Theophilus de Garencières
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Theophilus de Garencières (1610–1680) was a French apothecary who spent most of his life practising in England. Born in Paris, Garencières studied the prophecies of Nostradamus at an early age, and these had a lasting effect on him. He studied at the University of Caen, which he left with a Doctorate of Medicine in 1636. To avoid religious persecution, he moved to the University of Oxford during the 1640s, which finally granted him the same qualification in 1657. Garencières first came to public attention in 1647, when he claimed that
sugar Sugar is the generic name for sweet-tasting, soluble carbohydrates, many of which are used in food. Simple sugars, also called monosaccharides, include glucose, fructose, and galactose. Compound sugars, also called disaccharides or double ...
was bad for the health. He believed that it had a heating quality, which could cause " Tabes Anglica" of the
lung The lungs are the primary organs of the respiratory system in humans and most other animals, including some snails and a small number of fish. In mammals and most other vertebrates, two lungs are located near the backbone on either side of t ...
s. During the Great Plague, Garencières claimed to have a secret cure, and that nineteen of the twenty patients he had attended had recovered. He wrote of his "discovery" in ''A mite cast into the treasury of the famous city of London, being a brief and methodical discourse of the nature, causes, symptomes, remedies and preservation from the plague, in this calamitous year, 1665, digested into aphorismes''. This book proved highly popular, seeing at least three editions inside a year.Lance Library Catalog
/ref> While considering himself a Catholic, Garencières was a harsh critic of Pope Clement VIII, writing the endword to a work of 1670 entitled ''The famous conclave: wherein Clement VIII was elected Pope, with the intrigues and cunning devices of that ecclesiastical assembly: faithfully translated out of an Italian manuscript found in one of the cardinals studies after his death.'' In 1672, Garencières was the first to translate Nostradamus into English, creating the
bilingual text A parallel text is a text placed alongside its translation or translations. Parallel text alignment is the identification of the corresponding sentences in both halves of the parallel text. The Loeb Classical Library and the Clay Sanskrit Libr ...
''The true prophecies or prognostications of Michel Nostradamus''. However, Garencières unknowingly used a fake edition of Nostradamus’s work, printed in 1649, which contained quatrains that were forged in order to discredit and foretell the downfall of
Cardinal Jules Mazarin Cardinal Jules Mazarin (, also , , ; 14 July 1602 – 9 March 1661), born Giulio Raimondo Mazzarino () or Mazarini, was an Italian cardinal, diplomat and politician who served as the chief minister to the Kings of France Louis XIII and Louis XI ...
, prime minister of France. Also in 1672, Garencières wrote ''The Admirable Virtues, And Wonderful Effects Of The True And Genuine Tincture Of Coral, In Physick''. Soon afterwards, he met Thomas Britton, with whom he shared a love of the esoteric. Britton designed him a mobile laboratory. Garencières died in, or around, 1680. A grandson of the same name became a vicar in Scarborough, while his son, who again shared the name, was a noted apothecary in York.Admissions to the Freedom of York 1-15 George II (1727-42)
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References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Garencieres, Theophilus de 1610 births 1680 deaths University of Caen Normandy alumni Alumni of the University of Oxford Nostradamus Physicians from Paris English apothecaries