File:Hieronymus Brunschwig Liber de arte Distillandi CHF AQ13x3.jpg
Original file (3,744 × 5,616 pixels, file size: 11.59 MB, MIME type: image/jpeg)
Summary[edit]
| Summary | |
|---|---|
| Description | Two figures work with one of alchemy’s more grounded practices: distillation. This fanciful depiction of distillation apparatus is from Hieronymus Brunschwig’s Liber de arte Distillandi de Compositis (Strassburg, 1512).
Distillation was the technology by which the essence of a sample could be separated from the dross. In its simplest form, the objective of distillation is to separate a mixture of liquid and nonvolatile solids. Since alchemists worked through a sequence of separation and recombination, distillation provided experimental evidence for their view that matter was compounded of earthy and more spirituous constituents. In practice, with the development of the art in the medieval period, alchemists learned to wield distillation apparatus to produce powerful, pure chemicals: alcohol and strong acids (hydrochloric, sulfuric, and nitric). The distinctive apparatus became emblematic of their profession. Brunschwig’s comprehensive book on distillation was one of the earliest devoted exclusively to chemical technology. This work expanded on his smaller, earlier work on distillation of herbal remedies to include a wide range of alchemical distillation techniques. The caption above the apparatus reads: Distillatorium ad Aqua vite, distillation apparatus for aqua vitae, i.e. spirits of wine. Individual pieces of the apparatus are labelled. At the bottom, the cucurbits sit in furnaces with fire issuing from them. The wine contained within them boils, and the vapours rise through a series of pipes to be recondensed and collected in the receivers or Receptacula at the top of the Alembitum. The illustration shown is artistic, rather than functional. As portrayed, the apparatus would be expensive to make and difficult to use. Rising alcohol vapours would be condensed by the "tube full of cold water" Eine rore vol kalt wasser and run back down rather than reaching the receivers. |
| Source | Wikimedia Commons file page |
| Author | Hieronymus Brunschwig |
| Permission | See original Commons license details. |
Licensing[edit]
Public Domain
This file is in the public domain and may be used without restriction.
Please see the linked source page for the original file history, attribution information, and licensing details.
Original attribution and file history: Wikimedia Commons
File history
Click on a date/time to view the file as it appeared at that time.
| Date/Time | Thumbnail | Dimensions | User | Comment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| current | 03:37, 5 June 2026 | 3,744 × 5,616 (11.59 MB) | Maintenance script (talk | contribs) | == Summary == Importing file |
You cannot overwrite this file.
File usage
The following 3 pages use this file: