by Philip N. Wheeler (Author), Hans W. Nintzel (Author)
This is a very comprehensive collection of Alchecmical Symbols that make reading books from the R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy as well as other older coded writing much easier.
These symbols can be found online elsewhere for certain, but for instance the Wikipedia page of Alchemical Symbols is not a smooth read when learning the symobls which makes it very time consuming to use and slows the flow of reading immensely, at least for me.
When I read Bacstrom’s Notebooks, Part 1 +2 from The R.A.M.S. Library of Alchemy for instance, I had this Alchemical Symbols book in my lap under the Notenooks for quick reference.
The symbols are shown in several ways including handwritten and listed in alphabetical order under every term they can be used for. This makes for easy translation of every context.
Here is an excerpt from the books description:
“This is the fourth edition of Alchemical Symbols. The purpose of this revision is to add more symbols, correct a small number of errors, and improve the overall layout of the text. We believe this to be the most comprehensive presentation of alchemical symbols available.
Portions of the following symbol tables appeared in the “Last Will and Testament” of Basilius Valentinus in the seventeenth century.
That table has been augmented with symbols from other sources including the “Alchemist’s Handbook” by Frater Albertus, Dom Antoine Joseph Pernety’s “The Great Art”, Stanislas Klossowski de Rola’s “Alchemy: The Secret Art,” information taken from the works of Agrippa and John Read, symbols from the Bacstrom Manuscripts, and many other sources.
For details please see the References section. The second part of this work is a dictionary of basic Gematria.
For those desirous of seeking possible hidden meaning in the alchemistical writings through the Qabalah, the Hebrew of key alchemically-oriented words is presented along with the numerical equivalences.
Following that is a short Glossary of Latin Terms of interest to students of alchemy, tables of common conversion factors, and a list of abbreviations.”