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The Sword of Moses (Harba de-Moshe): Ancient Hebrew Practical Magic, Angelic Coercion, and the Power of the Word

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The Ancient Magical Sword of the Hebrews In the vast archive of early Jewish esotericism, few texts offer a more direct window into the world of practical magic and angelic conjuration than the work known as Harba de-Moshe , or The Sword of Moses . Dating to late antiquity or the early Geonic period (approximately the tenth century or earlier), the text is a complete, structured manual of practical sorcery. It survived in a single, fragmentary Hebrew manuscript, which was discovered, translated, and published in 1896 by the renowned scholar Moses Gaster, who found it bound within a larger Hebrew manuscript miscellany (codex) of liturgical and mystical works. Gaster was a prominent folklorist and scholar of Jewish studies, who recognized that this text represented a unique survival of early Jewish magical practices that had been largely suppressed by mainstream rabbinic authorities. Prior to Gaster's discovery, only brief, censored references to the "Sword" existed in o...

The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses: Popular Talismanic Magic, Biblical Apocrypha, and Folkish Grimoire Traditions

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The Forbidden Library of the Lawgiver In the vast archive of Western magical literature, few texts have achieved the level of widespread, popular influence as the volume known as the Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses . First printed in Germany in the mid-nineteenth century by the publisher Johann Scheible, the text presents itself as a collection of lost biblical apocrypha. It claims to contain the secret, magical instructions that the creator of the universe bestowed upon Moses on Mount Sinai—wisdom that allowed the Hebrew lawgiver to perform the miracles of the plagues, part the Red Sea, and lead his people through the wilderness. Johann Scheible compiled these materials between 1845 and 1849 as part of his monumental series Das Kloster ("The Cloister"), a scholarly and folkloric project that sought to document and rescue obscure medieval magical works, popular legends, and occult treatises from obscurity. The work was translated into English in 1880, published in New Yo...

The Compendium Rarissimum: Late Baroque Demonology, Illustrated Pacts, and the Visual Taxonomy of the Infernal

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The Illustrated Theater of the Underworld In the late eighteenth century, as the intellectual light of the Enlightenment spread across Europe, advocating for reason, empirical science, and the dismantling of superstition, a parallel counter-current of gothic fantasy and occult curiosity emerged in the shadows of the printing press. The most visually stunning monument to this counter-current is the manuscript titled Compendium rarissimum totius Artis Magicae sistematisatae per celeberrimos Artis hujus Magistros ("A rare summary of the entire Magical Art systematized by the most famous Masters of this Art"), dating to approximately 1775. Held in the Wellcome Collection under the shelfmark WMS 1766 , this German and Latin manuscript represents a radical departure from the traditional textual grimoires of the medieval and Renaissance periods. Physical examination of WMS 1766 reveals it to be a small, pocket-sized book of 31 folios, bound in dark, weathered leather with gold t...

The Book of Soyga: John Dee, Cryptographic Tables, and the Secret Code of the Angels

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The Lost Codex of Mortlake In the late sixteenth century, the house of Dr. John Dee at Mortlake, situated along the River Thames, was home to the largest and most sophisticated scientific and esoteric library in England. Dee was a trusted advisor to Queen Elizabeth I, providing her with astrological calculations and navigational charts for England's expanding maritime empire. Among the thousands of volumes of mathematics, astronomy, navigation, and Hermetic philosophy in his collection was a manuscript that Dee valued above almost all others: a Latin grimoire known as the Book of Soyga , or Aldaraia . Following the plundering of Dee’s library by an angry mob during his travels on the European continent with his scryer Edward Kelley—visiting the courts of Poland and Bohemia—this enigmatic text was lost to history, surviving only as a legendary reference in Dee’s personal diaries. For four centuries, scholars assumed the book was gone forever, until its dramatic rediscovery in 1994...

The Galdrabók: Icelandic Staves, Runic Sorcery, and the Fusion of Norse-Christian Magic

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The Grimoire of the Frozen North In the remote, volcanic landscape of early modern Iceland, a unique magical tradition developed at the intersection of classical runic heritage, medieval Christian theology, and practical survival folklore. The primary document of this tradition is the Galdrabók , a small manuscript containing forty-seven spells, compiled by various practitioners between the late sixteenth and mid-seventeenth centuries. Unlike the high ceremonial magic of continental Europe, which relied on the complex planetary calculations and demonic hierarchies of the Solomonic tradition, the Galdrabók presents a localized, elemental system of sorcery known as galdur . The historical context of the Galdrabók is shaped by Iceland's geographical isolation and the late arrival of the Reformation. The manuscript was written in a period known as the brennuöld , or "age of fire," during which approximately thirty people were executed at the stake for witchcraft. Interes...

The Black Pullet: Talismanic Rings, Safe Passage in the Orient, and the Lore of the Golden Hen

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The Hermit of the Pyramids and Napoleonic Occultism In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, as the fires of the Enlightenment burned across Europe, a parallel current of romantic occultism emerged, fascinated by the mysteries of the ancient East. The primary literary manifestation of this fascination was the grimoire titled La Poule Noire , translated into English as The Black Pullet or "The Hen with the Golden Eggs." Published anonymously in France, the text presents itself not as a compilation of medieval Solomonic conjurations, but as a dramatic, initiatory narrative set against the backdrop of Napoleon Bonaparte’s military expedition to Egypt. The framing narrative of the Black Pullet is one of the most elaborate in the entire history of grimoire literature. It tells the story of a French officer, a member of Napoleon's scientific and military expedition, who is attacked by local Bedouin forces in the deserts of Egypt. Wounded and left for dead, th...

The Secret Grimoire of Turiel: Priest-Magic, Angelic Conjuration, and the Secrets of the Earth

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The Subterranean Currents of the Grimoire Tradition The history of Western esotericism is defined not by a singular, monolithic doctrine, but by a multiplicity of subterranean currents, flowing through centuries of manuscript culture. Among the most enigmatic of these currents is the text known as the Secret Grimoire of Turiel . First appearing in the public consciousness in the mid-twentieth century through the publication of a manuscript allegedly transcribed in the nineteenth century, the text claims a pedigree stretching back to the sixteenth century. It presents a system of priest-magic focused on the conjuration of the planetary spirits of the earth, most notably the spirit Turiel, whose name translates from the Hebrew as the "Rock of God." Unlike the high ceremonial magic of the Key of Solomon or the intricate celestial coordinates of the Lemegeton , the grimoire of Turiel occupies a liminal space. It is a work of relatively modest scope, yet it is rich in symbolic...