- Calid
Calid [Also Kalid, possibly Galid. "Haly" or "Hali" is likely
Haly Abenragel .] is amedieval Latin transcription of the Arabic nameKhalid (or Khaled).Khalid ibn Yazid
In alchemy, Calid often refers to a historical figure, Khalid ibn Yazid (died
704 CE ). He was anUmayyad prince, a brother [ page 24 The Arab Contribution to Islamic Art: From the Seventh to the Fifteenth By Wijdan Ali American Univ in CairoPress ISBN:9774244761] ofMuawiyah II who was brieflycaliph . Prince Khalid lost the chance of inheriting the title, but took an interest in the study of alchemy, in Egypt, facilitating translations into Arabic of the existing literature. It is to this Khalid that later allusions to Calid rex (King Calid) refer. [For this see David W. Tshantz, [http://www.ishim.net/ishimj/3/03.pdf A Short History of Islamic Pharmacy PDF] . Also [http://www.muslimphilosophy.com/ip/hip.htm] .] [Julius Ruska , "Arabische Alchemisten, I, Chalid Ibn Yazid Ibn Muawiya", Heidelberg, 1924]Attributions to Calid
It is contested whether the attributions to Khalid ibn Yazid of alchemical writing are justified. [ [http://www.nlm.nih.gov/hmd/arabic/alchemy8.html] :"there is in fact no direct evidence to suggest that he had anything to do with early alchemy".] [There are numerous variant names. The "
Jewish Encyclopedia " [http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=1094&letter=A] gives Kalid ben Jasiki. Variants on that are Kalid ben Jazichi, Kalid Persica, or Calid, son of Sazichi. [http://www.alchemywebsite.com/albertus_compound.html] ] A popular legend has him consulting a Byzantine monk Marianos (Morienus the Greek ). [This made its way much later into occult lore. "Cedrenus (A.D. 491) gives an example of a magician who professed Alchemy. Morienus (a Hermit, whose works were translated from Arabic into Latin as early as A.D. 1182) learned the Art of Transmutation, or the Great Elixir, at Rome of Adsar, an Alexandrian and a Christian, and afterwards taught it to Calid, or Evelid, the son of Gizid the Second, who was King of Egypt about the year A.D. 725." FromJohn Yarker , Introduction to the "Golden Tractate". [http://www.levity.com/alchemy/yarkintr.html] ] The "Liber de compositione alchimiae", which was the first alchemical work translated from Arabic to Latin [See [http://www.history-science-technology.com/Articles/articles%201.htm] for this claim; it was translated byRobert of Chester , 1144.] was purportedly an epistle of Marianos to Khalid.Another traditional attribution is of the "Liber Trium Verborum". [ See for example [http://www.alchemywebsite.com/calid_liber_trium.html] . This book is also attributed to
Rasis or to aRadianus /Rodianus . Another work but with the same name is attributed toRamón Lull .] Forms as Calid filius Ysidri [Or Calid filius Seid, Calid filius Isid. [http://www.columbia.edu/dlc/garland/deweever/S/senior.htm] . Filius here stands for 'son of' in Latin, so translating 'ibn'. Also Kalid ben Jesid, Calid fils de Jesid, Calid filius Gesid, etc.] attempt to distinguish ibn Yazid from others named Calid. Calid filius Hahmil certainly intendsibn Umail . There is a Calid filius Jaici mentioned byJean-Jacques Manget , who includes an attributed "Liber Secretorum Artis" in his 1702 compilation "Bibliotheca Curiosa Chemica".Bibliophile Khalid is attested as a book collector, by
Ibn al-Nadim [ See also [http://tebyan.net/index.aspx?pid=27853] [http://209.85.135.104/search?q=cache:AQfAmN5OeMAJ:www.aarcegypt.org/eng/seminars/file/KhalilAbdelKarim.doc+%22Khaled+Ibn+Yazid%22&hl=en&gl=uk&ct=clnk&cd=7] .] ; though it was contested byibn Khaldun that he founded a library. [http://www.netmuslims.com/info/libraries.html]Notes
External links
*fr icon [http://hdelboy.club.fr/calid_morien.html]
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