PERSONEN FILTERS: s=, field=alchemy
Gevonden personen:
Member Group(s)
- Database Clusius

Variant Names
- Batthyány, Boldiszár de
BIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Batthyány was an Hungarian high noble, military man and patron of the sciences. Educated by private tutors at the Habsburg courts in Graz, Vienna, and France. Served in the imperial army against the Turks (1566-). He was appointed "dapiferorum regalium magister" by king Maximilian (the later emperor Maximilian II) in 1568. He inherited (among other castles) Szálonak in 1570 and Németújvár (Güssing) in 1575. Tolerant towards protestants, he employed for example the Lutheran preacher Istvan Beythe and the printer Johan Manlius. He Died 11 february 1590.
He was a military man, polyglot, book-collector and "prince-practitioner." He possessed a beautiful library, and was very interested in alchemy, parecelsian medicine, classical learning, and botany. He performed alchemical experiments and exchanged knowledge, medical recipes, and plants with friends. Although he spent a lot of money on the defense of the border, and he could not employ his own scholars, artists, or poets at his court, he acted as an occasional patron for nearby printers and scholars and built up an up-to-date and systematic library. He was also a patron, friend and correspondent of Carolus Clusius.
Batthyány was a patron of Carolus Clusius and "prince-practitioner": Carolus Clusius dedicated his Aliquot notae in Garciae (Antwerp 1582) to him. Batthyány financed the Stirpium nomenclator Pannonicus of Carolus Clusius (1583) and the watercolors on which one of the first publications about mushrooms was based (C. Clusius, Fungorum in Panoniis historia (Antwerp 1601).
Quoted in: C. Clusius, Rariorum plantarum historia (Antwerp 1601) 20, 57, 104, 137, 169, 181, 189, 233, 267, 272, 278, 287, 315, xviii, xxii, xxxii, xxxvi, xxxviii, lxxxvi, cxci, cxiv, ccxxix, cclxii, cclxxiii, cclxxvi.
-C. Clusius, Exoticorum libri decem (Leiden 1605) 300, [Belon translation] 67-68.
Residence
- Güssing 1575 - 1590
Occupation
- military man 
- aristocrat 
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- C. Clusius, Rariorum plantarum historia< | i> (Antwerp 1601) 20, 57, 104, 137, 169, 181, 189, 233, 267, 272, 278, 287, 315, xviii, xxii, xxxii, xxxvi, xxxviii, lxxxvi, cxci, cxiv, ccxxix, cclxii, cclxxiii, cclxxvi.
- C. Clusius, Exoticorum libri decem (Leiden 1605) 300, [Belon translation] 67-68.
- D. Bobory, The sword and the crucible: Count Boldizsár Batthyány and natural philosophy in sixteenth-century Hungary (Cambridge 2009).
- E. van Gelder, Tussen hof en keizerskroon. Carolus Clusius en de ontwikkeling van de botanie aan Midden-Europese hoven (1573-1593) (Leiden 2011) chapter 5, 6.
- S. A. Aumüller en J. Jeanplong ed., Fungorum in Pannoniis observatorum brevis historia et Codex Clusii (Budapest 1983).
Publications
N/AMember Group(s)
- Boerhaave (instrumentenmakers)

Variant Names
N/ABIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: N/A
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Instrument maker | inventor | painter who lived in Haarlem, Amsterdam, Prague and London. He made a water pump (for which he received a patent for 25 years in 1598), optical intruments and a clock with a perpetual motion. He was also an engraver and grinded lenses. In 1604, he and his wife Sophia, sister of his former tutor Hendrik Goltzius, moved to England where Drebbel started working for King James I of England. In 1610 Drebbel and family were invited to come to the court of Emperor Rudolf II in Prague. After Rudolf's death in 1612, Drebbel went back to London. In 1619 Drebbel designed and built telescopes and microscopes and was involved in a building project for the Duke of Buckingham. Drebbel became famous for his invention in 1621 of a microscope with two convex lenses. Several authors, including Christiaan Huygens, assigned the invention of the compound microscope to Drebbel. In 1624 Galileo sent a Drebbel-type microscope to Federico Cesi, a wealthy noble citizen of Rome, who used it to illustrate Apiarum, his book about bees. He also built the first navigable submarine in 1620 while working for the English Royal Navy. Using William Bourne's design from 1578, he manufactured a steerable submarine with a leather-covered wooden frame. Between 1620 and 1624 Drebbel successfully built and tested two more submarines, each one bigger than the last. The final (third) model had 6 oars and could carry 16 passengers. This model was demonstrated to King James I in person and several thousand Londoners. The submarine stayed submerged for three hours and could travel from Westminster to Greenwich and back, cruising at a depth of from 12 to 15 feet (4 to 5 metres). Drebbel even took James in this submarine on a test dive beneath the Thames, making James I the first monarch to travel underwater. This submarine was tested many times in the Thames, but it couldn't attract enough enthusiasm from the Admiralty and was never used in combat. Drebbel's most famous written work was Een kort Tractaet van de Natuere der Elementen (A short treatise of the nature of the elements) (Haarlem, 1621). He was also involved in the invention of mercury fulminate. He had found out that mixtures of 'spiritus vini' with mercury and silver in 'aqua fortis' could explode. The story goes that, while making a coloured liquid for a thermometer Cornelis dropped a flask of Aqua regia on a tin window sill, and discovered that stannous chloride makes the color of carmine much brighter and more durable. Though the inventor himself never made much money from his work, his daughters Anna and Catharina and his sons-in-law Abraham and Johannes Sibertus Kuffler set up a very successful dye works. One was set up in 1643 in Bow, London, and the resulting color was called bow dye. The recipe for 'color Kufflerianus' was kept a family secret and the new bright red color was all the rage in Europe
Residence
N/AOccupation
- instrument maker 1595 - 1633
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- Morpurgo, E. Nederlandse klokken- en horlogemakers vanaf 1300 (Amsterdam 1970), 35.
- Een kort tractaet van de natuere der elementen, ende hoe sy veroorsaecken den wint, regen, blixem, donder ende waeromme dienstich zijn (Rotterdam 1621).
- Rooseboom, M. Bijdrage tot de geschiedenis der instrumentmakerskunst in de noordelijke Nederlanden (Leiden 1950).
- Snelders, H. Alkmaarse natuurwetenschappers uit de 16e en 17e eeuw (1980).
- Berkel, K. van, e.a. A History of Science in the Netherlands (Leiden 1999), 441.
- Wonder-vondt van de eeuwighe bewegingh (Alkmaar 1607).
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cornelis_Drebbel
Publications
N/AMember Group(s)
- Database Clusius

Variant Names
- Boëtius de Boodt, Anselmus de
BIO
Dissertation: N/AHighest degree: docorate in medicine
Fields of interest:
Biography:
Flemish physician and naturalist from a rich family in Brugge. Studied law and medicine in Louvain, Heidelberg and Padua. Became personal physician of emperor Rudolph II in Vienna and Prague in 1584. Did research on natural history (minerals, botany, zoology). Made many illustrations himself.
He corresponded with Carolus Clusius in 1602 about the collection of botanical watercolors from Dirck Cluyt (letters in University Library Leiden).
Publications:
-A. Boetius, 'Gemmarvm et lapidum historia (Hanau 1609).
Residence
- Brugge 
- Wien 
- Prague 1588
Occupation
- physician 1584 - Court of Rudolf II, emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, Prague
Education
N/AMembership
N/AProvenance
- E. van Gelder, Tussen hof en keizerskroon. Carolus Clusius en de ontwikkeling van de botanie aan Midden-Europese hoven (1573-1593) (Leiden 2011) 107, 113.
- M. Maselis, A. Balis & R. H. Marijnissen, 'De albums van Anselmus de Boodt (1550-1632). Geschilderde natuurobservatie aan het Hof van Rudolf II te Praag' (1989).