ABSTRACT

This is a study of the most fascinating and idiosyncratic of all seventeenth-century figures. Like its famous predecessor The Cheese and The Worms: The Cosmos of a Sixteenth-Century Miller, it explores the everyday life and mental world of an extraordinary yet humble figure. Born in Lincolnshire with a family of Cambridgeshire origins, Thomas Totney (1608-1659) was a London puritan, goldsmith and veteran of the Civil War. In November 1649, after fourteen weeks of self-abasement, fasting and prayer, he experienced a profound spiritual transformation. Taking the prophetic name TheaurauJohn Tany and declaring himself 'a Jew of the Tribe of Reuben' descended from Aaron the High Priest, he set about enacting a millenarian mission to restore the Jews to their own land. Inspired prophetic gestures followed as Tany took to living in a tent, preaching in the parks and fields around London. He gathered a handful of followers and, in the week that Cromwell was offered the crown, infamously burned his bible and attacked Parliament with sword drawn. In the summer of 1656 he set sail from the Kentish coast, perhaps with some disciples in tow, bound for Jerusalem. He found his way to Holland, perhaps there to gather the Jews of Amsterdam. Some three years later, now calling himself Ram Johoram, Tany was reported lost, drowned after taking passage in a ship from Brielle bound for London. During his prophetic phase Tany wrote a number of remarkable but elusive works that are unlike anything else in the English language. His sources were varied, although they seem to have included almanacs, popular prophecies and legal treatises, as well as scriptural and extra-canonical texts, and the writings of the German mystic Jacob Boehme. Indeed, Tany's writings embrace currents of magic and mysticism, alchemy and astrology, numerology and angelology, Neoplatonism and Gnosticism, Hermeticism and Christian Kabbalah - a ferment of ideas that fused in a millenarian yearning for the hoped for

part |2 pages

Part I: Genesis

chapter 1|20 pages

Genesis

chapter 2|22 pages

The bitterness of the godly

chapter 3|20 pages

The wilderness of Zin

chapter 4|30 pages

Birth of the Prophet

part |2 pages

Part II: Genealogy of the High Priest

chapter 5|16 pages

TheaurauJohn

chapter 6|32 pages

Genealogy of the High Priest

chapter 7|28 pages

Justice

chapter 8|26 pages

Hell

part |2 pages

Part III: King of the Jews

chapter 9|24 pages

King of the Jews

chapter 10|36 pages

Canonical and extra-canonical sources

chapter 11|82 pages

Son of the morning stars

chapter 13|26 pages

To your tents, O Israel

chapter 14|6 pages

Gold Tried in the Fire