Martin Ruland the Younger (11 November 1569 – 23 April 1611), also known as Martinus Rulandus or Martin Rulandt, was a German physician and alchemist.
He was born in the Bavarian town of Lauingen, the son of the physician and alchemist Martin Ruland the Elder.
Ruland the Younger practiced at Regensburg during the 1590s and later at Prague. In Prague, he belonged to Emperor Rudolf II's retinue at the Habsburg court which during Rudolf's reign promoted the study of alchemy and astrology. Rudolf II conferred nobility upon Ruland the Younger in 1608.[1]
Ruland's 1612 Lexicon alchemiae (Dictionary of Alchemy)[2] is cited by the Swiss psychologist Carl Jung in his writings on alchemy.[3] Waite translated the book into the English language.[4]
Ruland the Younger was also the editor of his father's works.
Books
edit- Lapidis philosophici vera conficiendi ratio ("The True Method for Completing the Philosopher's Stone") (1606)
- "Defence of Alchemy" (1607)
- Progymnasmata alchemiae sive problemata chymica (1607)
- Lexicon alchemiae sive dictionarium alchemisticum ("Dictionary of Alchemy") (1612)
References
edit- ^ Staudinger M. Documenta Rudolphina., accessed on 2008-09-10
- ^ Ruland M. Lexicon alchemiae sive Dictionarium alchemisticum. Palthenius, Frankfurt 1612.
- ^ Jung C. Religious ideas in alchemy: an historical survey of alchemical ideas. 2. The psychic nature of the alchemical work. III. Meditation and imagination. In: Jung C. Collected Works of CG Jung. vol 12. 2nd ed. Princeton University Press 1968. pp 274-280.
- ^ Rulandus M. A Lexicon of Alchemy. Or Alchemical Dictionary Containing a Full and Plain Explanation of All Obscure Words, Hermetic Subjects, and Arcane Phrases of Paracelsus. Translated by A. E. Waite. Watkins, London 1964.