About
An alchemical symbol representing the union of opposites, specifically the chemical marriage of sulfur and mercury or the sun and moon. It signifies the 'Rebis' or the completed philosopher's stone, embodying perfect balance and spiritual wholeness.
Connections
Other entities that appear in the same books as Hermaphrodite.
Appears in 105 Books
Various; ed. Luca Jennis
Philipp Müller; Michael Sendivogius; Jean Béguin
Plato | Taylor, Thomas (trans.)
Various (trans. A.E. Waite)
Pseudo-Albertus Magnus
Limojon de Saint-Didier, Alexandre-Toussaint
Basilius Valentinus
Albertus Magnus
Eirenaeus Philalethes; ed. William Cooper
Poliziano, Angelo
[Starkey, George]
[Walchin, Dorothea Juliana]
Limojon de Saint-Didier, Alexandre-Toussaint
Faust, Johannes Michael
Abrabanel, Jehuda
Lemnius, Levinus
Figulus, Benedictus
Ficino, Marsilio, 1433-1499
anonymous
[Starkey, George]
Abrabanel, Jehuda
Solomon Trismosin
Figulus, Benedictus
Keil, Christoph Heinrich
Poliziano, Angelo
Richardus Anglicus; Braccesco; Geber; and others
Braccesco, Giovanni; after Jabir ibn Hayyan
Lazarus Zetzner (ed.)
Grataroli, Guglielmo
Galen; Karl Gottlob Kühn (ed.)
Angelo Poliziano
Lazarus Zetzner (ed.)
Carl Linnaeus
Bartholomaeus Anglicus
Dante Alighieri; Boethius
Michael Maier; English translator
Michael Maier
Basilius Valentinus
[Walchin, Dorothea Juliana]
Abrabanel, Jehuda
Aemilius Baehrens
Leone Ebreo (Judah Abravanel)
Martin Ruland
Macrobius
Ausonius; Valpy, Abraham John
Abraham Eleazar
Federico Gualdi; Joannes Augustus Brumhoffer
Firmicus Maternus
Camillo Leonardi; Petrus Arlensis de Scudalupis
Georg von Welling
Michael Maier
Various; ed. Luca Jennis
Avicenna (Ibn Sina)
Maimonides, Moses
Figulus, Benedictus
Maier, Michael
Philostratus
Angelo Poliziano
Carl Linnaeus
Marcellin Berthelot
Michael Scot
Christoph Jakob Trew
Aemilius Baehrens
Bidermann, Johann Leopold Wilhelm
Basilius, Valentinus