Frederick Clod
Frederick Clod (or Clodius) (1625 – after 1661), was a physician and ‘mystical chemist’ of German extraction. He lived in a sizeable house (taxed on eight hearths) in Axe Yard, London, next door to the Hartlibs, whose daughter Mary he married in 1660. He was also a neighbour to the diarist Samuel Pepys, who mentions him several times.[1] He was a minor figure in scientific circles and a friend of Robert Boyle, to which he supplied some very varied recipes.[2]
He came to England in 1652, having been recommended to Samuel Hartlib by Johann Moriaen. He had been in the service of Frederick III of Denmark, collecting "Rarities", and himself was a native of Holstein.[3]
He presided at the wedding of his sister-in-law Nan Hartlib to Johannes Rothe in 1660. Pepys, a guest at the wedding, describes it as a social event of great magnificence: this suggests that Clod was a man of some wealth, since the Hartlibs were then living in poverty, and Nan's father could not possibly have paid for the wedding.
References
- ↑ http://www.pepysdiary.com/p/533.php Diary of Samuel Pepys
- ↑ http://www.bbk.ac.uk/Boyle/workdiaries/WD12Clean.html#WD8-48 Dr. Clodius’ anti-scurvy medicine, made from Cochlearia hortensis.
- ↑ Alchemy tried in the fire Door William R. Newman, Lawrence Principe