Leigh T.I. Penman: ÒEin Liebhaber des Mysterii, und ein gro§er Verwandter desselben.Ó Toward the Life of Balthasar Walther: Kabbalist, Alchemist and Wandering Paracelsian Physician.

 

Despite the attention recently paid to Jakob BšhmeÕs life and works, the Gšrlitz theosopherÕs most famous disciple, Balthasar Walther (1558–c.1630), remains something of a historical puzzle. Utilizing several recently rediscovered print and manuscript sources located by the author, the present article seeks to provide the first detailed biographical study of Walther, highlighting his significance to sixteenth and seventeenth century history in a myriad of contexts. Far from being merely a follower of Bšhme, Walther emerges as significant in his own right as a physician, Paracelsian, Kabbalist, Weigelian, religious heretic, and distributor of magical manuscripts, whose personal networks extended across Europe and beyond. In addition to providing a biography, this article seeks to discover new avenues of enquiry in which information concerning WaltherÕs life and thought might be uncovered and contextualized. This investigation simultaneously throws light upon Walther himself, as well as Jakob BšhmeÕs often neglected intellectual and social Umwelt. It also points to new and entirely unexamined sources for BšhmeÕs thought.

 

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