>>17937750
Back in Europe by the High Middle Ages some Hermetic texts were written, the book of the 24 Philosophers in particular which is incredibly influential for just 24 sentences, there's also alchemy and astrology of that time and the translations from the the Maghreb but i won't get into that (Roger Bacon, Michael Scot, Albertus Magnus and his relationship to Liber de Causis, etc...).
>Renaissance
Marsilio Ficino translates the Corpus Hermeticum, it becomes influential in that period from various syncretist authors, Giovanni Pico uses some hermetic concepts in his 900 theses, Lodovico Lazzareli writes the Christian-Hermetic text Crater Hermetis, Henry Cornelius Agrippa continues the legacy of Lazzareli with his 3 Books of Occult Philosophy, it's generally connected to Christian Cabala so Francisco Giorgi was also influenced by Hermetism, even in Protestantism it gains a foothold with Valentine Weigel ans Paracelsianism generally, Giordano Bruno wanted to RETVRN to Egyptian religion and got burned at the stake from a Marian heresy in 1600, by the early 17th century the CH is dates to be a late Antique text and most lose interest in it but still some like Robert Fludd use it for their thought, the Rosicrucian movement is also connected to Hermetism as it's a german continuation of Italian Platonic Orientalism.
>Modernity
Now Hermeticism is basically deas but still lives on somewhat in some Freemasonic circles, usually the Rosicrucian kind (Gold un Rosenkreuzer) but by the 19th century Occult Revival it becomes popular again, which lead to the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn to being called Hermetic, it was connected to the Tarot, Valentin Tomberg wrote a whole book on why Catholicism is cool using Tarot and calling it Hermeticism, and the New Thought book the Kybalion was written which has been haunting us ever since due to it being called Hermetic.