Synopses & Reviews
Described by one modern scholar as a 'classic biography' of Agrippa, Prost's two-volume work (1881-1882) charts the life of one of the most renowned humanists of Renaissance Europe. Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa von Nettesheim (1486-1535) was a prolific author, best known for two popular, significant, and contradictory books: De occulta philosophia libri tres and De incertitudine et vanitate scientiarum et artium. Auguste Prost (1817-1896) established his reputation as an antiquarian and a historian of the French city of Metz. Volume 2, covering the period 1520-1535, is organized around Agrippa's travels and teaching across Europe. This volume also includes an appendix, which returns to a range of subjects touched on in the work as a whole, including Agrippa's name, family life, and academic achievements and works. These volumes would greatly interest historians and historiographers of Agrippa and of Renaissance magic and the occult.
Synopsis
Prost details Agrippa's life and writings, contextualizing his work in the history of, and Renaissance belief in, the occult.
Synopsis
Providing a thorough examination of Agrippa's life and works, Prost's biography follows its subject through his travels and teaching across western Europe in the early sixteenth century. In addition to its discussion of Agrippa, Volume 2 provides a useful appendix that discusses more fully details mentioned elsewhere in the text.
Table of Contents
5. Agrippa ... Cologne, ... Genève et ... Fribourg. 1520-1524; 6. Agrippa ... Lyon et ... Paris. 1524-1528; 7. Agrippa dans les Pay-Bas. 1528-1532; 8. Agrippa ... Bonn, ... Lyon et ... Grenoble. 1532-1535; Appendice; Errata.