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・ Nicolas Ladany
・ Nicolas Ladvocat-Billiard
・ Nicolas Lagneau
・ Nicolas Laharrague
・ Nicolas Lancret
・ Nicolas Langmede
・ Nicolas Lapierre
・ Nicolas Lawson
・ Nicolas le Berre
・ Nicolas Le Camus de Mézières
・ Nicolas Le Floch
・ Nicolas Le Floch (TV series)
・ Nicolas Fillon
・ Nicolas Fiévé
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Nicolas Flamel
・ Nicolas Florentin
・ Nicolas Florine
・ Nicolas Flégeau
・ Nicolas Fontaine
・ Nicolas Forissier
・ Nicolas Formé
・ Nicolas Fouché
・ Nicolas Fouquet
・ Nicolas Frantz
・ Nicolas François Conroux
・ Nicolas François Vuillaume
・ Nicolas François, Count Mollien
・ Nicolas Freeling
・ Nicolas Frey


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Nicolas Flamel : ウィキペディア英語版
Nicolas Flamel

Nicolas Flamel (; prob. Pontoise, ca 1330 – Paris, March 22, 1418)〔According to Nigel Wilkins: ''Nicolas Flamel, des livres et de l'or'', Chapter 3: 'D'arcanes et d'arcades.〕 was a successful French scribe and manuscript-seller. After his death Flamel developed a reputation as an alchemist believed to have discovered the Philosopher's Stone and achieved immortality. However, these legendary accounts only appeared in the seventeenth century.
According to texts ascribed to Flamel almost two hundred years after his death, he had learned alchemical secrets from a Jewish ''converso'' on the road to Santiago de Compostela. As Deborah Harkness put it, "Others thought Flamel was the creation of 17th-century editors and publishers desperate to produce modern printed editions of supposedly ancient alchemical treatises then circulating in manuscript for an avid reading public."〔Harkness, review of Dixon 1994 in ''Isis'' 89.1 (1998) p.a 132.〕 He has since appeared as a legendary alchemist in various fictional works.
==Life==

The historical Flamel lived in Paris in the fourteenth and fifteenth century and his life is one of the best documented in the history of medieval alchemy. He ran two shops as a scribe and married Perenelle in 1368. She brought the wealth of two previous husbands to the marriage. The French Catholic couple owned several properties, and contributed financially to churches, sometimes by commissioning sculptures. Later in life they were noted for their wealth and philanthropy.
Flamel lived into his 80s, and in 1410 designed his own tombstone, which was carved with the images of Christ, St. Peter, and St. Paul. The tombstone is preserved at the Musée de Cluny in Paris. Records show that Flamel died in 1418. He was buried in Paris at the Musée de Cluny at the end of the nave of the former Church of Saint-Jacques-de-la-Boucherie. His will, dated 22 November 1416, indicates that he was generous but that he did not have the extraordinary wealth of later alchemical legend. There is no indication that the real Flamel of history was involved in alchemy, pharmacy or medicine.

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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