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・ Jacques François Édouard Hervieux
・ Jacques Fred Petrus
・ Jacques Freitag
・ Jacques Freymond
・ Jacques Friedel
・ Jacques Friteyre-Durvé
・ Jacques Fromaigeat
・ Jacques Fromentin
・ Jacques Frémin
・ Jacques Futrelle
・ Jacques Félix Emmanuel Hamelin
・ Jacques Féréol Mazas
・ Jacques Février
・ Jacques Gabriel
・ Jacques Gabriel (painter)
Jacques Gaffarel
・ Jacques Gaillot
・ Jacques Gallot
・ Jacques Gamblin
・ Jacques Gamelin
・ Jacques Garcia
・ Jacques Garelli
・ Jacques Garnier
・ Jacques Garrigan
・ Jacques Gaultier
・ Jacques Gauthier
・ Jacques Gautier
・ Jacques Gay
・ Jacques Gelman
・ Jacques Genest


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Jacques Gaffarel : ウィキペディア英語版
Jacques Gaffarel

Jacques Gaffarel ((ラテン語:Jacobus Gaffarellus)) (1601–1681) was a French scholar and astrologer. He followed the family tradition of studying medicine, and then became a priest, but mainly developed his interests in the fields of natural history and Oriental occultism, gaining fluency in the Hebrew, Persian, and Arabic languages.
His most famous work is ''フランス語:Curiositez inouyes sur la sculpture talismanique des Persans, horoscope des Patriarches et lecture des estoiles'' ("Unheard-of Curiosities concerning Talismanical Sculpture of the Persians, the horoscope of the Patriarchs, and the reading of the Stars), which was published in French in 1629 (and translated into English in 1650, by Edmund Chilmead). Jewish astrology developed independently from the mythology and star-gazing of the ancient Greek and Roman civilisations. Gaffarel included in his work two large folding plates of "the Celestial Constellations expressed by Hebrew characters", and asserted that the letters of the Hebrew alphabet could be interpreted from the constellations and that the heavens could be read as if a book.
The book enjoyed phenomenal success. René Descartes read this work with interest and the French physician and mathematician Pierre Gassendi (1592–1655) defended it. ''Unheard-of Curiosities'' was one of 1,500 books in the Library of Sir Thomas Browne and one of the varied sources of his encyclopaedia entitled Pseudodoxia Epidemica. Browne alludes to Gaffarel's astrology in The Garden of Cyrus thus:
:''Could we satisfy our selves in the position of the lights above, or discover the wisdom of that order so invariably maintained in the fixed stars of heaven......we might abate.....the strange Cryptography of Gaffarell in his Starrie Booke of Heaven.''
Gaffarel contributed to the debate between Marin Mersenne and Robert Fludd.
On the other hand, the Sorbonne rejected Gaffarel's work and ridiculed him; however, he gained the protection of the powerful Cardinal Richelieu, who made him his librarian and sent him off firsto to Italy, then to Greece and Asia to retrieve rare books (reportedly including manuscripts by Pico della Mirandola).
==External links==

* Examples of Gaffarel's astrological writing
*
* (Charab in the Stars )
*
* (The Dial of Achaz )
* (CELESTIAL ALPHABET EVENT )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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