Adamic language: Difference between revisions

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Kelley was not a "spirit medium" which is a term from 19th century spiritualism: he was a scryer, there is a big difference
Adamic Tongue = archive.is/baf2Y = Indogermanic Tongue
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Elizabethan scholar [[John Dee]] makes references to a language he called "[[Enochian|Angelical]]", which he recorded in his private journals and those of [[scryer]] [[Edward Kelley]]. Dee's journals did not describe the language as "[[Enochian]]", instead preferring "Angelical", the "Celestial Speech", the "Language of Angels", the "First Language of God-Christ", the "Holy Language", or "Adamical" because, according to Dee's Angels, it was used by Adam in Paradise to name all things. The language was later dubbed Enochian, due to Dee's assertion that the [[Biblical Patriarch]] [[Enoch (ancestor of Noah)|Enoch]] had been the last human (before Dee and Kelley) to know the language.
 
[[Anne Catherine Emmerich]], a Catholic mystic, suggested that Adamic was [[Proto-Indo-European]], without using that specific term, but noting that it seemed to share features with [[Bactrian language|Bactrian]], [[Zend]], [[Sanskrit]] (three [[Indo-Iranian languages]]), and German.<ref>[[Anne Catherine Emmerich]], ''[http://www.tanbooks.com/doct/origin_sorcery.htm Life of Jesus Christ And Biblical Revelations]'' (1790).</ref>
 
Dutch physician, linguist, and humanist [[Johannes Goropius Becanus]] (1519–1572) theorized in ''Origines Antwerpianae'' (1569) that [[Antwerp]]ian [[Brabantic]], spoken in the region between the [[Scheldt]] and [[Meuse]] Rivers, was the original language spoken in Paradise. Goropius believed that the most ancient language on Earth would be the simplest language, and that the simplest language would contain mostly short words. Since Brabantic has a higher number of short words than do Latin, Greek, and Hebrew, Goropius reasoned that it was the older language.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Gorporius Becanus |first=Johannes |date=2014 |title=Van Adam tot Antwerpen: Een bloemlezing uit de Origines Antwerpianae en de Opera van Johannes Goropius Becanus |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=bgWyCAAAQBAJ&pg=265 |___location=Hilversum |publisher=Uitgeverij Verloren |pages=265–77 |isbn=9789087044312}}</ref> His work influenced that of [[Simon Stevin]] (1548–1620), who espoused similar ideas in "Uytspraeck van de weerdicheyt der Duytse tael", a chapter in ''[[De Beghinselen Der Weeghconst]]'' (1586).