Difference between revisions of "Brusch 1551 Monasteriorum"
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{{InfoboxTranslation|Date=2023-02-28}} Later, the Regusa River flows through the territory of the Abbot of Faveria and the Seven Pagans of Helvetia, and pours into the Rhine near the splendid city of Mayenfeld. These hot springs were discovered in the year of Christ 1242, during the times of Emperor Frederick II, by a certain hunter named Aucipi. It was observed that the warm and crystal-clear water, which was also exceptionally pure and pleasing to the human taste, flowed out of veins of gold and copper. The famous physician Theophrastus Paracelsus wrote about their nature. | |||
The water in these springs is constantly changing; in October, they dry up and disappear, and during winter they seem to be dead. However, they return in abundance in May. If these hot springs were located in a flat area, they would be sufficient for two thousand people at the same time, such is the abundance and richness of the water. |
Revision as of 20:45, 28 February 2023
Caspar Brusch,
Monasteriorum Germaniae ... centuria prima 1551 |
Text
[f. 53r]
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Bibliography
English Raw Translation
Generated by ChatGPT on 28 February 2023. Attention: This translation is a machine translation by artificial intelligence. The translation has not been checked and should not be cited without additional human verification.
The water in these springs is constantly changing; in October, they dry up and disappear, and during winter they seem to be dead. However, they return in abundance in May. If these hot springs were located in a flat area, they would be sufficient for two thousand people at the same time, such is the abundance and richness of the water.