. A perpetual screw, the invention of Archimedes,
by which it is an easy matter to lift 125 pounds with
the strength of a very weak small boy.
19. A large crystalline globe full of water
representing the resurrection of the Saviour in the
midst of the waters.
Various thermoscopes, or thermometers which indicate
the daily growth of simples, the mutations of the air,
the ebb and flow of the tide, and the variation of the
winds, together with experiments on the origins of
springs.
An extremely large concavo-convex burning mirror, with
a collection of many mirrors, some of which show
ghosts in the air, others show objects unchanged,
others show them multiplied and others reconstitute
completely undetermined species from a confused series
into a beautiful form. Amongst these there is one
which reconstitutes the effigy of Alexander VII.
....
A large number of mechanical clocks, one of which
plays harmonious music by a concert of bells with an
elaborate movement, at any hour it plays the sound,
also every half-hour with a marvellous harmony of
notes and sweetness of sound it plays the hymn Ave
Maris stella. Another one indicating the time of day
by the movement of a pendulum. Another , finally,
giving the minutes and seconds of time. The part of
the world illuminated by the sun, the increase and
decrease of day and night. The current sign of the
zodiac, the astronomical and Italian hours, as well as
the ancient hours, or the unequal hours, which it
describes along a straight line by a singular
artifice. Many sundials.
...
Armillary spheres, and celestial and terrestrial
globes, equipped with their meridians and pivots.
Astrolabes, Planispheres, Quadrants, a very full
collection of mathematical instruments.
...
The Delphic Oracle, or speaking statue.
A Divinatory Machine for any planetary influence at
the circumference of two glass spheres by genies moved
uniformly by a mutually sympathetic motion. Twisting
themselves to the same degree at a large distance,
each of them in his sphere indicates the same point of
the sign.
Various motions of solid globes bearing a resemblance
to perpetual motion.
A hydraulic perpetual motion by rarefaction and
condensation, an Archimedean screw carrying globes up
with a continual motion through helical glass
channels.[12]
This list is both illuminating and opaque – while
allowing us to form an idea of what some of the
machines may have looked like or sounded like, it
gives us little or no idea of how they were perceived
by contemporaries. Let us take one of them at random
-- “the Delphic Oracle, or speaking statue”, the
description of which De Sepibus leaves to the final
chapter of his catalogue of the museum’s contents,
stating that “we have rightly left the greatest
machination of art until the final course”. What was
this great “machination”? How did it work? Why was it
made? De Sepibus gives the following description of
the oracle:
Kircher has [sic, for “had”] a tube in the workshop of
his bedroom, arranged in such a way that the porters,
in order to call him to the door when business
demanded it, used not have to take the trouble to go
all the way to his bedroom, but merely called him in a
normal voice at the door that gave access to the
open-air garden. He heard their words as clearly as
if they had been present in his bedroom, and answered
in the same way, through the tube [...] Later he
transferred this tube to the Museum, and inserted it
into a statue in such away that the statue, almost
breathing life, is seen to speak with its mouth open,
and its eyes moving. He named this statue the Delphic
oracle, as it was in the same way, by the ingenious
trick of stuffing tubes into the mouths of idols, that
the ancient priests of the Egyptians and Greeks
deceived the people consulting the oracle and made
superstitious men give valuable offerings[13]
A manuscript draft of De Sepibus’ description (in
Kircher’s handwriting incidentally, suggesting that he
had a rather active role in the composition of the
1678 catalogue), is conserved amongst Kircher’s
manuscripts in the Pontifical Gregorian University, in
which he sometimes calls the machine the Oracle of
Apollo, but otherwise describes it almost
identically.[14] Kircher’s earlier 1673 work on sound
and acoustics, the Phonurgia nova, gives us a more
detailed account of the machine, and its changing role
in the Collegio Romano:
There was a repository in my Museum, between the wall
and the door. At the end of the repository was an oval
shaped window, looking out over the domestic garden of
the Collegio Romano, which is about 300 palms in
length and width. Inside this repository, or workshop,
I adapted a conical tube to the length of the space,
made from a length of 22 palms of sheet-iron, the
speaking hole of which did not exceed ¼ of a palm in
diameter. The tube, however, had a diameter of one
palm at its aperture that then grew gradually by
continuous and proportional increments in diameter so
that the orifice of the part extended out of the oval
window towards the garden had a diameter of three
palms. We have seen how the tube was made, now we will
also explain its effect.
Whenever our porters had to inform me of something,
either of the arrival of guests or of any other
matter, so that they would not be inconvenienced by
having to come to my Museum through the labyrinthine
corridors of the college, while standing inside the
porters’ lodge they could talk to me while I remained
in the remote recesses of my bedroom, and, as if they
were present, they could tell me whatever they wanted
clearly and distinctly. Then I too could respond in
the same tone of voice according to the demands of the
matter, through the orifice of the tube. Indeed nobody
could say anything inside the garden in a clear voice
that I could not hear inside my bedroom, and this was
a thing seen as completely new and unheard of by the
visitors to my museum, when they heard speech, but
couldn’t see who was talking. So that I would not be
suspected of some prohibited Art by the astonished
people, I showed them the hidden structure of the
device. It is difficult to say how many people, even
including many Roman Nobles, were attracted to see and
hear this machine.
...
It happened later that I was required to transfer my
Private Museum into a more suitable, and open space in
the Collegio Romano, that they call the Gallery. Here,
the tube that I have briefly described before was also
moved, and even now it is looked at and listened to
under the name of the Delphic Oracle, with the
following difference: the tube that previously
propagated clearly spoken words plainly into a distant
space, now acts secretly in ludic oracles and false
consultations with a hidden and quiet voice, so that
nobody present is able to perceive anything of the
secret technique of the reciprocal murmured
conversation. And when it is exhibited to strangers
even to this day, there are not lacking those who
harbour a suspicion of demons among those who do not
understand the machine, for the statue opens and
closes its mouth as if it was speaking, and moves its
eyes. Therefore I built this machine in order to
demonstrate the impostures, fallacies and frauds of
the ancient priests in the consultation of oracles.
For while they gave their answers through secret tubes
(described in the Oedipus), they urged the people to give
offerings extravagantly, if they wanted their prayers to be
answered. And consequently, by this fraud, they were able to
greatly increase their wealth. In any case I would not deny that
they also secretly involved demons in their works.[15] Kircher’s
Delphic oracle reveals much about the role of machines in his
Museum, and also much about the history of the museum itself. We
are told that Kircher had a “private museum” before he
transferred his collection to the Gallery of the Collegio Romano
after the “official” founding of the museum with Alfonso
Donnini’s 1651 bequest of his collection of antiquities to the
Collegio Romano.[16] Where was this “private museum”? In the
passage cited from the Phonurgia Nova, Kircher identifies it
explicitly with his “cubiculum”, or bedroom in the Collegio
Romano. So, even before Kircher was in charge of the Gallery of
the Collegio, his own bedroom functioned as a museum, containing
within it a storage area or workshop, from which his speaking-tube
originally allowed him to communicate with, or occasionally
eavesdrop on, people in the College garden and the college
porters, who, one imagines, must have been pleased with this
labour-saving device. In England, at around the same time, another
prominent mathematical magician, John Wilkins (1614-1672), made a
similar speaking-tube in the gardens of Wadham College, Oxford.
One day, a certain Mr. Ashwell was strolling through the college,
shortly after Cromwell had urged the Fellows of Oxford University
to bring the Gospel to Virginia. As he passed the statue of Flora,
he was astonished to hear it say to him “Ashwell goe preach the
Gospel in Virginia”, in a Puritanical translation of Kircher’s
Jesuit machine.[17] To return to Kircher’s multi-purpose bedroom
in the Collegio Romano, however, it may appear strange that this
domestic space also functioned as a museum, and clearly attracted
enough visitors to warrant the development of an intercom system.
In fact, there was a long tradition in the Collegio Romano before
Kircher’s arrival of describing the bedroom of the senior
mathematician of the college as the musaeum mathematicum.
Christoph Clavius (1538-1612), famous for his commentary on the
Sphere of Sacrobosco, and for his extensive activities as a Jesuit
mathematical pedagogue, kept mathematical instruments, clocks and
manuscripts in this space, a space that also served as the focus
for the activities of the private mathematical academy of the
Collegio Romano. Unlike the normal mathematics lectures that
formed part of the College’s public curriculum in philosophy,
often taught by a junior professor, the mathematical academy was
founded with the specific aim of teaching mathematics professors
for the Jesuit colleges in the different provinces of the Order.
Generally, the bedrooms of Jesuits were not provided with keys,
but, along with the rooms of the Superiors and the Procurator
(responsible for the financial affairs of the College), the room
of the senior mathematician of the College formed an
exception.[18] The added security of a key meant that the
mathematics professor could store valuable mathematical
instruments in his domestic space. The musaeum mathematicum of the
Collegio Romano then, formed a space for advanced level
mathematical teaching and for the formation of close relationships
between master and disciples, relationships which generally
continued through correspondence after the apprentice
mathematicians left to teach the mathematical disciplines in the
provinces. When Christoph Clavius died, in 1612, his
correspondence, manuscripts, instruments and position as the most
senior mathematician of the Collegio Romano were inherited by the
Tyrolese Jesuit Christoph Grienberger (c. 1564-1636). After
Grienberger’s death in on 11 March 1636, the manuscripts
collected by Clavius and Grienberger, their “archive” of
correspondence, and their instruments seem to have all passed to
Kircher. So, although Kircher only occupied the position of public
mathematics professor for a short time, he inherited the musaeum
mathematicum, a space in which the building of instruments and
machines was already an established tradition. Indeed, Kircher’s
far more modest predecessor Grienberger was rumoured to have
invented a speaking statue himself.[19] We find ample references
in the works of Kircher to the documents and objects Kircher
inherited. In Kircher’s 1641 book on magnetism, the Magnes, for
example, Kircher states clearly that “I have collected together
many observations concerning magnetic declination that are not to
be rejected [...] partly from the Archive that I possess of
mathematical letters sent from the different parts of the globe to
Clavius, Grienberger and my other predecessors as Roman
mathematicians of the Society of Jesus”.[20] Emulating the
private mathematical academy directed by Clavius and Grienberger
before his arrival in Rome, Kircher gathered private disciples
around him who were also able to avail of the instruments and
documents that Kircher had inherited from his mathematical
predecessors. While working as Kircher’s assistant in Rome
between 1652 and 1654, Kaspar Schott (1608-1666) seems to have
spent much of his time leafing through the papers of Clavius and
Grienberger: “In the manuscripts of the most learned man Fr.
Christoph Grienberger [...] that I found in the Clavius and
Grienberger archive ”, he wrote in his Mechanica
Hydraulico-Pneumatica, “I came across the following words about
this Machine made by Bettini, and an opinion about perpetual
motion”.[21] Describing a machine in which a sphere was
suspended in the air and rotated about its centre, Schott wrote
“I found the following machine amongst the papers of Fr.
Christoph Clavius and Fr. Christoph Grienberger, once professors
of mathematics in this Roman College of ours. However it was in
the handwriting of neither of them, nor was it composed by them,
as it smelled of neither of their lanterns. I suspect that it was
sent to Clavius by one of the disciples of Francesco Maurolico,
the Abbot of Messina, for it cites a small unpublished treatise of
his. But, whomsoever’s manuscript it is, I have judged it
fitting that it should be inserted here, since it can be applied
to many things by an industrious artisan”.[22] Schott also
borrowed items from the Clavius and Grienberger “mathematical
archive” that he did not acknowledge – a demonstration of how
to lift a golden earth using the force of one talent, using a
system of toothed wheels published in his Magia Universalis is
lifted directly from an unpublished manuscript by Grienberger that
Kircher would have possessed, as is a passage extolling the powers
of mathematics and the extraordinary achievements of Archimedes in
the same work.[23] Schott and De Sepibus also inform us about
instruments, experiments and machines that Kircher had inherited
from Clavius and Grienberger, and subsequently transferred to the
Gallery after 1651, such as a trick-lantern made by Grienberger
that performed in the same way when filled with water as with oil,
and a sample of water from the river Jordan that Clavius had
sealed hermetically in a glass vial, perhaps the most undramatic
of Kircher’s museum exhibits, demonstrating the incorruptibility
of water by remaining forever unchanged. A wooden astrolabe made
by Grienberger was also displayed prominently in the museum,
though by the time Sepibus compiled his catalogue it had been
almost completely eaten away by woodworm.[24] From all these
examples, it should be clear that Kircher effectively inherited a
space, complete with manuscripts, instruments and experiments,
that already had a well-established role in the Collegio Romano
– the musaeum mathematicum, and that many of the functions of
this space did not change dramatically with Kircher’s arrival in
Rome, when the space became his “private museum”. Indeed, it
seems that most Jesuit colleges where mathematics was taught in
the mid-seventeenth century had a mathematical museum of some
description, which was normally the bedroom of the senior
mathematician of the college where the mathematical instruments
could be locked away, though most would have been far more modest
than that of the Collegio Romano. An example is Valentin
Stansel’s mathematical museum in Prague, where Jakob Johann
Wenceslaus Dobrzensky de Nigro Ponte saw a hydro-magnetic fountain
clock, that he described in his Nova, et amaenior de admirando
fontium ... philosophia.[25] The descriptions of Kircher’s
Delphic oracle quoted above also reflect on other aspects of his
machinic installations. Kircher claims to have built the device in
order to expose the “impostures, fallacies and frauds of the
ancient priests”, so the ludic machine bears a moral burden. The
corruption of the good magic given by God to Adam into a tool of
deception and evil-doing in the hands of the post-diluvian
Egyptians is a theme that crops up frequently in the works of
Kircher and Schott, and we shall return to it. In the house of a
certain Francesco Serra, Kircher and Schott had seen an example of
an Egyptian speaking statue (fig. 4) designed to contain just such
a speaking-tube as that hidden in Kircher’s Delphic Oracle,
illustrated in the Oedipus Aegyptiacus.[26] The section of this
work dealing with Egyptian mechanics contains many examples of the
tricks employed by Egyptian priests to deceive worshippers, and
many of the machines in Kircher’s museum relate to the debunking
of Egyptian magic (see e.g. fig. 5, fig. 6). A “multimammary
Goddess”, for example, spraying forth liquid from her multiple
breasts (fig. 7), is described both in the Oedipus Aegyptiacus and
in Schott’s Mechanica Hydraulico-Pneumatica, where Schott
writes: “many thought that this work was constructed with the
art of prestidigitation and of demons, but Fr. Kircher clearly
showed that this was a devious machination of the priests [...]
and he has a small machine in his museum that he displays to this
end”.[27] Describing another Egyptian device, an altar on which
small gods or demons dance (fig. 8), Kircher writes “A devious
invention elaborately contrived by either Priests or evil demons
in order to enslave the stupid and ignorant plebs in idolatrous
servitude, so that nothing more effective or powerful could be
devised for the cult of false gods”.[28] It is interesting that,
while exposing the fraudulence of the magic of the Egyptian
priests, Kircher will nonetheless not rule out their involvement
with demons. One might have thought that the priests’ impressive
technical skills would have removed any need for traffic with real
demons. Regarding Kircher’s own performances with his Delphic
oracle, we are also told that he was frequently suspected of
involvement with demons by his less perceptive visitors, and that
he explained the functioning of the machine in order to remove
suspicions of him practicing “some prohibited Art”. Traffic
with demons was no laughing matter in the mid-seventeenth century,
at the height of the European witch-craze. One could well imagine
that a less well-inclined audience might well view Kircher’s
wonders in an altogether different light. Indeed, on one of the
few occasions when Kircher performed in front of a larger
audience, this was precisely what happened. Kircher, in his early
twenties, had recently arrived in Heiligenstadt after being
stripped of his clothes and nearly killed by heretical soldiers
who recognised him as a Jesuit, and a legation sent by the
Archbishop-Elector of Mainz was about to be received in the town.
The following excerpt is from his posthumous autobiography: And
because it was decided to spare no magnificence to provide an
appropriate welcome for the legates, I was commissioned to arrange
a theatrical performance. When I exhibited this, as they saw some
things that went beyond common knowledge, the legates who
witnessed the performance were so excited to great admiration that
some of them accused me of the crimes of Magic, with some people
say other things against me. In order to free myself of such an
ugly crime I was obliged to expose the mechanisms of all of the
things that I had exhibited. And when this task was discharged to
everybody’s great satisfaction, so that they could hardly be
separated from me, I also gave them a new collection of
Mathematical Curiosities together with a laudatory panegyric in
exotic languages composed in their honour, by which things
resulted no small increase in their benevolence towards me.[29] It
is clear from this episode that Kircherian magic flirted
dangerously with the boundaries between technical ingenuity and
the “prohibited art” of demonic magic. The Elizabethan
magician John Dee (1527-1608), similarly came under suspicion of
demonic magic in England when he constructed an automatic
“scarabeus” that flew up to Jupiter's palace during a
performance of a comedy by Aristophanes, when in fact the
theatrical trick was achieved by "pneumatithmie" or by
"waights”.[30] Perhaps this very flirtation with the black
arts was a source for titillation for the princely and religious
audience of Kircher’s wonders – an audience directly involved
in the persecution of popular magic during the same period –
allowing them to experience the “armchair-thrills” of magic
without being morally implicated.[31] Jesuit theatrical
productions during this period were particularly famous for their
stage-machinery – convincing representations of hell were a
speciality – and for their hard-hitting moral didacticism, both
features that they shared with Kircher’s machinic-performances,
as we have seen in the case of the Delphic oracle.[32] Other
inventions of Kircher’s also appear to have come under suspicion
of demonic magic, including the magnetic anemoscope that he built
in Malta (fig. 9), while he was supposed to be providing spiritual
guidance to Landgrave Ernst of Hessen-Darmstadt, relied, like many
Kircherian machines, on a hidden magnet. The magnet, rotated by a
wind-vane, caused a figure of Aeolius, the god of winds, suspended
in a glass sphere, to point to the direction of the wind marked on
the outside of the sphere. Some of the Knights of Malta who
witnessed Kircher’s machine apparently suggested that it must
contain a real demon, and Kircher, yet again, had to take pains to
demonstrate that his brand of magic was entirely natural.[33]
Anatomies of machines and mechanical anatomies By the time that De
Sepibus’ catalogue was published, the Musaeum Kircherianum had
entered a dramatic phase of decline, only to be resurrected
through the efforts of Filippo Buonanni in the early years of the
eighteenth century. The famous frontispiece of De Sepibus’ work,
and many of its contents are misleading, as they represent
Kircher’s museum as occupying a space that it had long
abandoned, due to General Oliva’s decision to transform it into
a library for the Jesuit “scriptors”, excused from teaching
duties in order to devote themselves to writing works for
publication. The frescoed lunettes and large windows of the space
depicted and described in De Sepibus’ catalogue had long been
forsaken for a dark corridor, much to the dismay of the ageing
Kircher. The catalogue thus presents immediate problems as a
historical document of Kircher’s museum. By 1678, Kircher,
depicted on the frontispiece of De Sepibus’ catalogue warmly
welcoming a pair of visitors to his museum, was nearing death, and
spending almost all of his time in the Marian shrine of the
Mentorella in the hills of Lazio, where his heart was soon to be
buried.[34] De Sepibus’ catalogue of the museum, then, crammed
with illustrations culled from Kircher’s other works, must be
regarded as a monument to a dead, or at least dying and
transfigured institution. In order to understand the magical
nature of the machines on display in the museum, many of which had
fallen into disrepair by 1678 we will have to look elsewhere. Long
before De Sepibus published the catalogue, repeated attempts to
publish a description of Kircher’s gallery had been made by
Kircher’s close disciple Kaspar Schott.[35] Schott’s
association with Kircher had begun in 1630, when he was studying
in Würzburg, a city that both Schott and his master had to
abandon with the onslaught of the Swedish troops of Gustavus
Adolphus in 1631. Whereas Kircher fled to the South of France,
arriving in the Jesuit province of Lyon along with 40 other Jesuit
refugees, Schott made for Tournai, and then began a series of
wanderings through Sicily, where he completed his studies and
taught in a number of Jesuit colleges.[36] Between late 1652 and
1654, Schott was finally reunited with Kircher in Rome for an
extraordinarily intense period of activity centered around the
recently founded museum, a period that was to fuel his prolific
output in the years that followed.[37] In addition to assisting
Kircher in the museum, Schott performed a number of other tasks.
While Kircher laboured to complete his monumental Oedipus
Aegyptiacus, Schott patiently edited the third edition of
Kircher’s Magnes. An anonymous foreword by the “Author’s
colleague in literary matters” inserted into this edition gives
a graphic picture of the conscientious approach taken by Schott to
this task: I examined and emended all of the calculations and
arithmetic tables with great care. I inspected the words in Latin,
Greek and Hebrew of authors who were cited in the original sources
and where they had been corrupted I restored them. I compared the
magnetic declinations and inclinations, and other observations
sent here to the Author (who had asked for them by letters) with
the autographs, and eliminated typographical errors. I inspected
the diagrams even engraved on brass or wood, and emended the
mistakes, restoring the missing or erroneous letters, lines and
signs. For several elevations I substituted more accurate ones.
From time to time I eliminated words, or added them, or changed
them, when I noticed that the sense was either false, altered or
unclear. In arranging the Appendices, Paradoxes, Problems, and new
Experiments and Machines written by the Author, or given to me to
write, I conserved an order that altered the order of the previous
editions as little as possible [...] I omitted, finally, no task
that I felt would contribute to the splendour of the Work.[38]
Modern editors may take note. As well as working as Kircher’s
editor, Schott was deeply involved with the machines of the
museum, and it is to his works that we will turn to attempt to
situate Kircher’s machines in a magical tradition. Schott’s
Mechanica Hydraulico-Pneumatica was published in 1657, shortly
after his return to Germany. Apart from the appendix, which dealt
with the new “Magdeburg” experiment carried out by Otto von
Guericke to demonstrate the existence of a vacuum, Schott had
composed the book while he was still in Rome with Kircher, as he
explains in a “Notice to the Reader”, excusing himself for
often writing as if he was still living in Rome. Schott writes
that he plans “to compose a Natural Magic, collected from the
printed works and manuscripts of the most learned man Athanasius
Kircher, of world-wide fame, and also from all of his notes and
loose pieces of paper that are in my possession, as well as from
the works of other approved authors and the inventions of ours
(i.e. Jesuits), composed in all trustworthiness and as the result
of much study, established through my own experiments and those of
others”. His promised work, subsequently published as the Magia
Universalis Naturae et Artis, will contain “various, curious and
exotic spectacles of admirable effects, wonders of recondite
inventions, that are rightly called magic, free from all imposture
and suspicion of the forbidden Art”.[39] In the meantime,
Schott’s Mechanica Hydraulico-Pneumatica consists in an
exhaustive description of the hydraulic and pneumatic machines
found in Kircher’s museum. As he writes in the preface to the
work: There is, in the much-visited Museum (that we will soon
publish in print) of the Most learned and truly famous Author
mentioned above (i.e. Kircher), a great abundance of Hydraulic and
Pneumatic Machines, that are beheld and admired with enormous
delight of their souls by those Princes and literati who rush from
all cities and parts of the world to see them, and who hungrily
desire to know how they are made, and so that I can satisfy their
desire to know the construction of the machines, I have undertaken
to show the fabric, and almost the anatomy of all of the Machines
in the said Museum, or already shown elsewhere by the same
author.[40] Schott promises to give his readers detailed
instructions on how to make instruments “for garden pleasures,
for the utility of houses, for the commodities, and ornaments,
particularly of Princes, who derive greater pleasure of their eyes
and souls from these things than they might expect profit for
their estate. Neither will we be satisfied with delighting only
the eyes, we also prepare a feast for the ears, with various
self-moving and self-sounding organs and instruments, that we will
excite to motion and sound only by the flow of water and the
stealthy approach of air, with no less ease than skill”.[41]
Schott’s Mechanica Hydraulico-Pneumatica, then, provides an
eloquent “identikit” picture of the ideal audience for
Kircherian wonders, a leisured, decadent class of princes and
cardinals, quite happy to turn their minds away from pressing
matters of church and state in order to delight their minds, eyes
and ears with the sensual pleasures provided by Kircherian
machines. From the rich study of the intellectual culture of the
Habsburg monarchy carried out by R.J.W. Evans, we see that this
description was entirely consonant with the consuming interests of
the prominent members of the Viennese courts of Ferdinand III and
Leopold I.[42] The wonders described in Schott’s work give us a
vivid picture of how Kircher and his disciples went about
satisfying the remarkable thirst for hydraulic and pneumatic
curiosities of a Catholic elite on a daily basis. In one instance,
Schott describes an incident in which the two Jesuit companions
came across the marvellous spectacle of a “water-vomiting
seat” in a Roman villa: Lately Father Kircher and I were
wandering through the fields of Rome to take the air, and we went
into a suburban villa, on the facade of which an elegantly made
sciatheric sundial was painted. While we were looking at this
curiosity, we were invited by a Noble Frenchman to inspect the
building and garden more thoroughly. We entered, and first saw a
most delightful pleasure-garden, filled with flowers and fruit,
and ornamented with statues of all kinds. We then entered a most
elegant house, ornamented with paintings, emblems, epigrams, and
epigraphs in Latin, Greek and Arabic, and thoroughly filled with
statues and artificious machines, so that even Pope Innocent X, as
he was being carried through the same fields with the delight of
his soul, entered the same house and garden, and was not reluctant
to honour it with his presence. The villa belongs to Jean Laborne,
a French Presbyter and Knight of the same Pope. Amongst the other
things, by which I was most delighted, was a seat known as
hydratic or water-vomiting because of its effect.[43] If we are to
take De Sepibus’s list of machines as a guide, we are forced to
conclude that the predominantly German princely audience of the
productions of Kircher and Schott had a peculiar fascination with
regurgitation. From the two-headed Imperial Eagle (fig. 1),
belching water copiously from its twin gullets, to the
“water-vomiting hydraulic machine, at the top of which stands a
figure vomiting up various liquids for guests to drink”, not to
mention the various birds and snakes ingesting and throwing-up
water from goblets, the spectacle of retching, puking, and spewing
seems to have been the very epitome of good taste and noble
amusement for the visitors to Kircher’s museum (see e.g. fig.
10). Schott further confirms this impression of an
“emetophiliac” Catholic elite. One of the most endearing
machines of his Mechanica is a “cancer vomitor” (fig. 11),
illustrated as a nauseous lobster, bending forlornly over the edge
of a goblet in its unhappy state. One is left unsure whether
sea-sickness or the drinking of the goblet’s contents is
responsible. Like a number of the machines illustrated in
Schott’s works, this device was adapted from the popular work by
Daniel Schwenter (1585-1636), later expanded by Georg Philipp
Harsdörffer (1607-1658), the Deliciae Physico-Mathematicae.[44]
Perhaps the most graphic demonstration of the cult of emesis is in
Schott’s description of a French visitor to Rome with an unusual
talent: While I was writing this, Jean Royer, a Frenchman from
Lyon, who is superior to all in the art that we have been
discussing, arrived here. From his stomach he brought forth twelve
or fourteen differently coloured perfumed waters, most perfect
liquors, distilled wine that could be set alight, and rock oil
that burned with a lamp-wick, lettuces and flowers of all kinds,
with complete and fresh leaves. He also exhibits a fountain by
projecting water out of his mouth into the air for the time of two
Misereres.[45] The description of this technicolour spectacle is
followed by a letter from Kircher, in which he reassures worried
readers that the digestive system of Mr. Royer was entirely free
of demonic interference, and that his stomach-churning feats were
carried out purely through the manipulation of natural causes.
Royer, it transpires, had even entertained the Emperor at
Regensburg, also exhibiting his “art” before “five kings and
many princes and learned men”. In Schott’s work, Royer himself
is classified as a machine – “Machina VII”, included with
other incontinent “hydropota”. Moreover, in order to ensure
that his talent was entirely natural, Kircher had studied his act
closely in the Musaeum Kircherianum itself, so he certainly earns
his place in a discussion of the museum’s hydraulic
machines.[46] The Miserere, incidentally, appears to have been a
commonly used and even somewhat standardized unit of time
measurement for seventeenth century Jesuit experimenters.
Elsewhere, Schott describes one of his more dangerous experiments
involving heating a sealed glass tube full of mercury, recounting
that “after about the time in which Psalm 50, Miserere mei Deus,
can be recited, it opened a way for itself with great violence and
noise” When Schott performed this experiment in front of the son
of the Duke of Holstein, the noise of the explosion brought the
young nobleman’s servants running in fear of an assassination
attempt. Jesuits describing Manfredo Settala’s burning mirrors
in Milan remarked that “the smaller mirror, that burns at a
distance of 7 braccie, works in barely an Ave Maria, whereas for
the one that burns at 15 or 16 braccie, which works more slowly,
you have to wait for a whole Miserere”. One can imagine the
groups of Jesuits as they recite the rosary and sing hymns while
incinerating objects with burning glasses, causing terrifying
explosions or witnessing Jean Royer’s superhuman feats of
projection.[47] The catoptric cat Robert Darnton has remarked that
the torture of cats was a source of constant amusement in early
modern Europe, and that the historical investigation of arcane
forms of humour has much to offer our understanding of major
historical transformations. His famous study of the “great cat
massacre” carried out by a group of Parisian printer’s
apprentices allowed him to investigate the social tensions that
formed the historical prologue to the French Revolution.[48] More
recently, Thomas Hankins and Robert Silverman have used
Darnton’s insights in an original study of some of the more
ludic machines and instruments produced by Kircher and others, in
particular the sunflower clock (fig. 12) that Kircher displayed to
Nicholas Claude Fabri de Peiresc in Aix, and the “cat piano”,
a grisly musical instrument, said to have been invented by
Kircher, that worked by prodding the tails of cats with spikes
driven by a keyboard.[49] Whereas for Darnton’s Parisian
apprentices, the torture of cats was a humorous means for an
abused community of labourers to score a symbolic victory over
their wealthy bosses, for Kircher and his princely clients the
manipulation of animals and automata was arguably a symbolic means
of reinforcing the political and philosophical status quo. Schott
recounts that one of the most “artificious and delightful”
machines in Kircher’s museum was a catoptric chest, presumably
identical with the “catoptric theatre” described by De Sepibus
(fig. 13). Two other catoptric chests existed in Rome, according
to Schott, one in the Villa Borghese and the other in the “villa
of some other Prince”, and both exhibited wonderful spectres of
objects – forests of pine trees, cities, elegantly furnished
houses, treasures of gold and silver vases and pearls and infinite
libraries of books, that seem so real that even those who were
knowledgeable in catoptrics were sometimes fooled, and less
intelligent people frequently held out their hands and attempted
to take hold of the “species of things”, to the great
amusement of spectators. Kircher’s catoptric chest, however, far
surpassed the competition, both in multiplying species and in
displaying illusory scenes. It could display infinite colonnades,
tables covered with all sorts of delicacies, inexhaustable
treasures, to the great torment of avaricious visitors who often,
according to Schott, attempted to make off with the infinite
quantities of money contained in the chest, only to be left with a
handful of air. “You will exhibit the most delightful trick”,
Schott informs us, “if you impose one of these appearances on a
live cat, as Fr. Kircher has done. While the cat sees himself to
be surrounded by an innumerable multitude of catoptric cats, some
of them standing close to him and others spread very far away from
him, it can hardly be said how many capers will be exhibited in
that theatre, while he sometimes tries to follow the other cats,
sometimes to entice them with his tail, sometimes attempts a kiss,
and indeed tries to break through the obstacles in every way with
his claws so that he can be united with the other cats, until
finally, with various noises, and miserable whines he declares his
various affectations of indignation, rage, jealousy, love and
desire. Similar spectacles can be exhibited with other
animals”.[50] The catoptric chest, then, is an instrument for
the manipulation and revelation of the passions. It is a theatre
of social distinction, using visual illusion for the detection and
display of baser human traits such as avarice and the instinctual
passions of animals. An understanding of the magical art of
catoptrics can allow one to trick people (and cats) into revealing
their hidden natures. Kircher’s emotionally confused catoptric
cat is thus very different from the pampered aristocratic cats
slaughtered by the Parisian artisans described by Darnton. By
making a spectacle out of incivility or popular superstition,
devices such as the catoptric theatre, the Delphic oracle and the
various vomiting-machines shown to visitors to Kircher’s museum
contributed to a particular definition of early modern European
civility.[51] Many of Athanasius Kircher’s machines were thus
civilizing machines. Descartes’ Treatise on the Passions of the
Soul, published in 1649, attempted to provide a manual to instruct
his readers both to combat the effects of the passions on the soul
and to dissimulate their outward manifestations.[52] The vogue for
automata and machine-models of the human body in the seventeenth
century was closely connected to the desire to exercise control
over the body through discipline and manners. The Jesuit
educational system, experienced by Descartes as a schoolboy at La
Flèche, laid great emphasis on bodily comportment and behavioural
discipline, epitomized by the choreographed movements of Jesuit
ballet. The limits of the man-machine metaphor exercised a
powerful fascination over Kircher’s contemporaries. While Marin
Mersenne (1588-1648) theorized about mechanised musical ensembles,
and instruments such as the “Archiviole”, allowing a single
player to play multiple musical instruments simultaneously, and
shortly after Justus Lipsius (1547-1606) had theorized about the
well-disciplined army as a war-machine, Thomas Hobbes (1588-1679)
opened his Leviathan, published in the very year that the Musaeum
Kircherianum was officially founded, with the famous metaphor of
the commonwealth as a giant automaton, manipulated by a single
monarch.[53] Peter Dear has recently evoked the close links
between the mastery of the passions, the rise of European
absolutism and the culture of automata in early modern Europe.[54]
We have frequently been led to discuss the wonders produced by
Kircher and Schott in magical terms. But just what was the magic
practiced by Kircher, that he took such pains to distinguish from
the illicit arts that invoked the aid of demons? What were its
boundaries? How did it intersect with natural philosophy, and with
the mathematical arts? How did it find a home in the bosom of the
Jesuit order and, especially, in Kircher’s Museum? Kircherian
magic: The roots of a paradigm Kircherian machines, we have
suggested, like Jesuit rhetorical devices, emblems and learned
orations, helped to draw a boundary between elite and vulgar. To
mount an attack on the causal knowledge at the core of the
Kircherian culture of machines on physical grounds was comparable
to challenging the authenticity of the Corpus Hermeticum and the
traces of the prisca sapientia contained in Egyptian hieroglyphics
on philological grounds. Both challenges threatened the mystical
core of a structure of political power in which the Jesuit order
constituted the cement linking the Counter-Reformation Papacy to
the Habsburg court in Vienna through a sophisticated network of
intermediaries. The intellectual project of Kircher’s Oedipus
Aegyptiacus, supported by Ferdinand III, cannot be separated from
Kircher’s artificial magic.[55] Kircher’s marvellous machines
took their place alongside his wooden reconstructions of Egyptian
obelisks in the Musaeum Kircherianum. A letter from Schott
inserted into the first volume of Kircher’s Oedipus Aegyptiacus
gives us a revealing picture of the mutual legitimation that
characterised Kircher’s close relationship with his
Habsburg-linked clients: In Kircher’s archive, I discovered an
enormous number of letters, many of which were sent by him at
every moment by Princes of the Christian world, and the supreme
heads of the Roman Empire, and the Most Wise Emperor FERDINAND
III, the Most Serene and Most Wise Queen of Sweden Christina, many
Most Eminent Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church, Most Serene
Electors of the Holy Roman Empire, Most Distinguished and
Illustrious Dukes, Princes, Counts, Barons and innumerable Nobles
of the same Empire and other Nations, all of whom admire and
praise Kircher’s learning, and thank him for the books he sent
them and for his other enormous productions, they urge and solicit
him to print other monuments to erudition, they offer him help and
protection, they communicate secrets, and ask for arcana, and for
the unravelling of arcane matters, they seek the interpretation of
exotic languages, strange inscriptions, and unknown characters,
and various questions. I would have appended here various long
letters from Emperors, other Princes and almost all the learned
Men of this century, showing singular affection and respect if the
small space and the Author’s modesty had permitted and if I had
not reserved that for a different time and place[56] While Kircher
provided princes, young and old, with enigmas, puzzles, emblems
and arcane knowledge that confirmed their social distinction, they
provided him with financial support and conferred authority on his
works. Elsewhere Schott tells us of a revealing dream that Kircher
had in the Collegio Romano while suffering from a serious bout of
illness. After requesting a strong sleeping-mixture of his own
specification from the college pharmacy, Kircher fell into a deep
sleep, and dreamt that he had been elected to the Papal throne and
was overcome with joy. He received legations and congratulatory
messages from all the Christian princes, applause from all
peoples, and, in his dream-role as Pope, built colleges and
churches in Rome for the different nations of the world, and
established “many other things for the propagation of the
Catholic faith”. Schott is particularly interested in the
healing capacities of Kircher’s dream – the older Jesuit
pronounced himself to be restored to full health the following
morning. However, without too much imagination, his dream might
also be seen as hinting at more than a modicum of personal
ambition on Kircher’s part. Although some of Kircher’s other
nocturnal visions were later transformed into reality, most
dramatically a graphic vision of the imment destruction of the
Jesuit college in Würzburg by the Swedish armies of Gustavus
Adolphus in 1631, his narcotically-induced dream of the papal
tiara was never to be realized, although one is tempted to wonder
what directives he might have issued in this role.[57] Despite the
fact that Kircher was never elected Pope, he was arguably the
ruler of his own invented polity. The Oedipus Aegyptiacus contains
no less than thirty-one separate letters of dedication for its
different sections and provides us with a suggestive map of
Kircher’s political universe. Prominent dedicatees include: the
holy Roman Emperor Ferdinand III, Pope Alexander VII, Ferdinand IV
King of the Romans, the Grand Duke of Tuscany Ferdinand II de’
Medici, Johann Philipp von Schönborn, Elector of Mainz; Archdukes
Leopold Wilhelm and Bernhard Ignaz of Austria, Johann Friedrich
Duke of Brunswick-Luneburg, and a host of other princes,
cardinals, counsellors and confessors of the Holy Roman Empire.
Kircher’s Oedipus Aegyptiacus provides an ancient pedigree of
magic that justified its revival amongst his distinguished
dedicatees and their peers, a pedigree echoed in Gaspar Schott’s
Magia Universalis. In its broad lines, legitimate magic was first
given by God to Adam, along with the other forms of knowledge.
However, true magic was corrupted, through the “Cainite evil”,
leading to the division between “licit” and “illicit”
magic. The architect of the corruption of magic was, as Pliny
recounts, Zoroaster. But which Zoroaster? A number of different
Zoroasters appear in the history books. On this subject, many
learned authors were in disagreement, but Kircher and Schott,
aided by a manuscript of the apocryphal Book of Enoch studied by
Kircher in the Greek library of Messina, are in agreement that
Zoroaster is identifiable with Noah’s rebellious son Cham, who
learned this art from the impious Cainites before the Flood and
inscribed it on stones and columns so that it would not be
destroyed in the deluge, transmitting it to his followers once the
waters had abated. These columns were the very columns described
by St. Augustine, when he wrote in the City of God that Cham,
Noah’s son, erected fourteen columns bearing the canons of the
arts and the sciences, seven made of brass and seven of bricks.
After propagating his magic in Egypt, where he had settled after
the flood and the linguistic confusion of the Tower of Babel, Cham
left his kingdom to his son Misraim, and departed to spread the
astrological and magical arts to Chaldea, Persia, Medea and
Assyria, eventually obtaining the name “Zoroaster”, meaning
“living star” as he appeared to be consumed with celestial
fire in his zeal to spread magical knowledge.[58] What is magic?
Schott tells us that magic is whatever is “marvellous and goes
beyond the sense and comprehension of common men”. Common men
because to “wise people or those who are more learned than the
common people the causes of magical effects are normally
apparent”. Natural magic, according to Schott, is “a recondite
knowledge of the secrets of nature, that applies things to things,
or, to speak philosophically, actives to passives, in the correct
time, place and manner, by the nature, properties, occult powers,
sympathies and antipathies of individual things, bringing about
some marvels in this way that appear magical or miraculous to
those who are ignorant of the causes”. An example of natural
magic is asbestos that resists combustion in flames, as Kircher
had demonstrated very frequently in Rome. Other examples of
natural magic include the magnetic marvels described by Gilbert,
Cabeo and Kircher, and the effects of music on the venom of the
tarantula, also described by Kircher. However, one must beware, as
not all magic said to be natural is truly so, the sunflower’s
supposed capacity to make men invisible being an example of
something that couldn’t possibly happen naturally. Schott’s
encyclopedia of natural and artificial magic comprises four parts:
Optics (“that is those things regarding sight and objects that
are seen, and whatever in Optics, Catoptrics, Dioptrics,
Parastatics, Chromatics, Catoptro-Dioptro-Caustics,
Catoptrologics, and other similar sciences, arts, practices and
secrets is rare, portentous and beyond the understanding of the
common people, when they perceive rays directly, relected or
refracted at the eye”), Acoustics (“that is, whatever pertains
to hearing, and the object heard, and it will explain all of
hearing, sound, the human voice, harmony, the Oeconomy of music,
by analogy to the oeconomy of sight and vision, colours, lights,
and their appearances, but only the rarer, less obvious ones that
fall under praxis and operation”), Mathematics (“that is
Arithmetic, Geometry, Astronomy, Statics, Hydraulics, Pneumatics,
Pyrobolics, Gnomonics, Steganography, Cryptology, Hydrography,
Nautical matters, and many other things, but only the rarer and
more amusing and wonderful matters, and most of the practical
things that come under human industry”) and Physics (“
whatever is wonderful, paradoxical or portentous in Nature. Of
this kind are magnetism, sympathy, physiognomy, metallurgy,
botany, stichiotics, medicine, meteorology, the secrets of
animals, stones and innumerable other things”).[59] Natural
magic has two branches in Schott’s system: operative and
divinatory. The latter include such arts as physiognomy, allowing
a person’s character to be determined by examining their
features, colour and voice. Divinatory natural magic, however,
cannot be used to find supernatural gifts or sins, as these
don’t depend on nature but on free human will. Artificial magic,
or operative natural magic, is, in Schott’s definition “an art
or a faculty of producing some wonder through human industry, by
applying various instruments”. Schott’s examples of this art,
culled from an assortment of classical sources, include the glass
sphere of Archimedes described by Cicero, which depicted the
motions of the different planets (fig. 14), the flying wooden dove
of Archytas, the small golden birds singing to the Byzantine
emperor Leo, and the flying and singing birds and hissing serpents
of Boethius. More recent pieces of artificial magic included the
eagle of Regiomontanus that reportedly flew to meet Charles V when
he was arriving in Nuremberg, and accompanied him to the gates of
the city, and an iron fly also made by Regiomontanus that flew out
of the hands of its artisan, and flew around the assembled guests,
and a statue in the shape of a wolf that walked around and played
a drum, that Schott had heard about from an eyewitness. The
talking head reportedly made out of brass by Albertus Magnus was a
further example of artificial magic for Schott. Whereas some
claimed that this was a mere fable, and others suggested that it
was the work of the devil, Schott disagreed, arguing that it was
made by human industry alone. Kircher himself, Schott had just
heard in a letter sent from Rome, was in the process of making
just such a speaking statue for the visit of Queen Christina of
Sweden to the Musaeum Kircherianum, “a statue that will have to
answer the questions that it is asked”. The Delphic Oracle,
then, places Kircher’s magical productions in a highly
respectable historical series of artificial wonders, and rids
Albertus Magnus of the suspicion of sorcery that allegedly led
Thomas Aquinas to destroy his talking statue of Memnon.[60] The
machines in Kircher’s museum occupy a central place in
Schott’s exhaustive account of the licit magical arts. But what
exactly were the boundaries of these arts? Where is the point of
transgression? Schott’s answer is simple: illicit magic involves
pacts with demons rather than the mere application of human
industry and artifice to natural causes. Following the principal
Jesuit authorities on the matter, the humanist Martin del Rio
(1551-1608) and the philosopher Benito Pereira (1535-1610), Schott
insists that demons are restricted to the manipulation of natural
causes. Only God can effect miracles that go against the natural
order. Demons are, effectively, just very good artificial
magicians, manipulating natural causes with greater dexterity than
even the most adroit instrumentally-enhanced human being.[61] But
what exactly is the order of nature that even demons cannot
pervert? Schott’s answer is unequivocal: demons are bound to
obey the laws of Aristotelian natural philosophy! “They cannot
create anything, as this exceeds the power of acting naturally.
Neither can they derive a substantial form immediately from a
subject, without a prior alteration, because this cannot be done
naturally”. Demons cannot even create a vacuum, “as Nature
abhors this and no experiment carried out until now proves that a
vacuum has been made, as we have said in the Mechanica
Hydraulico-Pneumatica”. If demons could not make a vacuum, what
chance did Evangelista Torricelli, Valeriano Magni or Otto von
Guericke stand of doing so? Schott’s account of the absolute
limits of artificial magic reveals its staunchly Aristotelian
core. The artificial magic practiced and described by Schott and
Kircher relied on an unchanging body of assumptions about the
normal behaviour of the natural world. Schott’s Mechanica
Hydraulico-Pneumatica had opened with a list of the four
fundamental principles underlying all hydraulic machines: the
“attractive power to avoid a vacuum”, the “power of
expulsion, avoiding the penetration of bodies”, the rarefactive
power (i.e. the “expulsion or attraction of water by rarefaction
and condensation”) and the weight of the water seeking
equilibrium. The purpose of Schott’s work is not to investigate
the truth of these principles, which have the status of axioms.
Instead, his aim is to catalogue the surprising effects that can
be obtained by combining these causes in different ways.[62] In
discussing Otto von Guericke’s experimental demonstration of the
existence of a vacuum using his antlia pneumatica, Schott remarks
casually that of course, the plenitude of nature is invulnerable
even to an angel, and thus Guericke’s device could never have
produced a real vacuum. A refusal to allow the instrument to
produce new natural philosophy did not put an end to Jesuit
discussions of hydraulics. Instead, the device was removed from
circulation in the philosophical domain and relocated within the
context of the Wunderkammer. Schott's Mechanica-Hydraulico
Pneumatica includes the experiments performed by Evangelista
Torricelli and Gasparo Berti to demonstrate the existence of the
vacuum in a section entitled De machinis hydraulicis variis, where
they are surrounded by a ball made to spin in the air, a
perforated flask for carrying wine known as the "Sieve of the
Vestal Virgin ", and a "phial for cooling tobacco
smoke". Unhealthy philosophical readings of Machina VI (the
Torricelli and Berti tubes) are dismissed by Schott as the
writings of "Neotherici Philosophastri" and
"insolent and unmannerly braggarts proclaiming a triumph
before victory".[63] To situate the Torricellian experiment
in the context of trick fountains and water-vomiting seats was to
insulate it from the Aristotelian philosophy taught in the
classrooms of Jesuit colleges. In a strong sense, then, the
Aristotelian physics at the basis of the artificial magic of
Kircher and Schott was invulnerable, except to occasional Divine
intervention. Machines combined a pre-established set of causes to
produce surprising effects, leaving the spectators to attempt to
decipher the combination of natural causes underlying the
appearances. Schott’s accounts of natural and demonic magic drew
heavily on the comprehensive treatment of magic composed by the
Antwerp-born Jesuit Martin del Rio, the Disquisitionum Magicarum
Libri Sex, first published in 1599. Del Rio was a scholarly
prodigy before he joined the Jesuit order. At the tender age of
twenty he published a work on the Latin grammarian Gaius Solinus,
later attacked by Claude Saumaise. Shortly afterwards, he
published a work on Claudius Claudianus that cited more than 1,100
authors. Before he joined the Jesuit order he occupied the
important public offices of Senator of Brabant, Auditor of the
army, Vice-chancellor and Procurator General. Del Rio’s
three-volume treatment of magic was an enormously influential
work, the influence of which was felt in witch-trials as much as
in the scholarly arena.[64] Chapter IV of Del Rio’s work deals
with artificial magic, which Del Rio divides into “mathematical
magic”, deploying the principles of geometry, arithmetic and
astronomy, and “prestidigitatory magic”, involving deliberate
deception and sleight-of-hand. The former includes all the the
famous mechanical marvels that Schott listed. Del Rio’s approach
to magic is to build an impenetrable wall between supernatural
phenomena, which are the prerogative of God alone, and artificial
and preternatural phenomena, which can be produced by men, by
demons and by angels. Preternatural phenomena are those which
appear to most people to go beyond nature’s capacities, but are
in fact achieved through the combination of natural causes by
human, demonic or angelic agents. The belong not to the “Order
of Grace”, the realm of true miracles brought about by divine
intervention in opposition the laws of nature, but to the
Prodigious Order, reserved for phenomena that resemble miracles,
but are in fact carried out through the manipulation of natural
forces.[65] Kircherian thaumaturgy, then, appears to transcend
what can be achieved through the human manipulation of natural
powers, thus leading some to view them as being produced by
demonic means. Good angels do not collaborate in magical works,
according to Del Rio, so any magical feat that goes beyond human
capacities, such as the production of healing effects through
incantations, must be due to the “ministry of bad angels”,
that is to say the companions of Lucifer, as “no words have a
natural power of healing wounds or illnesses, or driving away
other injuries”.[66] Incantations employed by Catholic priests
in sacraments and exorcisms did not work naturally, but through
the concurrence of divine grace, and thus belonged to the Order of
Grace, and are thus excluded from the natural order. Kircher’s
machines ludically encouraged spectators to read them as wonders
achieved through angelic or demonic concurrence. Many of the
machines described in De Sepibus’ list even contained small
genies, angels and demons, moved by occult forces to point at
letters, scales and inscriptions, a miniature automated population
that positively cried out to be interpreted as preternatural, and
belonging to Del Rio’s prodigious order. While Descartes
hypothesised a single evil genie to demolish the basis of
scholastic metaphysics in the first of his Méditations
Metaphysiques, Kircher and Schott employed an obedient army of
them to uphold the core of Aristotelian physics (see figs. 8, 15,
16, 17). Benito Pereira, Schott’s other chief authority on
magical matters, was one of the most influential philosophers of
the Jesuit order in the late sixteenth century, despite coming
under suspicion of heterodoxy for his sympathy for the philosophy
of Averröes.[67] Pereira’s textbook on natural philosophy, De
Communibus omnium rerum naturalium principijs & affectionibus,
went through a great number of editions, and was widely used for
teaching in Jesuit colleges. His widely read work on magic and
divination, the Adversus fallaces & superstitiosas artes, id
est, De magia, de observatione somniorum, et de divinatione
astrologica, argued that demons could not pervert the natural
order of the Aristotelian elements or create a vacuum, and this
may have been the source for Schott’s similar assertions.
Pereira insists that men skilled in knowledge of nature can work
great wonders by natural magic, but those who are either wicked or
ignorant may only learn this art from demons, “for scarcely any
mortal or certainly very few indeed, and those men of the keenest
mind who have employed diligent observation for a long time, can
attain to such natural magic”.[68] Kircher clearly considered
himself to be one of the latter, and offers us his own working
definition of natural magic in his Magnes, a definition that is
pretty close to those provided by Del Rio, Pereira and Schott:
Here I call natural magic that which produces unusual and
prodigious effects through natural causes alone, excluding any
commerce, implicit or explicit, with the Enemy of humankind. Of
this kind are those machines that are called for this reason
“thaumatourgikai”, that sometimes transmit prodigious
movements to an effigy from air and water contained in siphons by
a subtle art, and sometimes blow spirits into an organ arranged in
a certain way to make statues burst forth in speech, and similar
things, that can seem like miracles to people who are ignorant of
their causes.[69] Kircherian machines thus walked a tightrope
between the demonic and the miraculous. To understand how the
magical aspects of Kircher’s machines were experienced by
contemporaries, it may be helpful to look at how Kircher’s
Musaeum was visited. Visiting the machines The frontispiece of the
fourth volume of the first edition of Kaspar Schott’s Magia
Universalis depicts a crowned man pointing a magic wand at a
flowerbed, making a clear visual link between social status and
the practice of natural magic. The opening of Schott’s work
provides a justification of magic that places Kircher’s machines
directly in the context of aristocratic visits to the Jesuit
Collegio Romano: In my various long journeys through Germany,
France, Italy and Sicily, and in my frequent occupation teaching
mathematics both in public and in private, I have always found
that almost everybody, especially Nobles and Princes, not only
youths, but also men conspicuous for their learning, prudence,
worldly experience and dignity displayed a propensity towards
those disciplines that promise and set forward things that are
marvellous, curious, hidden and beyond the comprehension of the
common people. I hardly ever saw anyone, who, when he had achieved
a little mastery of these matters, or had examined devices
constructed from their prescription, was not thereby incited to
continual study and did not surrender himself entirely to this
discipline, or wish to do so if other occupations had permitted.
Witnesses to this, to omit other examples, are the whole of Rome,
and the most celebrated Roman College and Athenaeum of our
Society, the seat and residence of Athanasius Kircher, a man of
great fame in the whole world. For, every day the inhabitants of
both [city and college] look at and admire (as I myself beheld
with amazement and delight of my soul when I was [Kircher’s]
assistant in literary matters for a few years) those works that
many people hasten at every moment to behold, excited by the fame
of his learning and the desire of seeing the things that he
displays in his famous Museum. These works, constructed from the
recondite arts and sciences, are truly deserving of wonder. The
visitors are drawn from the most illustrious ranks, in doctrine
and dignity, including Royalty and Cardinals, foreigners as often
as natives. How many of them are instructed privately by him, even
if occupied by other most grave matters, particularly the sons of
Princes, recommended by very polite letters, with profit flowing
into their whole nations and even into the whole Roman Church as a
result![70] Here Schott suggests that Kircher’s museum in Rome
functioned as a powerful magnet for a Catholic elite, attracting
princely visitors to the Collegio Romano, and encouraging them to
send their sons to be privately educated in arcane matters by
Kircher. Kircher’s aristocratic apprentices in magic would then
return to their countries of origin, having acquired a taste for
curiosity, and this would bring clear benefits both for their
countries and for the Catholic church as a whole. Schott’s
description of the social function of the museum is consonant with
the apostolic goals of the Jesuit educational system, as developed
since the mid-sixteenth century. Ignatius Loyola’s Majorcan
assistant Jerónimo Nadal (1507-1580), famously remarked that
“for us lessons and scholarly exercises are a sort of hook with
which we fish for souls”.[71] In 1594 Christoph Clavius had
argued that excellence in the mathematical disciplines would aid
the Jesuits to gain precious ground on the Protestant pedagogues
that were enticing aristocrats away from the Catholic church,
writing that [T]here is no one who does not perceive how much it
is central to every objective of the Society to have some men who
are most outstandingly erudite in these minor studies of
mathematics, rhetoric, and language [...] who would spread the
eminent reputation of the Society far and wide, unite the love of
noble youths, curb the bragging of the heretics in these arts, and
institute a tradition of excellence in all those disciplines in
the Society.[72] The creation of a private mathematical academy,
along with similar academies for rhetoric, Greek and Hebrew,
would, Clavius argued, create Jesuit experts in all of these
disciplines, who, “when they are distributed in various nations
and kingdoms like sparkling gems [...] will be a source of great
fear to all enemies, and an incredible incitment to make young
people flock to us from all the parts of the world, to the great
honour of the Society”.[73] We have argued above that Kircher
inherited Clavius’s musaeum mathematicum. Schott’s description
of the function of Kircher’s museum as a magnet for a curious
princely elite suggests that it had much in common with
Clavius’s prophetic vision of the Jesuit educational apostolate.
What was it like to visit Kircher’s artificial wonders? How did
different visitors experience their magic? Arguably the most
famous visit to the Musaeum Kircherianum was that made by the
convert Queen Christina of Sweden. On 11 November 1651, Athanasius
Kircher wrote a letter to Queen Christina in Stockholm: Your
Majesty will know that our Society not only holds you in intimate
affection, as is fitting, but also esteems and admires above all
other things those rare and sublime treasures bestowed by heaven
that divine bounty has hoarded up in your breast. This is
especially true of this Roman College of our Society, both of the
famous men and writers and of the novices, who have come from all
of the nations of the world, where we speak 35 different
languages, some native to Europe, Africa and Asia, the remainder
to the Indies and America. And all of them are excited by the fame
of your majesty's wisdom, and attracted by some unknown
sympathetic magnetism, and their only ambition is to paint the
extraordinary example of all virtues that your Majesty exhibits to
the world in all the colours that it deserves.[74] Queen
Christina's tour of the Collegio Romano in 1656 was the
culmination of a lengthy process of rapprochement between the
Queen and the Jesuit order which had begun in February 1652 when
two Italian gentleman travellers, going by the names of Don
Bonifacio Ponginibio and Don Lucio Bonanni, had arrived in the
Royal court in Stockholm.[75] The two gentlemen, as Christina
quickly divined, were in reality Jesuits, carefully disguised by
long hair and beards. Paolo Casati and Francesco Malines, both
highly trained in mathematics and theology, had set off from
Venice on 8th December on their important mission to convert
"Don Teofilo", as Goswin Nickel, the Vicar General of
the order, had instructed them to call Christina in their letters.
Christina had specially asked the General for mathematically
skilled Jesuits, and spent as much time with her visitors
discussing Galileo's Dialogo, atomism, and the latest books by
Bartoli and Kircher[76] as the matters of faith that were the
ostensible reason for the meeting. She received a copy of
Bartoli's Dell'huomo di lettere[77] from her Italian visitors, and
probably availed of their services to send a letter to Kircher in
Rome in which she expressed a desire to have a chance to talk to
the famous polymath more freely in the future.[78] Curiosity
played a central role in Christina's abdication and relocation in
Rome. The image of Rome which the Jesuit missionary mathematicians
nurtured in the Queen's mind was one of a city in which the
secrets of the natural world could be investigated under
conditions of utter intellectual freedom, in stark contrast to the
ascetic Lutheranism that reigned in Stockholm. Paradoxically, the
very book that Kircher was to dedicate to Christina, the Iter
Exstaticum, ran into serious difficulties on account of the
atomist matter-theory which it sanctioned and which Christina also
favoured.[79] The receptions of the Queen in the Collegio Romano
were intended to further the image of the Jesuits’ showpiece
college as the home of cultivated Catholic curiosity. On 18th
January 1656, Queen Christina made her first visit to the Collegio
Romano.[80] 20 Swiss guards were placed at the door, preventing
anyone from entering the building except the pupils of the lower
classes, who were all meant to await the Queen in their
classrooms. When the Queen arrived, the bells rang twice, and all
of the Fathers, wearing cloaks, lined up inside the main door to
receive her. The Queen entered the college with her entourage and
the door was closed. In each class that the queen visited a pupil
came forward to recite an epigram, and then presented her with a
piece of printed satin brocaded with golden lace. When she had
finished visiting the classes, she returned to the entrance, and
went to visit the Church, where she prayed to Saint Ignatius and
at the altar of Blessed Aloysius Gonzaga, while musicians sang
some motets. As she had been unable to see everything during this
first visit, Christina returned to the college on 30th January.
She entered by the side door, where she was received by the
General, the Roman Provincial, the Rector of the College and other
members of the order. Her subsequent perambulations are described
in detail in Galeazzo Gualdo Priorato's biography of the queen,
and we cite from the 1658 English translation: She quickly went
into the Library [...] Here her Majesty entertaining her self for
some time, in viewing the many volumes, took pleasure too in
looking on the Modell and Platforme of the City of Jerusalem,
which was left by Father Villalpando, with the description of the
streets, and holy places, consecrated by the journeys and passions
of our Lord Jesus Christ. She then, going about the other sides,
discovered some Greek and Latin Manuscripts lying open on a Table,
and could judge of the Authors, shewing very great learning. She
went thence into the gallery, that was near, where Father
Athanasius Kircherus the great Mathematician had prepared many
curious and remarkable things, as well in nature, as art, which
were in so great a number, that her Majesty said, more time was
required, and less company to consider them with due attention.
However she stayed some time to consider the herb called Phoenix,
which resembling the Phoenix grew up in the waters perpetually out
of its own ashes. She saw the fountains and clocks, which, by
vertue of the load-stone turn about with secret force. Then
passing through the Hall, where she looked on some Pictures well
done, she went through the walkes and the garden, into the
Apothecaries shop, where she saw the preparation of the
ingredients of herbs, plants, metalls, gemms, and other rare
things, for the making of Treacle [i.e. Theriac] and balsome of
life. She saw them distill with the fire of the same furnace sixty
five sorts of herbs in as many distinct limbecks. She saw the
philosophical calcination of ivorie, and the like. She saw
extracted the spirits of Vitriol, Salt, and Aqua fortis, as
likewise a jarre of pure water, which with two single drops of the
quintessence of milke, was turned into true milk, the only
medicine for the shortness of the breath, and affections of the
breast. In fine being presented with Treacle [i.e. Theriac] and
pretious oyles, she went into the sacristy, where they opened all
the presses, where they keep the Plate and reliques of the Church,
with the great candlesticks, and vases given them by the deceased
Cardinall Lodowick Lodowiso the founder of the Church. She
honoured particularly the blood of St. Esuperantia a Virgin and
Martyr, which, after a thousand and three hundred years, is as
liquid as if newly shed. Then going into the Church she heard
Mass, and at her departure, gave testimonies to the Fathers of her
great satisfaction and content.[81] The accounts of Christina's
visits to the Collegio Romano resonate with the image of the
College as both a theatrum mundi and repository of universal
knowledge suggested in Kircher's letters to the Queen before her
departure for Rome. Although Christina's case is conspicuous for
its dramatic charge, the pattern is far from unique, and there are
innumerable other examples of monarchs and aristocrats, Catholic
and Protestant, being enticed into metropolitan Jesuit colleges
throughout Europe rather as Chinese literati were initially
enticed into Matteo Ricci's house, by the promise of arcane
knowledge, curiosities, maps and mathematical instruments.[82] A
manuscript chronicle of the Collegio Romano describes a large
number of such ceremonial visits.[83] The transformation of the
Collegio Romano into a theatre of curiosity had numerous
precedents throughout the century. During the festivities to mark
the canonization of Saints Ignatius and Francis Xavier in 1622,
the College was transformed into ancient Rome, to echo the solemn
ecclesiastical rites with "erudite allusion and ancient
Apotheosis".[84] The Atrium and entrances of the Collegio
were decorated to represent the Roman forum, while the Aula Magna
became the Campus Martius, scene of the apotheoses of the Roman
Emperors. Two large globes, at the main entrance, represented the
old and new worlds, divided into thirty-four Jesuit provinces,
with their colleges and houses marked on tesserae. Plays
representing important events in the lives of Xavier and Ignatius
were staged by the Parthenian academicians of the College and the
members of the Roman seminary. The mathematics professor Orazio
Grassi (1583-1654) staged an opera in the transformed Aula Magna
for the occasion, the Apotheosis of Saints Ignatius and Xavier,
set to music by Kapsberger, with elaborate stage-machinery.[85]
Grassi also provided geographical demonstrations (ragioni
Geografiche) that St. Francis Xavier was responsible for a larger
amount of territory than any apostolic preacher, much as he had
provided public mathematical demonstrations for the supra-lunary
location of the comets of 1618.[86] By the time of Christina's
visit in 1656, as Gualdo Priorato's account reveals, the College
could boast two further sites of courtly display: the College
pharmacy and the Musaeum Kircherianum. Building of the college
pharmacy commenced on 5 July 1627, shortly after the commencement
of work on Orazio Grassi's church of St. Ignatius[87], but the
existence of Spetiali is evident from the Catalogues of the
College back to 1598 and beyond.[88] In 1609 the category becomes
"Aromatarius"[89], before the title of pharmocopolae was
bestowed upon Francesco Vagioli and Francesco Savelli in the
Catalogi of 1624-5.[90] The walls of the pharmacy were decorated
with a series of (surviving) frescoed lunettes by Andrea Sarti and
Emilio Savonanzi in 1629, depicting Galen, Hippocrates, Mesue,
Andromachus and other authorities in medicine, botany and
pharmacy. A painted panel at the centre of the ceiling depicted
the patron saints of medicine, Cosmas and Damien, in the company
of Saints Francis Xavier and Ignatius and the Madonna and child, a
grouping lent legitimacy by the coincidence that the bull of
foundation of the Jesuit order (27 September 1540) fell on the
feast day of the medical saints.[91] A manuscript ground-floor
plan of the Collegio[92] apparently dating from the
mid-seventeenth century depicts the pharmacy as occupying at least
five rooms. As well as producing the balsam of life, theriac and
various other precious substances that could be distributed to
potential patrons of the order[93], the numerous books of secrets
that survive suggest that the pharmacy was used for alchemical
operations as well as the production of candle-wax and even
substances for combatting "carnosità", or carnality,
clearly a dangerous enemy to Jesuit collegiate life[94] . As a
site of display, the pharmacy played a part in a visit made by
Urban VIII to the Collegio Romano as early as 1631.[95] The
enormous spagyrical furnace shown to Christina was depicted
graphically in Kircher's Mundus Subterraneus,[96] where it
bolstered Kircher's attack on alchemical charlatans. On Vincenzo
Carafa's first visit to the college after his election to the
position of Father General of the Jesuit Order in 1646 he was
shown a large parchment bearing the recipes of the theriac and
other medicines produced in the Jesuit pharmacy.[97] On the same
visit, Carafa was brought to Kircher’s “private museum”,
where he was shown the “universal horoscope of the Society of
Jesus” (fig. 3) that we have described above. In its original
form this device was cruciform in shape.[98] A less famous, but
perhaps more observant visitor to Kircher’s museum was the
English traveller Philip Skippon.[99] Skippon, travelling in the
company of the botanists John Ray, Francis Willughby and Nathaniel
Bacon as well as two servants, visited Kircher’s museum in 1664.
He gives the following very detailed description of his visit: We
visited father Kircher, a German Jesuit, at the Collegium Romanum
(which is a very large and stately building belonging to the
Jesuits). He shewed us his gallery, where we saw all his works,
some of which are not yet printed; he hath translated an Arabick
book into Latin; wherein the virtues of plants are discoursed. He
said Johnston, the printer at Amsterdam, offered him 2000 for all
his writings. His Roman medals were fixed within a wire grate on a
turning case of shelves. This pope's picture seen in a glass that
reflects it from the plaits or folds of another picture. An organ
that counterfeits the chirping of birds, and at the same time a
ball is kept up by a stream of ait. The picture of the king of
China. A picture of father Adam Schall, a German Jesuit, who is
now in great favour with the king of China, being his chief
counsellor; on his breast he wears the mark of his honour, which
is a white bird, having a long bill, and red on the crown of its
head. The picture of Deva Rex Davan Navas. The picture of Michael
Rex Nepal. The rib and the tail (flat and broad) of a Syrene,
which Kircher said he saw at Malta. A cross made of 300 small
pieces of wood set together without glew, nails &c. Painting
of Raphael Urbin on earthen dishes. A microscope discovering fine
white sand to be pellucid, and of an elliptical figure; and red
sand pellucid and of a globular figure. A China shoe. Two Japan
razors. A Japan sword, wherewith some Jesuits had been martyr'd. A
China sword, or rather a mace. Corvus Indicus, a red bird. China
birdsnests like white Gum. Canada money made of little pieces of
bones, and a medal of the same, which faintly represented the
figure of a man. Medals of the hieroglyphical obelisks in Rome. A
cabinet door that first opened upon hinges on one side, and then
upon hinges on the other. A flat and broad hoop that moved to and
fro, on a declining plane, without running off; within it having a
weight at A.. Water put into the glass BC, and by clapping one's
hand at B, without touching the water, forces the water out a good
heighth out at C. A perpetual motion attempted by this engine. D
is a cistern with water, which runs down the channel E, and turns
the wheel from G to F. At i the axis of this wheel is a handle
that lifts up the sucker H, that forces up the water out of the
cistern K K into the pipe L into the upper cistern D. A sphere
moved regularly by water that falls on the aequinoctial line which
is made like a water wheel. An image that spewed out of its mouth
four sorts of water, one after another. A serpent vomiting water,
and a bird drinking out of the same dish. The perpetual motion we
saw at Milan. The heat of a man's breath or hand, expelled water
out of a glass, that afterwards turned a wheel. A brass Clepsydra
made after this manner. A and B are two cisterns for water. When
that in A is uppermost it falls down thro' thee four tubuli, which
are the supporters into the lower cistern B, and there it springs
up like a fountain, a pretty height for an hours's space; and so
vice versa when B is turned up. A notable deceptio visus in the
pyramidal spire C. D. being turned one way it seemed to go up, and
moved the other way it appeared as if running downwards. These and
many other inventions are described in Kircher de Magnete.
Birds-nests, that are earen by the Indians, which Wormius p. 311,
calls Nidus Ichthyocollam referens. The figure of a woman he
called the oracle with a hole in her breast, which applying one's
ear to, words and sentences are plainly understood, though
whispered a good way off. Flies and a lizard within amber. A paper
lizard with a needle stuck in it, ran up and down a wooden pillar,
being moved by a loadstone. The magnet moved several figures
hanging within glass globes. One figure was moved by the
loadstone, thro' wood, glass, water and lead. A cylindrical glass
of water with a glass figure in it, which rises or falls as you
press the air at the top of the glass with your finger; the air
being pressed in the cylinder, presses that in the figure into a
narrower room, and so water comes in and weighs the figure down,
which rises upon lessening the pressure at the top of the
cylinder. Avis Guaria, p. 308 Wormii, was seen here.[100]
Skippon’s meticulously detailed description betrays little
emotion – we are not told whether the English naturalists were
frightened by the Delphic oracle. Indeed, if anything Skippon even
suggests a certain tedium in the face of Kircherian wonders –
“the perpetual motion machine we saw at Milan”. His curt,
“objective” style also has much to do with the developing
genre of the travel journal, however, and there is ample evidence
that English circles were utterly enthralled by Kircher’s
natural and artificial wonders, and were doomed to repeated
frustration in attempting to repeat Kircher’s experiments in
Restoration England. The vegetable phoenix, admired by Queen
Christina in Kircher's museum, immediately the object of great
interest amongst English natural philosophers, illustrates the
difficulty Kircherian wonders experienced in travelling beyond the
walls of his museum. In 1657 Henry Oldenburg planned a trip to
Italy, hoping to bring back to England news of Kircher's
"vegetable phaenix's resurrection out of its own dust by ye
warmth of ye Sun", along with other Kircherian secrets and
"remarquable things, one might have the satisfaction to be
punctually informed about"[101] Oldenburg never made the
trip, and the next news about Kircher's phoenix had to wait until
Robert Southwell encountered an English traveller returning from
Italy. Southwell reported to Oldenburg "[H]e gives me some
incouragement yt when I come to Rome I shall be able fully to
satisfy you concerning Kerchers plant. he told me he was wth him
and remembers to have seene in a glasse half as bigg as his head
(close luted) a plant glowne up ye length of his finger with a
kind of asshes at ye bottome but I found he had not beene Curious
in the observation of it".[102] On accomplishing his mission,
Southwell brought disappointing news about the phoenix: "As
to the flower growing from its ashes, he had such a thing, but it
is now spoiled; he made it not himself, but it was given
him".[103] Southwell nonetheless acquired "the receipt
thereof, upon a swop, wrote with his own hand; it is long and
intricate, and of a nice preparation".[104] We have no record
of whether the Royal Society suceeded in reproducing the vegetable
phoenix[105], but generally attempts to replicate Kircherian
wonders in London and Oxford met with little success. The trouble
was not limited to England. John Bargrave recounted in graphic
terms the price of failure for a Nuremberg optician: I bought this
glass of Myn Here Westleius, an eminent man for optics at
Nurenburg, and it cost me 3 pistolls, which is about 50S English.
This gentleman spoke bitterly to me against Father Kercherius, a
Jesuit at Rome (of my acquaintance), saying that it had cost him
above a thousand pounds to put his optic speculations in practice,
but he found his principles false, and showed me a great basket of
glasses of his failings.[106] Kircher’s net drew in too much,
according to unsympathetic English commentators in the 1650s.
Robert Payne's remarks on Kircher qua Jesuit in 1650, while
complaining about an experiment on roasted worms reported in the
Ars Magna Lucis et Umbrae emphasize precisely this point: The
truth is, this Jesuit, as generally the most of his order, have a
great ambition to be thoughte the greate and learned men of the
world; and to that end writes greate volumes, on all subjects,
with gay pictures and diagrams to set them forth, for ostentation
And to fill up those volumes, they draw in all things, by head and
shoulders; and these too for the most part, stolen from other
authors. So that if that little, which is their owne, were
separated from what is borrowed from others, or impertinent to
their present arguments, their swollen volumes would shrink up to
the size of our Almanacks. But enough of these Mountebankes.[107]
In similar vein, on sending Descartes a copy of Kircher's Magnes,
Constantijn Huygens had remarked that the former would find in it
"more grimaces than good material, as is normal for the
Jesuits. These scribblers, however, can be useful to you in those
things quae facti sunt, non juris".[108] Sir Robert Moray
(1608-1673), later one of the prime movers in acquiring a charter
from Charles II for the foundation of the Royal Society and its
first president[109], entered into close correspondence with
Kircher in 1644, after admiring the Magnes.[110] While in the
services of the French army in Germany, Moray consumed Kircher's
books avidly and discussed their contents with Jesuits in Cologne
and Ingolstadt.[111] On his return to the royal court in
Whitehall, he informed Kircher of the foundation of the Royal
Society, and continued to send scholars, such as the mathematician
James Gregory, the naturalist Francis Willughby and others to seek
Kircher's company in Rome.[112] Moray was confident that Kircher's
agglomeration of information could be filtered, or threshed, to
separate the wheat from the chaff: Whatsoever Mr. Hugens &
others say of Kercher, I assure you I am one of those that think
the Commonwealth of learning is much beholding to him, though
there wants not chaff in his heap of stuff composted in his
severall peaces, yet there is wheat to be found almost every where
in them. And though he doth not handle most things fully, nor
accurately, yet yt furnishes matter to others to do it. I reckon
him as usefull Quarries in philosophy and good literature. Curious
workmen may finish what hee but blocks and rough hewes. Hee
meddles with too many things to do any exquisitely, yet in some
that I can name I know none goes beyond him, at least as to
grasping of variety: and even that is not onely often pleasure but
usefull.[113] Moray changed his tune in his following letter to
the secretary of the Royal Society, demonstrating the increasing
fragility of Jesuit scientific credibility, and linking the
failure of an experiment involving the focusing of moonbeams on
substances with a powerful burning-glass to Kircher's membership
of the Jesuit order explicitly, writing that “hee does but lyke
other birds of his feather”.[114] Boyle wrote to Oldenburg in
1665 to complain about the problem: I suppose Sr. Rob. Murry has
told you, that the Expt about Salt & Nitrous water exposed to
the Beames of the moone did not succeed as Kircher promises, but
as I foretold. And for the same Author's Expts with Quicksilver
& sea water seald up in a ring, though the want of fit glasses
will, till the commerce with London be free, keepe mee unable to
try: yet besides it is at most the same, but not soe probable as
that wch he publishd in his Ars Magnetica, 20 or 30 year ago. I
cannot but think it unlikely that it will succeed at least in our
Climate, where by concentrating the Beames of the Moone with a
large Burning-glasse, I was not able to produce any sensible
Alteration, in Bodys that seeme very easily susceptible of
them.[115] Commenting to Boyle on the unhappy results of attempts
to repeat Kircher’s experiments, Oldenburg wrote darkly that
"'Tis an ill Omen, me thinks, yt ye very first Experiment
singled out by us out of Kircher, failes, and yt 'tis likely, the
next will doe so too".[116] The replication of the wonders
displayed to visitors to Kircher’s museum and described in his
published works was difficult. Kircher’s performances and
demonstrations were apparently meant to be beheld, admired and
believed, but not to be repeated outside the preternatural realm
of the museum of the Collegio Romano. Miracle-machines For
Kircher, as for other early modern natural magicians, art is
nature’s ape. Or, to turn the metaphor on its head, nature is
God’s work of art, and thus the natural magician bears a
relationship to his technical productions that is analagous to the
relationship God bears to the whole of Creation.[117] Kircherian
machines can thus be compared to miniature, artificial universes,
bearing encrypted messages from a playful creator. The perpetual
motion machines and emblematic clocks displayed in Kircher’s
museum display the microcosmic character of Kircherian machines
most evidently, sometimes even bearing zodiacal and planetary
symbols to make the analogy unmissable (e.g. fig. 14). The “user
intervention” required by machines such as Kircher’s sunflower
clock (fig. 12), that so frustrated Nicholas Claude Fabri de
Peiresc when the instrument was demonstrated to him in
Aix-en-Provence in 1633 was not a failing in Kircher’s
instrument, but rather a rhetorical demonstration of the limits of
the analogy between the human magus and his omnipotent
forbear.[118] Other machines, as we have argued, were miniature
moral universes, the catoptric chest (fig. 13) being a striking
example. We have argued that Kircherian machines were jokes that
occupied a ludic space between the demonic and the supernatural
realms. What, then, are we to make of the following machine listed
by De Sepibus: “a large crystalline globe full of water
representing the resurrection of the Saviour in the midst of the
waters”?[119] How could Kircher dare to make a joke of the
central mystery of Christianity? How could he place the
resurrected Christ in a glass sphere, alongside genies,
water-vomitting snakes and pagan Goddesses? Surely to place the
Resurrection in this mechanical context was tantamount to reducing
it to a secret combination of natural causes and denying its
miraculous status? The problem is even more striking when we look
at Kircher’s first published book, the Ars Magnesia, published
in Würzburg when he was twenty-nine years old. Launching into a
description of the various machines that can be constructed with
the aid of the magnet, Kircher describes a device “to exhibit
Christ walking on water, and bringing help to Peter who is
gradually sinking, by a magnetic trick”. “Carve statues of
Christ and Peter from the lightest material possible”,
Kircher’s description begins, “When a strong magnet is placed
in Peter’s breast, and with Christ’s outstretched hands or any
part of his toga turned toward Peter made of fine steel, you will
have everything required to exhibit the story. With their lower
limbs well propped-up on corks so that they don’t totter about
above the water, the statues are placed in a basin filled up to
the top with water, and the iron hands of Christ soon feel the
magnetic power diffused from the breast of Peter. The magnet drags
the statue of Christ to it with equal motions, and insinuates
itself into Peter’s embrace. The artifice will be greater if the
statue of Christ is flexible in its middle, for in this way it
will bend itself, to the great admiration and piety of the
spectators”.[120] Despite Kircher’s claims, the steel-handed
bending Jesus floating on a cork and drawn to a magnetic Peter
does not strike us as a particularly pious artifice. Indeed, his
demonstration almost seems to carry the heretical suggestion that
what appeared to be miraculous was merely carried out through a
clever piece of natural magic, reminiscent of James Bond’s
magnetic encounter with the metal-toothed villain Jaws in the film
Moonraker. But that can hardly be the real thrust of Kircher’s
demonstration. Rather, the clue to Kircher’s intention can
probably best be gleaned from his own definition of natural magic:
feats of natural magic can resemble miracles to those who are
ignorant of their true causes. Again, as in the case of the
perpetual motion machines, the analogy is limited. Real miracles
by definition defy demonstration and replication. By producing
wonder, fear and amusement, however, Kircher’s magical machines
rehearsed his visitors’ reactions to the miraculous and the
demonic, and trained them in civility and piety. essay
illustrations gallery [1] For discussions of Kircher’s machines,
see particularly Thomas L. Hankins and Robert J. Silverman,
Instruments and the Imagination, Princeton, N.J.: Princeton
University Press, 1995, especially chapters 2-4, Paula Findlen,
Scientific Spectacle in Baroque Rome: Athanasius Kircher and the
Roman College Museum, Roma Moderna e Contemporanea. 1995;
3:625-665, Joscelyn Godwin, Athanasius Kircher: A Renaissance man
and the quest for lost knowledge. London: Thames and Hudson; 1979,
Eugenio Lo Sardo ed. Icononismi e Mirabilia da Athanasius Kircher.
Rome: Edizioni dell'Elefante; 1999 and Adalgisa Lugli,. Naturalia
et Mirabilia. Il collezionismo enciclopedico nelle Wunderkammern
d'Europa. Milan; 1983. On Kircher’s musical machines, see Jan
Jaap Haspels, Automatic musical instruments, their mechanics and
their music, 1580-1820, Niroth: Muiziekdruk C.V. Koedijk, 1987. On
Kircher’s magnetic devices in particular see Martha Baldwin.
Magnetism and the anti-Copernican polemic. Journal for the History
of Astronomy. 1985; 16:155-174, Jim Bennett, Cosmology and the
Magnetical Philosophy, 1640-1680. Journal for the History of
Astronomy. 1981; 12: 165-177, Silvio Bedini, Seventeenth Century
Magnetic Timepieces. Physis. 1969; 11: 37-78. On optical and
catoptric devices, see Jurgis Baltrusaitis, Anamorphoses ou magie
artificielle des effets merveilleux. Paris: Olivier Perrin; 1969,
and idem., Le miroir. Paris: Le Seuil 1978. [2] Filippo Buonanni,
Musaeum Kircherianum sive Musaeum a P. Athanasio Kirchero In
Collegio Romano Societatis Iesu Jam pridem Incoeptum Nuper
restitutum, auctum, descriptum, & Iconibus illustratum. Rome:
Typis Georgii Plachii; 1709, pp. 302-315: [3] See, for example,
the classic study by Krysztof Pomian, Collectionneurs, amateurs et
curieux: Paris, Venise, XVIe-XVIIIe siècle, Paris: Gallimard,
1987, especially chapter 1. [4] On the relationship between
courtly models of behaviour and early modern science, see in
particular Mario Biagioli, Galileo Courtier: The practice of
science in the culture of absolutism. Chicago: University of
Chicago Press; 1993. For sprezzatura see pp. 51-52. [5] On
early-modern scientific “jokes”, cf Paula Findlen, Jokes of
Nature and Jokes of Knowledge: The Playfulness of Scientific
Discourse in Early Modern Europe. Renaissance Quarterly. 1990;
43:292-331. [6] Athanasius Kircher to Johann Georg Anckel (or J.M.
Hirt), Rome, 16 July 1659, Herzog-August-Bibliothek Wolfenbüttel,
Bibliotheksarchiv N° 376, quoted in John Fletcher (ed.),
Athanasius Kircher und seine Beziehungen zum gelehrten Europa
seiner Zeit. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz; 1988, p. 105. The manuscript
letters of Kircher conserved in the Herzog-August-Bibliothek have
recently been made available on the Internet <http://www.hab.de/projekte/kircher/kircher.htm>
[7] Athanasius Kircher, Ars Magna lucis et umbrae. Romae: Ludovico
Grignani; 1646, p. 553: "Horoscopium Geographicum universale
Societatis Iesu construere, quo in omnibus Collegijs dictae
Societatis toto orbe terrarum diffusis, quota hora sit uno intuitu
demonstratur". [8] Georgio de Sepibus. Romanii Collegii
Musaeum Celeberrimum cuius magnae antiquariae rei... Amsterdam: Ex
Officina Janssonio-Waesbergiana; 1678; also Kircher, Phonurgia
nova, Campidonae: Dreherr; 1673, p. 2 [9] See Claudio Costantini,
Baliani e i Gesuiti. Florence: Giunti Barbèra; 1969, Ugo Baldini,
Uniformitas et Soliditas Doctrinae: Le censure librorum e
opinionum. in idem., Legem impone subactis. Studi su filosofie e
scienze dei gesuiti in Italia, 1540- 1632. Rome: Bulzoni; 1992;
pp. 75-119, Michael John Gorman, A Matter of Faith? Christoph
Scheiner, Jesuit censorship and the Trial of Galileo. Perspectives
on Science. 1996; 4(3):283-320, idem., Jesuit explorations of the
Torricellian space: carp-bladders and sulphurous fumes. Mélanges
de L'Ecole Française De Rome. Italie Et Méditerranée. 1994;
tome 106(fasc. 2):pp. 7-32 and Marcus Hellyer, "Because the
authority of my superiors commands": Censorship, physics and
the German Jesuits . Early Modern Science and Medicine. 1996;
1(3):319-354. [10] De Sepibus, op. cit. (note 6) [11] See
Francesco Gizzio to Athanasius Kircher, Naples; 27 October 1668,
Rome, Archives of the Pontifical Gregorian University (hereafter
APUG), 564 f. 156r and, for De Sepibus’ trip to Naples, Gizzio
to Kircher, Naples, 28 February 1670 (APUG 559, f. 85r). For
Kircher’s fear that De Sepibus had died in 1674, see Gizzio to
Kircher, Naples, 14 July 1674 (APUG 565, f. 213rv. The manuscript
correspondence of Kircher conserved in the Archives of the
Pontifical Gregorian University (APUG 555-568) is now available
for consultation on the Internet. See The Athanasius Kircher
Correspondence Project, ed. Michael John Gorman and Nick Wilding,
<http://galileo.imss.firenze.it/multi/kircher/index.html>
[12] De Sepibus, op. cit., pp. 2-3. [13] De Sepibus, op. cit., p.
60 [14] De oraculo Delphico, APUG 566, f. 236r <http://150.217.52.68/kircher/ASPgentit.asp?idtitrec=4965>,
accessible via the Athanasius Kircher Correspondence Project, cit.
[15] Athanasius Kircher, Phonurgia nova, Campidonae: Dreherr;
1673, p. 112. [16] On the official foundation of the Musaeum
Kircherianum and the Donnini bequest, see Findlen, op. cit., R.
Garrucci, Origini e vicende del Museo Kircheriano dal 1651 al
1773. La Civiltà Cattolica. 1879; Serie X Vol. XII(Quaderno 703):
727-739, Maristella Casciato, Maria Grazia Ianniello and Maria
Vitale, eds., Enciclopedismo in Roma barocca: Athanasius Kircher e
il museo del Collegio Romano tra Wunderkammer e museo scientifico.
Venice: Marsilio; 1986, and R. G. Villoslada, Storia del Collegio
Romano dal suo inizio all soppressione della Compagnia di Gesù.
Rome; 1954, as well as Buonanni, Musaeum Kircherianum, pp. 1-3, as
well as the manuscripts documenting the museum’s history in APUG
35. [17] The passage, from John Evelyn’s diary, is quoted in
Barbara Shapiro, John Wilkins, 1614-1672; an intellectual
biography, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1969, p. 120.
See Jack Peter Zetterberg, "Mathematical Magick" in
England: 1550-1650, Dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Madison;
1976, pp. 212 ff. [18]Archivum Romanum Societatis Iesu (hereafter
ARSI) Rom. 150, I. 36r, cited in Ugo Baldini and Pier Daniele
Napolitani, eds., Christoph Clavius: Corrispondenza, Pisa:
Università di Pisa, Dipartimento di Matematica, Sezione di
Didattica e Storia della Matematica; 1992, Vol. III.2, pp. 54-5,
note 2. [19] On Grienberger, see Michael John Gorman, Mathematics
and Modesty in the Society of Jesus: The Problems of Christoph
Grienberger, forthcoming in Archimedes, guest ed. Mordechai
Feingold, 2001. [20] Kircher, Magnes, sive de arte magnetica opus
tripartitum, Romae: Ex Typographia Ludovici Grignani, 1641, Lib.
II, Cap. II, p. 431, "[P]artim è literis ab ijs, qui iter in
Indias susceperant, vel oretenus ab ijs, qui inde peregrini Romam
advenerant; partim ex literarum Mathematicarum è diversis orbis
terrae partibus ad Clavium, Grimbergerum, aliosque Romanos
Societatis IESU Mathematicos praedecessores meos datarum, quod
penes me est, Archivio; multas sanè, circa declinationes
Magneticas haud spernendas observationes collegi" [21] Kaspar
Schott, Mechanica Hydraulica-Pneumatica, Würzburg: Pigrin, 1657,
p. 339 [22] Schott, Mechanica Hydraulica-Pneumatica, cit., p. 300
[23] See Schott, Magia Universalis, Pars III, Würzburg: J. G.
Schönwetter, 1658, pp. 219-228 “Machina II: Glossocomum
nostrum”, discussed in Gorman, Mathematics and Modesty, cit.,
and also Schott, Magia Universalis, Pars I, Würzburg: J. G.
Schönwetter, 1657, pp. 26-7. [24] De Sepibus, op.cit., p. 13 (on
Clavius’ experiment) and p. 17 (on Grienberger’s wooden
astrolabe) [25] Jakob Johann Wenceslaus Dobrzensky de Nigro Ponte,
Nova, et amaenior de admirando fontium genio (ex abditis naturae
claustris, in orbis lucem emanante) philosophia. Ferrara:
Alphonsum, & Io. Baptistam de Marestis; 1659, p. 46. On
Dobrzensky de Nigro Ponte see R.J.W. Evans, The Making of the
Habsburg Monarchy: An Interpretation. Oxford: Clarendon Press;
1979, pp. 316, 337, 339-40, 356, 369-70, 390 [26] Schott, Magia
Universalis, Pars I, Würzburg: J. G. Schönwetter, 1657, p. 42,
cf. Kircher, Oedipus Aegyptiacus hoc est universalis
hieroglyphicae veterum doctrinae temporum iniuria abolitae
instauratio, Rome: Vitalis Mascardi; 1652-1654, Tom. 3, Syntag.
17, Cap. 1, p. 488 [27] Schott, Mechanica Hydraulico-Pneumatica,
cit., Pars II, Classis I, p. 255 and Kircher, Oedipus Aegyptiacus,
cit., Tom. II2, Classis VIII, Cap. III, Pragmatia I, p. 332. [28]
Kircher, Oedipus Aegyptiacus, cit., Tom. II2, Classis VIII, Cap.
III, Prag. V, pp. 337-8, “Ara deorum”. [29]Athanasius Kircher,
Vita admodum Reverendi P. A. Kircher, Augsburg: S. Utzschneider,
1684, pp. 30-3. [30] See Zetterberg, “Mathematical Magick”,
cit., p. 32 [31] For a rich discussion of the contrast between
learned and popular magic during this period see R.J.W. Evans, The
Making of the Habsburg Monarchy, cit., Chapters 9-12. [32] The
literature on Jesuit theatre is enormous, and a survey would take
us beyond the scope of this article, but a classic study is
Jean-Marie Valentin, Theatre des Jésuites dans les pays de langue
allemande (1554-1680) : salut des ames et ordre des cités, Bern,
Las Vegas : P. Lang, 1978 (3 vols.). [33] See Schott, Mechanica
Hydraulico-Pneumatica, cit., p. 323 and Iconismus XXIX. On
Kircher’s time in Malta see Alberto Bartòla, Alessandro VII e
Athanasius Kircher S.I. Ricerche e appunti sulla loro
corrispondenza erudita e sulla storia di alcuni codici chigiani.
Miscellanea Bibliothecae Apostolicae Vaticanae. 1989; III:7-105.
[34] See the letter from Kircher to General G.P. Oliva, Rome, 5
May 1672, published in Garrucci, Origini e vicende del Museo,
cit., also Buonanni, Musaeum Kircherianum, pp. 1-3, Godwin,
Athanasius Kircher, cit., pp. 14-15. [35] See Schott to Kircher,
n.p., n.d. [Würzburg, circa 1656? ], APUG 567, f. 52r: “Tutti
li Padri di questa nostra Provincia stimano e amano Vostra
Reverenza principalmente il nostro R. P. Provinciale, il quale
vorebbe che io discrivessi e stampassi la Galeria di Vostra
Reverenza”, also Schott to Kircher, Würzburg, 21 October 1656:
“O[ro] se V.a R.a volesse e potesse impiegare per mio e suo
servitio, uno o due giorni, e farmi un’abbozzo, e breve
descrittione della sua Galeria, significandomi brevemente le cose
più riguardevole, massimamente le nuove datte doppo la mia
partenza, delineandole ruditer e obiter. Vorrei descrivere a lungo
ogni cosa, e farle stampare, con bellissime figure di rame, prima
separatamente, e doppo nella mia Magia Universalis Naturae et
Artis”. Apparently Valentin Stansel had been charged with
composing the description for Schott, but Stansel, soon to depart
for Brazil, did not send it, despite Schott’s repeated pleas
(e.g. “Prego Vostra Reverenza quanto posso, e per l’amore che
mi porta, e propter con humania studia, che m’impetri dal R.P.
Assistente, che mi mandi la Galeria di V.a R.a descritta dal P.
Stansel, o almeno le cose più principali”, Schott to Kircher,
Würzburg, 16 June 1657, APUG 567, f. 45r) [36] On Schott’s
career, see ARSI, Lamalle: Schott. On Kircher’s arrival in
Avignon, see ARSI, Lugd. 14, f. 239v, and the appendix to the
Catalogue. [37] See ARSI Rom. 81 ff.64v, 88v, 114v: (Catalogue of
Collegio Romano, 1652-4): “P. Gaspar Sciot, socius P.
Athanasii”, “P. Athanasius Chircher, scribit imprimenda”.
[38] Kircher, Magnes, sive de magnetica arte libri tres, Rome: V.
Mascardi, 16543, sig. †† rv. [39] Schott, Mechanica
Hydraulico-Pneumatica, cit., pp. 1-3, Praeloquium ad Lectorem [40]
Schott, op. cit.., p. 3 [41] Schott, op. cit., p. 5 [42] R.J.W.
Evans, The Making of the Habsburg Monarchy, cit., especially ch.
9-12. [43] Schott, Mechanica Hydraulico-Pneumatica, cit., p. 219.
[44] Daniel Schwenter and Georg Philipp Harsdörffer, Deliciae
Physico-Mathematicae, oder Mathematische und philosophische
Erquickstunden, herausgegeben und eingeleitet von Jörg Jochen
Berns, Frankfurt a. M.: Keip, 1991. [45] Schott, Mechanica
Hydraulico-Pneumatica, cit., pp. 311-2 [46] ibid. [47] Schott,
Mechanica Hydraulico-Pneumatica, cit., pp. 63-4 (on explosions)
and Gioseffo Petrucci, Prodromo apologetico alli studi
Chircheriani, Amsterdam: Janssonio-Waesbergi; 1677, p. 128 (on
Settala’s burning-mirrors). [48] Robert Darnton, The Great Cat
Massacre and Other Episodes in French Cultural History, New Your:
Basic Books, 1984, pp. 75-104. [49] Thomas L. Hankins and Robert
J. Silverman, Instruments and the Imagination, Princeton, N.J.:
Princeton University Press, 1995, especially chapters 2-4. On the
cat piano, designed to entertain a melancholy prince, see Kircher,
Musurgia universalis, Rome: Francesco Corbelleti; 1650, Tom. I,
Lib. VI, Pars IV, Caput I, p. 519 and Schott, Magia Universalis,
cit., Pars II, pp. 372-3. Schott provides an illustration. [50]
Schott, Magia Universalis, cit., Pars I, p. 302 [51] The classic
study of early modern civility remains Norbert Elias, The
civilizing process, trans. Edmund Jephcott, Oxford: Blackwell,
1994. A contrasting view, arguing that European civility had its
origins in monastic disciplina rather than court culture is
advanced in Dilwyn Knox, Disciplina: The Monastic and clerical
origins of European Civility in John Monfasani and Ronald G.
Musto, eds. Renaissance society and culture: Essays in honour of
Eugene F. Rice, Jr. New York: Italica Press; 1991; pp. 107-135.
Kircher would seem to demonstrate that the lines between courtly
and clerical traditions are perhaps not so clear-cut as both Knox
and Elias suppose. On civility see also Jacques Revel, The Uses of
Civility, trans. Arthur Goldhammer, in Roger Chartier, ed., A
History of Private Life, Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
1989, Vol. 3, pp. 167-205 [52] René Descartes, Les Passions de
l’âme, ed. Geneviève Rodis-Lewis, Paris: J. Vrin, 1966. [53]
Marin Mersenne, Harmonie Universelle, Paris: S. Cramoisy, 1636
(facsimile repr. Paris: CNRS, 1963), sig. A iiij recto (on the
Archiviole), Justus Lipsius, De Militia Romana, Antwerp:
Plantin-Moretus, 1598), Thomas Hobbes, Leviathan, London: A.
Crooke, 1651. For the court of Louis XIV at Versailles as a
“machine”, see Apostolidès, Le roi-machine: Spectacle et
politique au temps de Louis XIV, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1981.
On automata and political power see Otto Mayr, Authority, Liberty
and Automatic machinery in Early Modern Europe, Baltimore: Johns
Hopkins University Press, 1986. For a more dated, though
entertaining, presentation of the political function of automata,
see Lewis Mumford, Authoritarian and Democratic Technics.
Technology and Culture. 1964; 5(1):1-8. On automata more generally
see Derek J. de Solla Price, Automata and the Origins of Mechanism
and Mechanical Philosophy. Technology and Culture. 1964;
5(1):9-23, who recounts the (probably apocryphal) story that
Descartes constructed a “beautiful blonde automaton named
Francine, but she was discovered in her packing case on board ship
and dumped over the side by the captain in his horror of apparent
witchcraft”, and Silvio Bedini, The Role of Automata in the
history of technology, Technology and Culture. 1964; 5(1): 24-42.
[54] Peter Dear, A Mechanical Microcosm: Bodily Passions, Good
Manners, and Cartesian Mechanism. in Christopher Lawrence and
Steven Shapin, eds. Science Incarnate: Historical embodiments of
Natural knowledge. Chicago and London: University of Chicago
Press; 1998; pp. 51-82. [55] On the context of Kircher’s Oedipus
Aegyptiacus, see especially Giovanni Cipriani, Gli obelischi
egizi: politica e cultura nella Roma barocca. Florence: Olschki;
1993, pp. 77-167. On the question of the Corpus Hermeticum see
Frances Yates, Giordano Bruno and the Hermetic tradition, London:
Routledge & K. Paul, 1964, and, more recently, Anthony
Grafton, Protestant versus Prophet: Isaac Casaubon on Hermes
Trismegistus, and idem., The Strange Deaths of Hermes and the
Sibyls, both in idem., Defenders of the Text: The Traditions of
Scholarship in an Age of Science, 1450-1800, on pp. 145-161 and
162-177 respectively. [56] Kircher, Oedipus Aegyptiacus, cit.,
Sig. d recto [57] For Kircher’s dream of being elected Pope, see
Kaspar Schott, Physica Curiosa, sive Mirabilia Naturae et Artis,
Würzburg: Jobus Hertz; 1667 (2nd edition), Liber III (Mirabilia
Hominum), Caput XXV, pp. 455-6. Kircher’s vision of the invasion
of the Jesuit college in Würzburg is described in idem., Liber II
(Mirabilia Spectrorum), Caput V, p. 210 and also in Kircher’s
posthumous autobiography, Vita admodum Reverendi P. A. Kircher,
Augsburg: S. Utzschneider, 1684, pp. 38-41. On the use of recorded
dreams as a historical source, see Peter Burke, The Cultural
History of Dreams, in idem., Varieties of Cultural History,
Ithica: Cornell University Press; 1997, pp. 23-42. [58] Schott,
Magia Universalis, cit., Pars I, Prolegomena, especially pp. 8-18,
cf Kircher, Oedipus Aegyptiacus, Tom. 2, class. 2, cap. 1 and
Kircher,Obeliscus Pamphilius, Rome: Ludovico Grignani; 1650, bk.
1, ch. 1. [59] Schott, Magia Universalis, loc. cit. [60] Schott,
Magia Universalis, Pars I, Cap. VI (p. 22 ff). In a letter to
Kircher sent from Würzburg on 1 April 1656, Schott wrote
“Gaudeo vehementer, Reginam Suedice [sic] tandem visitare Museum
R.ae V.ae” (APUG 561, f. 40r) [61] On the relationship between
demonology and natural philosophy in seventeenth century Europe,
see Stuart Clark, Thinking with Demons: The Idea of Witchcraft in
Early Modern Europe, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1997, especially pp.
149-311, and idem., The rational witchfinder: conscience,
demonological naturalism and popular superstitions. in Stephen
Pumfrey, Paolo Rossi and Maurice Slawinski, (eds.). Science,
Culture and Popular belief in Renaissance Europe. Manchester and
New York: Manchester University Press; 1991; pp. 222-248. [62]
Schott, Magia Universalis, cit., Pars I, Caput X, p. 39 (on demons
and the vacuum) and idem., Mechanica Hydraulico-Pneumatica, cit.,
introduction, on the four fundamental principles of hydraulic
machines. [63]Schott, Mechanica Hydraulico-Pneumatica, cit., pp.
307-8 [64] Martin del Rio, Disquisitionum Magicarum Libri Sex,
Louvain, 1599 (edition used Mainz: Henningii; 1624). Liber I, De
magia in genere, & de naturali ac artificiosa in specie. On
this work and witch-trials see Petra Nagel, Die Bedeutung der
"Disquisitionum magicarum libri sex" von Martin Delrio
für das Verfahren in Hexenprozessen, Frankfurt am Main: Peter
Lang, 1995. On Del Rio’s life, see anon., [H. Langeveltius?], M.
A. del Rii.... Vita brevi commentariolo expressa. Antwerp; 1609.
On Del Rio’s critique of Stoic drama see Roland Mayer, Personata
Stoa: Neostoicism and Senecan Tragedy. Journal of the Warburg and
Courtauld Institutes. 1994; 57:151-174. [65] On wonders and the
preternatural, see especially Lorraine Daston and Katherine Park,
Wonders and the order of nature, 1150-1750, New York : Zone Books,
1998. [66] Del Rio, Disquisitionum Magicarum, ed. cit., pp. 49-50.
[67] Unfortunately there is no adequate scholarly study of
Pereira. [68] Benito Pereira, Adversus fallaces &
superstitiosas artes, id est, De magia, de observatione somniorum,
et de divinatione astrologica. Libri tres, first published
Ingolstadt 1591, edition used Coloniae Agrippinae, apud Ioannem
Gymnicum, 1598, pp. 41, 67-8, 91. [69] Kircher, Magnes, 16543,
cit., Liber II, Pars 4, p. 238. [70] Schott, Magia Universalis,
cit., Sig. ††††† recto: Prooemium totius operis [71] J.
Nadal, Exhortatio Coloniensis 6a (1567), in P. Hieronymi Nadal
Commentarii de Instituto Societatis Iesu, ed. Michael Nicolau,
S.J. (= Epistolae et Monumenta P. Hieronymi Nadal, Tomus V) Romae:
apud Monumenta Historica Societatis Iesu, 1962, p. 832, n. 21.
[72]Christoph Clavius, Discursus cuiusdam amicissimi Societatis
Iesu de modo et via qua Societas ad maiorem Dei honorem et
animarum profectum augere hominum de se opinionem, omnemque
haereticorum in literis aestimationem, qua illi multum nituntur,
convellere brevissime et facillime possit, (c. 1594), ARSI Stud.
3, ff. 485-487 (Clavius autograph), published in Monumenta
Paedagogica Societatis Iesu, Nova editio penitus retractata, ed.
Ladislaus Lukács, Rome, Institutum Historicum Societatis Iesu,
1965-, VII, pp. 119-122 [73] ibid. [74]Athanasius Kircher to Queen
Christina of Sweden, Rome, 11 November 1651, APUG 561 ff. 50r-v
(autograph draft), on 50r. [75]There is a vast bibliography on
Christina, but see especially Susanna Åkerman, Queen Christina of
Sweden and her circle: The transformation of a seventeenth-century
philosophical libertine, Leiden: Brill, 1991, idem., Cristina di
Svezia: scienza ed alchimia nella Roma barocca. Bari: Dedalo,
1990, Jeanne Bignami Odier and Anna Maria Partini, 'Cristina di
Svezia e le scienze occulte', Physis 1983, A. 25(fasc. 2):
251-278. Georgina Masson, Queen Christina London: Secker &
Warburg, 1968, though a popularised presentation, remains useful
as an overview. [76]Kircher had arranged for a copy of his
Musurgia Universalis to be sent to Christina in 1650. See Louys
Elzevier to Athanasius Kircher, Amsterdam; 14 November 1650, APUG
568, f. 238 r-v [77]Daniello Bartoli, Dell'huomo di lettere difeso
& emendato, Bologna: Heredi di E. Dozza, 1646. [78]See the
undated letter to Kircher in APUG 556 f. 173r, in a more legible
Italian translation on f. 174r: "Spero che hormai havremo un
occasione più libera, e fedele di corrispondenza mutua, e per
poter communicarmi gli più sicuramente". Kircher eventually
dedicated his 1656 Itinerarium Exstaticum to Christina, who
mentions his plan to do so in the same letter: "Desiderei
ancor sapere, se me giudichi ancor degna a dedicarmi la sua
incomparibile opera". [79]See Carlos Ziller Camenietzki,
L'Extase interplanetaire d'Athanasius Kircher: Philosophie,
Cosmologie et discipline dans la Compagnie de Jésus au XVIIe
siècle, Nuncius, 1995, X(1): 3-32. [80]APUG 142 ff.81r-83r
[81]Galeazzo Gualdo Priorato, History of her majesty Christina
Alessandra, queen of Swedland. London: Printed for T.W., 1658, pp.
428-431. [82]See Jonathan D. Spence, The memory palace of Matteo
Ricci, London: Faber and Faber, 1985, Pasquale M. D'Elia, Galileo
in China. Relations through the Roman College between Galileo and
the Jesuit Scientist-Missionaries (1610-1640). Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 1960, Jacques Gernet, China and the
Christian impact: a conflict of cultures, trans. Janet Lloyd,
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985, p. 22. [83][Anon.],
Origine del Collegio Romano e suoi progressi, APUG: 142. This
manuscript forms the basis of the descriptions of ceremonial
receptions given in the Collegio Romano provided in R. Garcia
Villoslada, Storia del Collegio Romano dal suo inizio all
soppressione della Compagnia di Gesù. Rome: Typis Pontificiae
Universitatis Gregorianae, 1954, pp. 263-296. [84]Famiano Strada,
Saggio delle Feste che si apparecchiano nel Collegio Romano in
honore de' Santi Ignatio et Francesco da N. S. Gregorio XV
Canonizati All'Illustrissimo, & Eccellentissimo Signor
Principe di Venosa. Roma: Appresso Alessandro Zannetti; 1622, sig.
A2 recto. On theatrical productions in the Collegio Romano during
this time, see Irene Mamczarz, La trattatistica dei Gesuiti e la
pratica teatrale al Collegio Romano: Maciej Sarbiewski, Jean
Dubreuil e Andrea Pozzo. in M. Chiabò and F. Doglio, eds., I
Gesuiti e i Primordi del Teatro Barocco in Europa. Roma: Torre
d'Orfeo; 1995: 349-387 and Jean-Yves Boriaud, La Poésie et le
Théâtre latins au Collegio Romano d'après les manuscrits du
Fondo Gesuitico de la Bibliothèque Nationale Vittorio Emanuele
II. Mélanges de l'École Française de Rome, Italie et
Mediterranée. 1990; 102(1): 77-96. [85]See Emilio Sala and
Federico Marincola, La Musica nei Drammi Gesuitici: Il Caso
dell'Apotheosis sive Consecratio Sanctorum Ignatii et Franciscii
Xaverii (1622), in in M. Chiabò and F. Doglio, eds., I Gesuiti e
i Primordi del Teatro Barocco in Europa, cit., pp. 389-439. For a
rich contemporary Italian discussion of theatrical machinery see
Nicola Sabbattini, Pratica di fabricar scene, e machine ne' teatri
Ravenna: Per Pietro de' Paoli, e Gio. Battista Giouanelli
Stampatori Camerali; 1638. [86]Strada, op. cit., p. 9, and, for
the cometary presentation, [Orazio Grassi], De tribus cometis anni
MDCXVIII Disputatio astronomica publice habita in Collegio Romano
Societatis Iesu ab uno ex Patribus eiusdem Societatis. Romae: ex
typographia Iacobi Mascardi; 1619, OG VI pp. 21-35, translated in
Stillman Drake and C.D. O'Malley, The Controversy on the Comets of
1618, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press; 1960, pp.
3-19. [87]APUG 142 ff.1r-8v: Nota delle spese fatte nella Fabrica
del Collegio Romano f. 4r :" Dal 1627 fino a tutto il 1632
furono spesi [scudi] sedicimila dugento novanta due per la fabrica
della spezieria, cominciata a di 5 Luglio 1627" [88]ARSI Rom.
79 f.11v and Biblioteca Nazionale di Roma “Vittorio Emmanuele
II”, Fondo Gesuitico 1526 f.35r [89]ARSI Rom. 110 f.51v
[90]Idem. f.121r [91]See Imago Primi Saeculi Societatis Iesu A
Provincia Flandro-Belgica eiusdem Societatis Repraesentata.
Antwerp: Balthasar Moretus; 1640, p. 12. [92]APUG 134, XVI,
Abbozzo iconografico del Collegio Romano. [93]See e.g. Athanasius
Kircher to Duke August of Brunswick-Lüneburg, Rome, 25 July 25,
HAB BA n. 366, and the other medical gifts discussed in John
Fletcher Athanasius Kircher and Duke August of
Brunswick-Lüneburg. A chronicle of friendship in John Fletcher,
John, ed., Athanasius Kircher und seine Beziehungen zum gelehrten
Europa seiner Zeit. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz; 1988: pp. 99-139.
[94]Some manuscript books of secrets originating in the Collegio
Romano are listed in Il Fiore dell'arte di sanare, Rome: Edizione
Paracelso, 1992, pp. 565-570. The Fondo Curia of APUG also
contains numerous manuscript books of secrets, including APUG: FC
2087, APUG: FC 1381, APUG: FC 562, APUG: FC 1860/2, APUG: FC 2200.
The "ceroto per la carnosità", accompanied by a crude
drawing of a phallus, is described in APUG FC 2193, f. [40v]. On
candlewax see APUG 134, XIV. For a study of the contents of
another Jesuit pharmacy see Carmen Ravanelli Guidotti, La Farmacia
dei Gesuiti di Novellara, Faenza: Edit Faenza, 1994. On the
tradition of books of secrets during this period, see William
Eamon, Science and the secrets of nature: Books of secrets in
medieval and early modern culture. Princeton: Princeton University
Press; 1994. [95]APUG 142 f. 71r, Villoslada, Storia, cit., p.
275. For the Rospigliosi family's visit to the pharmacy in 1668,
see Villoslada, Storia, cit., p. 277. [96] Kircher, Mundus
Subterraneus, Amsterdam: Janssonius, 1665, Vol. 2 p. 392 [97] See
the manuscript Fondo Gesuitico 1382 in the Biblioteca Nazionale di
Roma, “Vittorio Emmanuele II” [98] Kircher, Ars Magna Lucis et
Umbrae, cit., pp. 553-4. [99] On Skippon see Peter Burke, The
discreet charm of Milan: English travellers in the seventeenth
century, in idem., Varieties of cultural history, Oxford: Polity
Press, 1997, pp. 94-110. [100] Philip Skippon, An Account of A
Journey made Thro' Part of the Low-Countries, Germany, Italy and
France. in A. and J. Churchill, A Collection of Voyages and
Travels. London: J. Walthoe; 1732; pp. 359-736, on pp. 672-4.
[101]Oldenburg to Boyle, Saumur, 19 March 1657, The Correspondence
of Henry Oldenburg, ed. and transl. by A. Rupert Hall and Marie
Boas Hall, Madison, Milwaukee, and London, 1965-, vol. I
pp.155-156. [102]Southwell to Oldenburg, Montpellier; 20 October
1659, The Correspondence of Henry Oldenburg, cit., I, pp. 323-325.
[103]Southwell to Boyle, n.p., 30 March 1661, in The works of the
honourable Robert Boyle, ed. Thomas Birch, London: J. & F.
Rivington, 1772 (2nd edition), VI, pp. 297-300. [104]ibid.
[105]Boyle did however allude to the palingenetic experiment in A
Discourse about the possibility of the resurrection (1675) in
Boyle, Works, cit., 4, p. 194. [106]Quoted in John Bargrave, Pope
Alexander the Seventh and the College of Cardinals, with a
Catalogue of Dr. Bargrave's Museum, ed. J.C. Robertson. London;
1867. [107]R[obert] P[ayne] to Gilbert Sheldon, Oxford, 16
December 1650, British Library Ms. Lansdowne 841 ff. 33r-v, on
33v. [108] Constantyn Huygens to Descartes, n.p., 7 January 1643,
published in Leon Roth, ed., Correspondence of Descartes and
Constantyn Huygens 1635-1647, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1926, pp.
185-6, cited in John L. Heilbron, Electricity in the 17th and 18th
centuries. A study in early modern physics, Berkeley, California:
University of California Press; 1979, p. 106. [109]On Moray see
Alexander Robertson, The Life of Sir Robert Moray. Soldier,
Statesman and Man of Science (1608-1673), London, 1922. [110]Moray
to Kircher, Ingolstadt, 1 June 1644, APUG 557 363r-v. [111]Moray
to Kircher, Ingolstadt, 7 September 1644, APUG 557 323ar-av, Moray
to Kircher Ingolstadt, 24 January 1645; APUG 568 ff. 74r - 75v,
Moray to Kircher, Paris, 12 March 1645, APUG 557 ff. 271r-v, Moray
to Kircher, Cologne, 21 November 1655; APUG 568 ff. 39r-v, Moray
to Kircher, Cologne, 28 January 1656; APUG 568 ff. 20r-21v, Moray
to Kircher, Rotterdam, 6 August 1657; APUG 568 ff. 196r-197v.
[112]Moray to Kircher, Whitehall, 25 July 1663, APUG 563 ff. 212
r-v [113] Moray to Oldenburg, Oxford; 19 October 1665; The
Correspondence of Henry Oldenburg, cit., II: 574-576. [114]Moray
to Oldenburg, Oxford, 16 November 1665 in The Correspondence of
Henry Oldenburg, cit., II: 608-611 [115]Boyle to Oldenburg, Oxford
[?]; 18 November 1665, The Correspondence of Henry Oldenburg,
cit., II: 613-614. [116]Oldenburg to Boyle, London, 21 November
1665, The Correspondence of Henry Oldenburg, cit., II: 615-617
[117] See Kircher, Magnes, 16543, cit., pp. 22-23, Axiomata seu
pronunciata De Natura & Arte [118] See Hankins and Silverman ,
Instruments and the Imagination, cit., pp. 14-36 [119] De Sepibus,
Romani Collegii Musaeum, cit., pp. 2-3 [120] Kircher, Ars
Magnesia, Hoc est Disquisitio Bipartita-empirica seu
experimentalis, Physico-Mathematica De Natura, Viribus, et
Prodigiosis Effectibus Magnetis, Würzburg: Typis Eliae Michaelis
Zinck; 1631, p. 51
Latest from
the Vatican (1/12/2007)

In a volume the documents from 1966 to 2005 of
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, concerning 105
texts of decisive importance for the "Magistero
Ecclesiale".
VATICAN CITY, thursday, 11 January 2007 (ZENIT.org). -
A volume recently published collects all documents emanated from
the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith since Council
Vatican II until 2005. The work is
composed of 662 pages, the greater part of which is written in
Latin.
Moreover, of the 105 present documents 52 are signed by Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger, which was "Prefetto" of this
Congregation from 1981 until 2005.
According to what is asserted from the Cardinal William Levada,
Prefetto of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith and
author of the introduction these documents "interventi
magisteriali" “that, rejecting the objections and
deformations of the faith, propose with new authority
deepenings of the revealed doctrine, they can accompany and they
can help the theological search”.
The Cardinal Levada remembers moreover that “it's not
enough to denounce the error” but that “it is necessary to
recall the elements of the tradition and the other elements of the
Christian faith that can illuminate the way”.
The Congregation, explains the porporato, does not mean to replace
the task of the theologians: “It's not a question to replace the
work of the theologians, neither to propose only one normative and
particular theology”.
What the Ministry of Vatican pursues is “to propose again
disregarded elements, which are indispensable for the elaboration
of a healthy catholic theology”.
“Documenta. Inde a Concilio Vaticano Secundo Espleto
Edita (1966-2005)” is published from the Publishing Vatican
Library (www.libreriaeditricevaticana.com) and costs Euro 40. This
is a modernized edition in respect to the previous one, published
in 1985 and that collected documents from
1966 to 1985.
The last document is the “Note regarding the Minister of the
Sacramento of the Unzione of Infermi”, signed from the Cardinal
Ratzinger 11th February 2005, in which it is remembered that this
unction can be only given from the
clergymen (Bishops and presbiteri) and that therefore
whichever perform such act if not part of the mentioned category
it constitutes a “simulation of the sacrament”.
The Secretary of the Congregation for the Doctrine of
the Faith, the Archbishop Amato Angel, SDB, emphasizes that in
these documents the “high strongly radicated theological quality
is mirrored in the great tradition of the Church”.
The book show at the end an index (Index rerum notabilium) that in
alphabetical order report the various arguments, from the abortion
(abortus) until Virgin Mary (Virgo Maria) and to the rising life
or procreation (Vita
nascens ET procreatio).
One of the apparata with greater information is the one dedicated
to the reduction to the laical state (reductio to statum
laicalem), and that also reference to weddings (matrimonium) and
to the doctrinal errors.
Between the other voices discussed in the volume, figure those
relative to the excomunication (excommunicatio), the omosexuality
(homosexualitas), the forbidden books (index librorum
prohibitorum), to the masonry (massonica associatio) and to the
private revelations (revelationes privatae).
Freemasonry,
Jesus and Constantine the pagan worshipper (1/12/2007)

Many of the Christian preachers and leaders of
today have been initiated into the so called secrets of
Freemasonry. And they know that the story of Jesus Christ, as it
is understood by the masses of the people, has its origin in
mythology and paganism;yet they will not educate their following
to this
truth.The Hiramic legend is perhaps the most important story in
the Masonic teachings.In order for a Mason to be considered a
Master,he must first be accepted and initiated into the third
degree wherein he is made to imitate the legendary Hiram Abiff
(who is refered to as the Widow's Son). Once the Mason reaches the
32dn degree, he finds out, among other things,that the story and
life of Jesus which is derived from the Osirian legend or myth, as
well as other ancient legends and pagan ideas. According to the
Masonic Ritual, the story of Hiram Abiff is symbolic.In the 32nd
degree (called the Sublime Prince of the Royal Secret),it is said
that the symbolic mystery of the death of Hiram Abiff represents
Jesus Christ. The three blows which were given to Hiram by Jubela,
Jubelo and Jubelum at the three gates,actualy allude to the three
points of condemnation against Jesus by the High Priest
Caiphas,Herod and Pilate. "It was from the last that he was
led to the most violent and excruciating death". They said
three blows with the square,gauge and gavel,are symbols are of the
blow of the cheeck,the flagelation and the crown of thorns.The
Brethern assembled around the tomb of Hiram is a representation of
the disciples lamenting the death of Christ on the Cross. The
"Master's Word", which is said to be lost since the
death of Hiram Abiff is the same that Christ pronounced on the
cross,and which the Jews did not comprehend: " Eli,Eli,lama
sabaethani?" ("My God,my God,why has thou forsaken
me?"); instead of which the words of a Master Mason , "
Mah-hah-bone" (Welcome) were substituted. The false brethern
represent Judas Iscariat,who sold Christ.
The sprig (of acacia) is the figure of the cross because from this
wood was the cross made". (Richardson's Monitor of
Freemasonry p.198). Hiram being buried on hill refers to the
supposed crucifixion of Jesus on the top of a hill.The resurection
of Hiram alludes to the resurection and ascension of Jesus.
There is much more evidence wich shows that the birth, death and
resurection version of Jesus version was accepted officialy only
after the Council of Nicea in A.D.325 ,this version was connected
to the ancient mythology and paganism previously practiced in the
Roman Empire. J.D.Buck informs us that "Constantine the
Emperor who with his soldiers ,environed the Bishops at the first
Council of Nicea A.D.325,and dictated terms of the deliberations
,applied for initiation into the Mysteries, and was told by
officiating priest that no purgation could free him from the crime
of putting his wife to death,or from his many perjuries and
murders." (Mystery Masonry p53).
Costantine being a pagan worshipper himself, introduced and
incorporated many of the pagan ideas and customs into the
teachings of their false monotheist Church. We need to be honest
and find the true Christianity not the lies of the Roman Catholic
Mafia, we need to discover the true Jesus before is too late as a
listener said to me and Greg on our last Radio Show together.Lets
promote the real Jesus that
will bring together all true believers.
Leo Lyon Zagami