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Guillaume Postel

 
French Literature Companion: Guillaume Postel

Postel, Guillaume (?1510-81). Scholar and original thinker (docte et fol), born near Barenton. He studied oriental languages in Paris and was commissioned by François Ier to buy manuscripts in the Near East. In 1538 he published De originibus seu de hebraicae linguae et gentis antiquitate, the first of a number of publications in French, Latin, and Hebrew on the affairs of the Middle East. Constantly attacked for his beliefs by both Catholics and Protestants, Postel led a chequered existence. In the early 1540s he formulated a theory he was to propound throughout his life, that of peace through a universal religion, De orbis terrae concordia (1543-4), drawing upon his knowledge of the Turks. He contemplated becoming a Jesuit, but a difference of views between him and Ignatius Loyola prevented him from doing so. He travelled around the Middle East, Italy, and Eastern Europe. In 1555 he was interrogated by the Inquisition; judged to be insane, he was imprisoned for four years in Rome. Although he was a staunch defender of the Gallican Church against Rome, he was constantly criticized for the extreme and unorthodox nature of his views. An expert on languages, mathematics, and theology, Postel's work (much of which remains in manuscript) is exemplary of a society open to new ideas yet influenced by a ‘medieval mentality’, a mixture of rationalism and mysticism.

[Keith Cameron]

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(ca. 1510-1581)

A sixteenth-century visionary born around 1510 in the diocese of Avranches, France. At fourteen years of age, Postel was made master of a school. Postel believed he had been called by God to reunite all men under one law, either by reason or the sword. The pope and the king of France were to be the civil and religious heads of his new republic.

Postel was made almoner to a hospital at Venice, where he met Mére Jeanne, a woman who had visions. Because of his heterodox preachings, Postel was denounced as a heretic, but later was regarded as merely mad.

A follower of Kabbalah he spoke internationally about his belief in astrology wrote several works on the visions of his coadjutor. Postel retired to the priory of St. Martin-des-Champs at Paris, where he died penitent.

Wikipedia: Guillaume Postel
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Postel as depicted in Les vrais pourtraits et vies des hommes illustres grecz, latins et payens (1584) by André Thevet.
Guillaume Postel.
De la République des Turcs, Guillaume Postel, Poitiers, 1560.

Guillaume Postel (March 25, 1510September 6, 1581), was a French linguist, astronomer, Cabbalist, diplomat, professor, and religious universalist.

Born in the village of Barenton in Basse-Normandie, Postel made his home in the vicinity of Paris.

Adept at Arabic, Hebrew, and Syriac and other Semitic languages, as well as the Classical languages of Ancient Greek and Latin, he soon came to the attention of the French court. In 1536, seeking a Franco-Ottoman alliance with the Ottoman Turks, Francis I sent Postel as the official interpreter of the French embassy of Jean de La Forêt to the Turkish sultan Suleiman the Magnificent in Constantinople. Postel was also apparently assigned to gather interesting Eastern manuscripts for the royal library.

In Linguarum Duodecim Characteribus Differentium Alphabetum Introductio, An Introduction to the Alphabetic Characters of Twelve Different Languages, published in 1538, Postel became the first scholar to recognize the inscriptions on Judean coins from the period of the Great Jewish Revolt as Hebrew written in the ancient "Samaritan" characters.

In 1544, in De orbis terrae concordia, Concerning the Harmony of the Earth, Postel advocated a universalist world religion. The thesis of the book was that all Jews, Muslims and heathens could be converted to the Christian religion once all of the religions of the world were shown to have common foundations and that Christianity best represented these foundations. He believed these foundations to be the love of God, the praising of God, the love of Mankind, and the helping of Mankind.

Postel was a relentless advocate for the unification of all Christian churches, a common concern during the period of the Reformation, and remarkably tolerant of other faiths during a time when such tolerance was unusual.

Postel is believed to have spent the years 1548 to 1551 on another trip to the East, traveling to the Holy Land and Syria to collect manuscripts. After this trip, Postel earned the appointment of Professor of Mathematics and Oriental Languages at the College Royal. After several years, however, Postel resigned his professorship and traveled all over Central Europe, including Austria and Italy, returning to France after each trip.

Through Postel's efforts at manuscript collection, translation, and publishing, he brought many Greek, Hebrew and Arabic texts into European intellectual discourse in the Late Renaissance and Early Modern periods. Among these texts are:

Working on his translations of the Zohar and the Bahir in Venice (1547-1549) , Postel, recovering from his expulsion from the Company of Jesus in Rome (1543-1547) became the confessor of the blessed and stigmatised Mother Joan who was responsible for the kitchen of the hospital of San Giovanni e Paolo. Her point of view, although illiterate, on his present work inspired him and on his return from a second journey to the East (1549-1551) he dedicated two works to her memory: Les Très Merveilleuses Victoire des Femmes du Nouveau Monde and La Vergine Venetiana . Based on a vision and claiming his own immortality these deepened his conflict with Rome ( To Ignatius de Loyola,like himself a former pupil of the Collège Sainte-Barbe, he had claimed to be the " Evangelical Pope of Universal Concord " ). Subsequently Postel was jailed for this heresy, and shipped off to the Papal prisons in Rome as being insane.[1] He was released when the prison was opened upon the death of Paul IV. After several years in Paris, he was sentenced to house arrest by the parlement of Paris and spent the last eleven years of his life in the monastery of St. Martin des Champs.

Sources

  • Jeanne Peiffer, article in Writing the History of Mathematics: Its Historical Development, edited by Joseph Dauben & Christoph Scriba
  • Marion Kuntz, Guillaume Postel: Prophet of the Restitution of All Things, His Life and Thought, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, Hague, 1981
  • Whose Science is Arabic Science in Renaissance Europe?

Notes

  1. ^ Yvelise Bernard, L'Orient du XVIe siècle, Paris, L'Harmattan 1988. see her annotated biography pp 31-37

 
 

 

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French Literature Companion. The New Oxford Companion to Literature in French. Copyright © 1995, 2005 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Copyright © 2001 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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