This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.
![Johannis Danielis Mylii Vetterani Hassi M. C. Opus Medico-Chymicum : Continens tres Tractatus sive Basilicas: Quorum prior inscribitur Basilica Medica. Secundus Basilica Chymica. Tertius Basilica Philosophica. [2],2,[1], [Qua continentur Tres Libri Posteriores Basilicae Chymicae, ut & Basilica Philosophica, Perfecta, in libros tres distributa, & figuris aeneis illustrata]](/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fimages.sourcelibrary.org%2Farchived%2F69b51dbbcf111105c428ed4a%2F2.jpg&w=3840&q=75)
Johannis Danielis Mylii Vetterani Hassi M. C. Opus Medico-Chymicum : Continens tres Tractatus sive Basilicas: Quorum prior inscribitur Basilica Medica. Secundus Basilica Chymica. Tertius Basilica Philosophica. [2],2,[1], [Qua continentur Tres Libri Posteriores Basilicae Chymicae, ut & Basilica Philosophica, Perfecta, in libros tres distributa, & figuris aeneis illustrata]
No prior complete English translation of this text has been found.
Extensive searches across multiple scholarly and library catalogs (including Library of Congress, Internet Archive, and academic databases via OpenAlex) yielded no evidence of an English translation of Johann Daniel Mylius's 'Basilica Chymica' (often referred to as part of his 'Opus Medico-Chymicum'). While Mylius is a known figure in 17th-century alchemy, his massive Latin compilations remain untranslated into English.
Verified Mar 30, 2026 via local catalogs, open library, google books, ustc, internet archive, openalex, loc · methodology
Johann Daniel Mylius reveals the dangerous, demanding art of turning Antimony into medicine. You will learn the precise laboratory techniques required to purge the human body and cure incurable diseases.