If the German alchemist lived after 900 AD, then yes. They became more common as time went on.
Alchemists were researchers who worked in Europe and the Middle East during the Middle ages.
The Europeans from the Middle Ages.
Chemists of the Middle Ages were called alchemists.
Alchemists
I don't think it means anything in modern German. In Middle High German it meant "beech-tree".
A. G. Papagiannopoulou has written: 'The influence of middle Minoan pottery on the Cyclades' -- subject(s): Antiquities, Minoan Pottery, Pottery, Minoan
The Middle Ages. They were trying to convert lead into gold, and to create the philosopher's stone.
Middle German Ecclesiastical Province was created in 1930.
Aqua regia was first described by alchemists in the Middle Ages, with its exact inventor unknown. However, the term "aqua regia" is credited to German-Swiss physician and alchemist Philippus Ulstadius Paracelsus in the 16th century.
Yes, pottery has been used for thousands of years. Pottery containers are relatively easy and cheap to produce, and humans have always needed to contain food staples, either for transport, storage, or to eat or drink from.
pet form of a Germanic personal name formed with Middle Low German riden, Middle High German ritan 'to ride'
No. (In the Middle Ages, alchemists believed that they could transform one metal into another. Sadly, for them, they never were able to succeed at doing so.)