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Hidden manuscript from 1598, published

Tuesday 19 February 2013


Hidden Manuscript From 1598, Published




The Bodleian Library in Oxford has a new addition to its impressive collection. Deep in the bowls of Burford Church some of the first works by Elizabeth Cary were found in 1970s. Finally this manuscript has no been published. The piece, which is translation from French of Orelius, a world atlas, is now being kept in the Bodleian Library.

Dr Lesley Peterson notes that it "is very fragile. It is being preserved in a climate-controlled space". The magic of the Bodleian seems like a suitable environment for the work of a woman who is credited for having written the first original tragedy in English by a Woman. Dr Peterson has a deep knowledge of the writer, having spent 10 years researching the writer, and factors which influence her writing.

Find out more about Oxford and it's literary connections on a private Oxford literary tour!

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Oxford Magic and Mystery

Monday 4 February 2013




Oxford Magic and Mystery






People come to Oxford to see the Harry Potter film locations and hear eerie tales of ghosts and weird and wonderful goings-on in past centuries. But fans of magic - the Hogwarts variety and others - might be interested to know that Oxford has links with real magicians, alchemists and mystics of the past. In the 13th century Roger Bacon, philosopher and early scientist, practised alchemy in his laboratory at Folly Bridge, and is supposed to have invented gunpowder and the telescope long before anyone else in Europe. The renaissance scholar and mystic, Giordano Bruno, came and lectured in Oxford in the 1580's, trying to convince the learned doctors of the university of his theories about the universe and his idea that there was an infinite number of worlds inhabited by intelligent beings. Unfortunately they weren't impressed and didn't offer him the teaching job he was after, so he went back to Italy - a big mistake, as he was tried and burnt at
the stake there for heresy by the Catholic church.

Elias Ashmole, founder of the Ashmolean Museum, was a fan of alchemy  and astrology, and if you go into the Old Ashmolean (now the Museum of the History of Science) and turn left at the entrance, you will find a cabinet with some strange magical objects in it that belonged to Doctor John Dee - famous astronomer, astrologer and occultist in the reign of Elizabeth I, including his 'magic table' and crystal ball with which he conversed with spirits and angels in his search for ultimate knowledge. His skills helped him choose the most auspicious date for Elizabeth's coronation - clearly very successfully, as she reigned gloriously for many years and survived assassination attempts and invasions - but unfortunately they didn't work for himself as well, as his house with its great collection of books was ransacked by a mob while he was away in Europe seeking the Philosopher's Stone, the Queen never gave him the plum job he was hoping for, and he ended up broke and destitute, living on into the time of James I and possibly ending up as the model for Shakespeare's Prospero, in 'The Tempest'.

 Which just shows that magic doesn't always produce the results you expect - be careful, all you Harry Potter fans! Why not take a Harry Potter Tour of Oxford, to find out more about the Oxford magic and mystery?


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