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Elementymology & Elements Multidict by Peter van der Krogt
Stibium
Antimony
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Multilingual dictionary
Indo-EuropeanLanguage key Germanic Antimony en Antimon de lb da sv no fo Antimoon nl af fy Antímon is Italic Antimoine fr Antimonio es gl it Antimoni ca fur Antimòni oc Antimónio pt Stibiu, Antimoniu ro Antimonu arm Slavic Сурьма [sur'ma] ru Сурма [surma] uk by Antymon pl Antimón kas sk Antimon cs sl hr bos Антимон [antimon] sr mk bg Baltic Stibis lt Antimons lv Stibijan sud Celtic Antimoni cy Antamón ga Antamòn gd Antimoan gv Antymony kw Antimoan br Other Indo-European Αντιμονιο [antimonio] el Antimon sq Ծարիր [tsarir] hy Indo-Iranian Сурьма [sur'ma] oss Uralic Antimoni fi Antimon et hu Сурьма [surjma] mok Altaic Antimon tr Сурьма [sûr'ma] kk [sur'ma] uz mn² Sur'ma tg Будаг [budag] mn Other (Europe) Antimonioa eu სტიიუმი [stiiumi] ka East- & South-Asia アンチモン, アンチモニー [anchimon, anchimonii] ja 銻 [ti4 / tai1] zh (mand./cant.) 안티몬, 2안티모니 [antimon, antimoni] ko Antimon vi พลวง [phuang] th Antimoni, Antimonium ms அந்திமன் [antimani] ta Afro-Asiatic انتيمون [ithmīd] ar Antimoni mt אנטימון [antimon] he Africa Stibi sw Artificial Antimono eo New names Stibnion (STB) aen Scaleium dms |
Appearance, some properties, a memory peg and a summary of discovery and etymology
History & Etymology
Valentine's book was edited and published by Johann Thölde in Nürnberg in 1676 (note) and contains treatises by several famous alchemists, including the Benedictine alchemist Basil Valentine, who wrote the featured selection. The frontispiece shows Mercury, Antimony, and other archetypal powers parading through the countryside in a chariot while an angel looks on from above. The word "triumphal" refers not to the conquering of anything but rather to an ancient pagan procession in which people dressed up in costumes depicting the archetypal forces in nature were carried through the streets in a chariot. For many alchemists, especially Isaac Newton, the metal Antimony became a more potent form of Mercury with which to work transformation. They were fascinated by a property of Antimony to form a cyrstalline star (the Star Regulus) under certain conditions. For alchemists, of course, that symbolized the quintessence of matter. (Read an English translation).
Stibium → Al-ithmīd → Antimonium
At present, the most common name for the element is Antimonium. However, in his essay on the chemical signs (note), Jakob Berzelius used for Antimony the symbol Sb (also St), being an abbreviation of Stibium. This became the official symbol, despite the fact that Stibium or its derivations are rarely used in the different languages. Further, the name Surma is used in some Slavic and Altaic languages. Antimony sulphide (Sb2S3) in the form of powder was used in the Orient as a cosmetic to darken and beautify their eyebrows. In ancient Egypt the name for this cosmetic powder was "sdm" (variant "msdm.t") which is derived from the Coptic CTHM [stem]. The word was borrowed in Greek as στιμμι [stimmi] or στιβι [stibi]. This substance with the name στιμμι is described by Dioskorides (Materia medica 5, 99) and Pliny (Naturalis historia 33, 34) so clearly, that it is certain that it concerns Sb2S3. In turn, the Latin language borrowed their word from the Greek as Stibium (which is now used as the Latin name for the element and the source for the chemical symbol Sb). The Arabic designation, انتيمون ("uthmud" or "othmod" or, with the article, "al-ithmīd") is probably a loan word from the Latin Stibium. The alchemists used like other terms a corruption of the Arabic word, refashioned so as to wear a Latin aspect, thus "al-ithmīd" was latinized as "athimodium", "atimodium", "atimonium", "Antimonium". Thus Antimonium is the latinized form of an Arabization of the Latin Stibium!
Phantasy etymologies
Chemistianity 1873
GEYAN
ANTIMONY, the type hard'ning metalloid, Latin, Stibium, has a bluish white hue; 'Tis lustrous, brittle, and easy to fuse; Further reading
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© Peter van der Krogt