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The Pseudo-Zoroastrian Oracles in the Renaissance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2019
Extract
To the learned men of the classical period, of the middle ages and of the Renaissance, the name of Zoroaster was not unknown and many of the classical and medieval authors wrote descriptions of his life and writings. However, the picture of the ancient sage which writers such as Pliny, Porphyry, Clement of Alexandria, Origen, Arnobius, Suidas, and many others presented was very short, incomplete, and often quite confusing and erroneous. Zoroaster was variously spoken of as an Assyrian, a Persian, a Mede, a Persomede, a Chaldean, and as a king of the Bactrians. He was also held to be the creator of magic, the founder of astrology, and the author of numerous works on philosophy, nature, magic, alchemy, and astrology.
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References
1 These descriptive passages may be found assembled in Bidez, Joseph and Cumont, Franz, Les mages hellénisés (Paris, 1938), 11, 7–92 Google Scholar, and in Williams Jackson, A. V., Zoroaster, the Prophet of Ancient Iran (New York, 1899), pp. 226–273 Google Scholar.
2 The Zend-Avesta, for which Zoroaster is known today, was not brought to Europe until the eighteenth century.
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17 In the preface to Ficino's translation of Plotinus (1492); Opera omnia (Basel, 1561), II, 1537.
18 Trapezuntius, Georgius, Comparationes phyhsophorum Aristotelis et Platonis (Venice, 1523)Google Scholar, penultimate chapter. Pletho, unlike Psellus, wished to use the doctrines of the oracles to establish his own philosophy, which was not only different from Christianity but contrary to it.
19 Pletho, Traité des Lois (Nomoi), ed. by C. Alexandre (Paris, 1858), p. 20; Schultze, Fritz, Georgios Gemistos Plethon und seine reformatorischen Bestrebungen (Geschkhte der Philosophic der Renaissance 1, Jena, 1874), 135 Google Scholar.
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21 Ibid., p. 252.
22 Ibid.
23 Ibid., pp. 252-253.
24 Ibid., pp. 30-31, 254-255.
25 Plutarch, De Iside et Osiride, 46 (369E); Bidez-Cumont, , Mages, II, 70–79 Google Scholar. This triadic division is not in the oracles of Pletho's recension but was probably derived from Plato as interpreted by Proclus ( Anastos, , op. cit., pp. 293–295 Google Scholar). Ficino also made use of this trinity (Opera, pp. 130, 1325).
26 Nomoi, pp. 279-281; Bidez-Cumont, , Mages, II, 253 Google Scholar. The quotation from Plato is from the pseudonymous Second Epistle, 312E.
27 In his reply to George Scholarius’ criticism of Plato: Nomoi, p. 297; Bidez-Cumont, Mages, II, 259; J. P. Migne, P. G., 160, 984A. The translation is that of Anastos, op. cit., pp. 280-281.
28 Migne, P. G., 160, 639B; Nomoi, p. 423. This is in a letter to the exarchon Joseph which M. Jugie, ‘La polémique de Georges Scholarios contre Plethon', Byzantion x (1935), 524, dates at the end of 1456 or in 1457. Nowhere in his writings does Pletho actually quote from the oracles.
29 Nomoi, p. 423. On Elisaeus (Eliseus) see the Jewish Encyclopedia v, 136.
30 Nomoi, pp. 262-269; Fabricius, Bibliotheca Graeca XIV, 137-144; J. P. Migne, P. G., 160, 973-974; Brucker, Jacob, Historia critia phihsophiae, 1 (Leipzig, 1742), 185 Google Scholar. Manuscripts are located in a number of places; e.g., Parisin, gr. 462, 1603 1739, 2376. The Expositio can be found in Greek and in Latin in the editions of Opsopoeus and Gallaeus; cf. Appendix B.
31 Nomoi, pp. lix-lx.
32 The recension of the oracles was not published until 1538; cf. Appendix B. They are readily available in J. P. Migne, P. G., 122, 1116-1122, where they are placed under the name of Michael Psellus. A Latin translation of the commentary can be found in the editions of Opsopoeus and Gallaeus. Excerpts are given in Nomoi, pp. 274-281, and in Bidez-Cumont, , Mages, II, 251–254 Google Scholar. Manuscripts: Vaticanus gr. 1011; Parisin. gr. 2832 and Suppl. 66; Marcianus 519; Monacensis 419; Neapolitans III, AA7; Scorial. II T I. The absence of the surname Pletho in the manuscripts leads some to believe that the work was one of the first which George Gemistus wrote; cf. Bidez-Cumont, , Mages, 1, 160 Google Scholar; II, 252. Note that in the title the doctrines are not attributed to Zoroaster but to the ‘Magi of Zoroaster’.
33 In his Theologia Platonica, written in eighteen books between 1469 and 1474 (Opera, 1,156,386).
34 Ibid., I, 871; II, 1537. In the preface to his translation of the Corpus Hermeticum (Opera, II, 1836), Ficino does not include Zoroaster in the series of ancient theologians. Here the lead is taken by Hermes Trismegistus, and Philolaus is included in the six. Prof. P. O. Kristeller suggests this may indicate that Ficino became acquainted with the oracles only after 1463.
35 Theologia Platonica, IV, ii; Opera, 1, 131.
36 Ficino possessed a Greek manuscript copy of the oracles with the commentaries of Pletho and Psellus, Cod. Riccard. No. 76; cf. Vitelli, G., ‘Indice de’ Codici Greci Riccardiani, Magliabechiani e Marucelliani’, Studi italiani de filologia classica II (1894), 523–524 Google Scholar.
37 Plotini vita, ed. Creuzer, F., in Plotini opera omnia, 1 (Oxford, 1835), lxvi (sec. XVI)Google Scholar.
38 Migne, J. P., Patrologia latina, 175, 49cGoogle Scholar; ibid., 198, 1090A; both in Bidez-Cumont, , Mages, 11, 49 Google Scholar. Cf. also in Ficino, Opera, 1, 29, where the reference is to the commentary on Genesis by Didymus (fourth century). Cf. also Bk. III of the forgery of Annius of Viterbo (ca. 1432-1502) entitled Berosi Babylonii antiquitates. This spurious work first appeared in Annius Antiquitatum volumina XVII. cum commentariis (Rome, 1498).
39 De Christiana reiigione, XXII; Opera, 1, 25. The translation is that of Shorey, Paul, Platonism, Ancient and Modern (Berkeley, Calif., 1938), p. 124 Google Scholar.
40 Like the work of Pletho, the title does not attribute the oracles to Zoroaster but to his followers. This translation was not published until 1936. The MS. is located in Florence, Biblioteca Laurenziana, lat. Plut. XXXVI, cod. 35; cf. Bandini, A. M., Catalogus codicum latinorum Biblio. Med. Laurentianae (Florence, 1775), II, 240 Google Scholar. Although the MS. is not signed, Bandini, for good reasons, assigns it to Ficino and the research of Bohdan Kieszkowski supports this. Cf. the latter's Studi sul Platonismo del Rinascimento in Italia (Florence, 1936), pp. 155-156. The translation, ibid., pp. 159-161, begins: Quere tu anime riuum, unde quoue ordine, Corpori cum seruiueris, ad ordinem a quo defluxisti Rursus erigas, sacro cum sermone opus uniens. Professor Paul O. Kristeller has called to my attention the existence of a second manuscript: Biblioteca Vaticana, Vat. Ottob. lat. 2966.
41 The index to the Venice, 1525, edition lists twenty-five ‘opinio Zoroastri’ and seven ‘opinio Mercurii', one being a combined expression.
42 Opera, I, 301, 88, 305,236, 88, 303.
43 E.g., Opera, 1, 50 (resurrection of the body).
44 E.g., Opera, 1, 460 (justice of god, grace, and redemption).
45 Mirandola, Pico della, Opera (Basel, 1572), 1, 367 Google Scholar; Fabricius, B. G., 1, 36, 10. Cf. also Kieszkowski, , op. cit., p. 124 Google Scholar, where it is pointed out that probably only the text of the oracles was in Aramaic, the rest being in Greek. Pico succeeded in learning Aramaic; cf. his letter to Andreas Corneus of Urbino, 15 October 1486 (Opera, 1, 377-378). After Pico's death, Ficino found these works, but they were illegible; cf. Fabricius, B. G., 1, 313.
46 Opera, I, 79-80, 103-104.
47 Kieszkowski, , op. tit., p. 124 Google Scholar.
48 Ibid.; cf. also Pico, Opera, I, 330.
49 Zervos, , op. tit., p. 247 Google Scholar; Pico, Apologia. Cf. also Disputatio habita inter Hieronymus Savonarolam et Picum Mirandulanum, de philosophia vetemtn cum Christiana Academia. Et quid item vetustissimi de ipso Deo senserint, idest Moses, Mercurius, Zoroastres et Pythagoras, in Petrus Crinitus, De honesta disciplina (Lyons, 1554), III, 2, and in Mirandola, Pico della, De hominis dignitate, Heptaplus, De ente et uno, ed. Garin, Eugenio (Florence, 1942), pp. 79–81 Google Scholar.
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51 Opera, I, 320, 321. The translations are those of Forbes, E. L., De hominis dignitate (Lexington, Kentucky, 1953)Google Scholar. The oracle here attributed to Zoroaster is not in the original hexameters of Pletho.
52 Opera, I, 323.
53 Opera, I, 324.
54 Opera, I, 325.
55 Opere di Girolamo Beniuieni (Florence, 1519), fol. 4; A Platonick Discourse upon Love by Pico della Mirandola, ed. Gardner, E. G. (Humanist's Library VII, Boston, 1914), 6.Google Scholar.
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59 Ibid., III, 24. Book I especially shows the influence of the Zoroastrian oracles.
60 Lectionum antiquarum libri (Frankfort, 1599), cols. 11, 75, 95, 418, 423, 646, 747, 785, 849, 850, 1069.
61 The work was first printed in sixteen books at Venice in 1516 and reprinted many times. In 1550 his nephew got out fourteen more books after Rhodiginus’ death. Rabelais made much use of the Lectionum antiquarum libri; cf. Smith, W. F., Rabelais in his Writings (Cambridge, 1918), pp. 108, 150, 165Google Scholar.
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63 Dedicated to Pope Gregory XIV with a secondary dedication to Gaetani, Cardinal Enrico, the oracles appeared in his Nova de universis philosophia (Ferrara, 1591; Venice, 1593)Google Scholar and in his Magia philosophica (Hamburg, 1593), with later editions in London, 1611 and 1628. Cf. Appendix B. Cf. also Fabricius, G. B., I, 312-313; Jahn, A., ‘Glossarium sive vocabularium ad Oracula Chaldaica a Clerico post Patricium et Stanleium sub falso nomine Oracularum Zoroastris mendose edita, nunc vero fontium ope correcta’, Revue de Philologie de Littérature et d'Histoire anciennes, XXIII (1899), 193–225 Google Scholar; idem, ‘Specimen commentarii critici et exegetici ex fontibus hausti ad Oracula Chaldaica’, ibid., XXIV (1900), 169-192. On Patrizi and his philosophy see Brickman, Benjamin, An Introduction to Francisco Patrizi's Nova de Universis Philosophia (New York, 1941)Google Scholar.
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65 Ibid., Panarchia, IX, fol. 19; XII, fol. 25.
66 Ibid., Panarchia, XIX, fols. 42-47.
67 Ibid., Panarchia, IX, fol. 18.
68 Ibid., Pancosmia, fols. 75, 76, 109.
69 Ibid., Panarchia, IX, fol. 20.
70 Ibid., in the dedicatory letter to Pope Gregory XIV.
71 Ibid., fol. 5a.
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73 The original drawings are in the British Museum and are reproduced in Sidney Colvin, A Florentine Picture Gallery (London, 1898).
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76 Lyons, 1533, p. 12; the medal is only I3/8 inches in diameter. A Latin edition appeared the same year, also at Lyons.
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84 Ibid., p. 137.
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88 Ibid., p. 70.
89 Ibid., p. 315.
90 Cf. Mönch, op. cit.; and Lefranc, Abel, ‘Le Platonisme et la littérature en France à l'époque de la Renaissance’, in his Grand écrivains français de la Renaissance (Paris, 1914), pp. 63–137.Google Scholar
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92 This first published Latin translation was often reprinted; cf. Appendix B.
93 Hesiodi opera et dies et Zoroastri magica oraculagraeca (Paris, 1541).
94 Utilis docti Hesiodi Ascraei liber, opera et dies … cui operi addita sunt quaedam sapientiae dogmata Zoroastris logia ab eodem translata (Lyons, 1550).
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97 Magorum, qui a Zoroastre prodiere, oracula, graece (Paris, 1595) and Zoroastris, seu magorum qui a Zoroastre prodierunt, oracula heroica (Paris, 1597).
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108 Brucker, J., op. cit., 1, 157 Google Scholar.
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110 Ibid.
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