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  • - The Practice of English Folk Magic 1550-1900
    by Jim Baker
    £29.99

  • - A Course in Iamblichus' Philosophy, Theology and Theurgy
    by Jeffrey S. Kupperman
    £15.99

  • - Being an Account of the Conjuration of the 72 Spirits of the Goetia - A Practical Guide
    by Gary St Michael Nottingham
    £15.99

  • - Being an Instruction on the Arte of Using Mirrors and Shewstones in Magic
    by Gary St Michael Nottingham
    £11.49

  • - Being an Account of the Arte and Praxis of the Conjuration of some of the Spirits of Solomon
    by Gary St Michael Nottingham
    £15.99

  • - Being an Account and Rendition of the Arte of Geomantic Divination and Magic
    by Gary St Michael Nottingham
    £11.49

  • - Being of that Hidden Arte of Solomon the King
    by Gary St Michael Nottingham
    £14.49

  • - A Handbook of the Sorcerous Arte
    by Gary St Michael Nottingham
    £15.99

  • - A study of the God Dionysos history, myth and lore
    by Vikki Bramshaw
    £15.99

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    - Ritual, Myth and Oracle in Shang Period China
    by Jan Fries
    £30.99 - 62.49

  • - A Collection of Essays Exploring the Myths, Magic and Mythology of the Faerie Queens
     
    £17.99

  • - A Collection of Magickal and Mythological Perspectives on Death, Dying, Mortality & Beyond
    by Julian Vayne
    £17.99

  • by Georgi Mishev
    £17.99

  • - Ancient Persian Goddess and Zoroastrian Yazata
     
    £17.99

  • - A 17th Century London Cunningman's Book of Charms, Conjurations and Prayers. Includes Material from the Heptameron, the Arbatel, the Discoverie of Witchcraft; and the Writings of Cornelius Agrippa
     
    £43.99

    The Grimoire of Arthur Gauntlet is an outstanding example of a seventeenth century London Cunning-man's book of practice. Cunning-folk were practitioners of magic and herbal medicine who dealt with problems in their local communities. Cunning-man Arthur Gauntlet was based in Gray's Inn Lane in London, and his personal working book contains a fascinating diverse mixture of herbal remedies, prayers, magical and biblical charms, with previously unseen angelic conjurations and magic circles, in an eclectic blend of practical magic for health, wealth, love and protection.This unique manuscript demonstrates both the diverse and spiritual nature of such Cunning-folk's books of practice, as well as their magical emphasis on Biblical scripture, particularly the Psalms, and their opposition to witchcraft, found in charms and conjurations. Arthur Gauntlet worked with a female skryer called Sarah Skelhorn, and drew on numerous preceding sources for his craft, including the Arbatel, the Heptameron, Folger Vb.26, The Discoverie of Witchcraft, the Book of Gold, the writings of the German magus Cornelius Agrippa, the astrologer William Bacon and Queen Elizabeth I's court astrologer Dr. John Dee, as well as other London Cunning-folk.In his introduction, the author provides fresh insights into the hidden world of seventeenth century magical London, exploring the web of connections between astrologers, cunning-folk and magicians, playwrights, authors and church figures. These connections are also highlighted by the provenance of the manuscript, which is traced from Arthur Gauntlet through the hands of such notable angel magicians as Elias Ashmole (founder of the world's first public museum, the Ashmolean in Oxford), Baron Somers (the Lord Chancellor), Sir Joseph Jekyll (Master of the Rolls) and Sir Hans Sloane (founder of the British Museum), as well as the astrologer John Humphreys and the cunning-woman Ann Savadge.This is a unique work which draws attention to the often neglected place of women in seventeenth century magic, both as practitioners (such as skryers and Cunning-women), and customers. It also emphasises the vital and influential role played by Cunning-Men and Women in synthesising and transmitting the magical traditions of medieval Britain into the subsequent centuries, as well as their willingness to conjure a wide range of spiritual creatures to achieve results for their clients, including angels, demons, fairies, and the dead.

  • - A historical study of the goddess of the Old Testament and Kabbalah
    by Sorita D'Este
    £15.99

    The Shekinah is the manifestation of the Wisdom Goddess of the Kabbalah, the Old Testament and Merkavah Mysticism. She encompasses the primordial light of creation, the wisdom of the serpent and the inspiration of the dove. She is the beauty of the lily and the embodiment of the Tree of Life. She is also the World Soul, heavenly glory, mother of angels, inspiration for prophecy, and source of souls, as well as being the Shabbat Bride and the wife of God.In The Cosmic Shekinah the authors present a concise history of the different influences of earlier wisdom goddesses on the development of the Shekinah. These goddesses include the Sumerian Inanna, the Egyptian Ma'at, the Greco-Egyptian Isis, the Semitic Anat and Astarte and the Canaanite Asherah. They show that from these ancient sources arose the unnamed Wisdom Goddess and wife of God portrayed in the Old Testament and early Jewish wisdom literature. It is this unnamed Wisdom Goddess who would subsequently become the source for the development of the Shekinah as well as the Gnostic Sophia. The influence of the feminine divine as the Shekinah has continued to find expression, with the Virgin Mary and the Holy Spirit of Christianity and the Sakina of Islam all being shaped by the enduring influence of the Wisdom Goddess.Through tracing her roles, myths and functions the authors show that in addition to her modern-day resurgence, the Wisdom Goddess has always been present throughout history, even when she has been suppressed and disguised by deliberate exclusion and mistranslation. Drawing on numerous sources including medieval Kabbalistic works, Hekhalot texts of Merkavah Mysticism, ancient literature such as the Egyptian, Sumerian and Ugaritic myths, the Old Testament, Gnostic texts and recent finds in Biblical archaeology, The Cosmic Shekinah draws attention back to the light of divine feminine wisdom.

  • - Duality and Conflict in Magick, Mythology and Paganism
    by Michael Howard, Payam Nabarz & Katie Gerrard
    £15.99

    "Relationship cannot be created without duality: we are divided for love's sake, for the chance of union..."Vs., edited by Kim Huggens, is a unique collection of twenty-one essays exploring the dynamic and wide-ranging nature of duality in magic, paganism and folklore, from polarity to paradox to opposition to friction to union. The essays by magicians, witches, folklorists, sorcerors, Norse and vodou practitioners, weave together diverse threads of wisdom, knowledge, experience and inspiration into a tapestry of fallen angels, heroes, gods, goddesses, fairies, lwa, dreams, myths and stories. The significance of the interplay between two disparate or similar powers is explored through the relationship of divine twins, siblings, lovers and enemies in a variety of different pantheons and tales, from Cain and Abel to Lilith and Eve, from Shiva & Shakti to Inanna and Dumuzi, from Perseus and Andromeda to Ares and Hephastus.The union of divine and mortal is another powerful theme explored in this book, both through the hieros gamos (sacred marriage) and the maryaj (Vodou spirit marriage) where a person weds one of the lwa.Vs. also explores the theme of self and other, as experienced both in ritual techniques for trance and dreaming, and in social commentaries on the diversity of beliefs within the modern esoteric revival such as Wicca, Sorcery and Neopaganism.Vs. covers a span of thousands of years, from ancient writings such as those of Plato and Gnosticism to the modern works of twentieth century magicians such as Austin Osman Spare and Dion Fortune.From the wisdom of the Emerald Tablet to the tales of the Mabinogion, Vs. challenges you in numerous ways to accept diversity and strive for the union of perfection."I am the voice whose sound is manifold and the word whose appearance is multiple." Thunder, Perfect Mind, 3rd century CE

  • - Exploring the Norse Gods, Myths and Legends Through the Days of the Week
    by Marion Pearce
    £15.99

  • - A Manual of Tantric Magick
    by Jan Fries
    £28.99 - 52.99

  • - A 17th Century London Cunningman's Book of Charms, Conjurations and Prayers. Includes Material from the Heptameron, the Arbatel, the Discoverie of Witchcraft; and the Writings of Cornelius Agrippa
     
    £23.49

  • - A 17th Century Magical Grimoire of Amulets, Charms, Prayers, Sigils and Spells Using the Biblical Psalms of King David
    by David Rankine
    £23.49

  • - Shedding Light on the Treasure and Legacy of Rennes-le-Chateau and the Priory of Sion
    by Jean-Luc Chaumeil
    £20.99

  • - A Practical Guide to the Wisdom of the Runes, Through Galdr, Sigils and Casting
    by Katie Gerrard
    £14.49

  • - A 17th Century Magical Grimoire of Amulets, Charms, Prayers, Sigils and Spells Using the Biblical Psalms of King David
     
    £43.99

    Le Livre d'Or (The Book of Gold) is a unique 17th century French magical work comprising numerous amulets, charms, prayers, spells and sigils for working with the Biblical Book of the Psalms of King David. Written in a simple style akin to a medieval Book of Secrets combined with magical practices from the ancient world, Le Livre d'Or brings together practices which have their roots in major works from the Dead Sea Scrolls and the Cairo Genizah, to the Greek Magical Papyri and Sepher Shimmush Tehillim (Magical Use of the Psalms).Now translated into English for the first time, this exceptional text demonstrates the significance of the Psalms as a unifying and vital thread throughout the development of Western magic. From Sweden to Syria, Britain to the Baltic, the use of appropriate Psalms has spread as a significant part of popular folk and religious magic, and Le Livre d'Or is an inimitable example of the transmission of divine power through the written and spoken word. Le Livre d'Or was originally bound as part of Lansdowne MS 1202 with a 17th century French copy of the most important of grimoires, the Key of Solomon.The extensive commentary by David Rankine and Paul Harry Barron emphasises the place of the Psalms within the Grimoire tradition, detailing their extensive apotropaic, amuletic and coercive uses in works such as the Book of Abramelin, the Key of Solomon and the Goetia. The editors also illustrate how the magic of the Psalms has underlain and cross-fertilised numerous traditions over the last two thousand years, from Hellenic magicians, early Christians and Jews of the ancient world to practitioners of the medieval Grimoires and Renaissance Cunning-folk. Whether it was for benevolent or malefic results, Le Livre d'Or provided the appropriate Psalm verses and relevant techniques.This previously ignored work is an outstanding example of eminently practical magic which not only draws on such major works as the Heptameron and the Steganographia, but also many of the divine names found in the Kabbalah. From Saints to spirits, characters to Creeds, Le Livre d'Or shines forth as a significant and reclaimed chapter in the Western Esoteric Traditions.There is also a paperback edition available of this book.

  • - A Collection of Essays Exploring the Origins, History, Nature and Magical Practices of Angels, Fallen Angels and Demons
    by Stephen Skinner, David Rankine & Aaron Leitch
    £15.99

  • - A 17th Century Grimoire of Magical Conjurations to Increase Wealth and Catch Thieves Through the Invocation of Spirits, Fallen Angels, Demons and Fairies.
    by David Rankine
    £15.99

  • - A Practical Guide to Performing Rites and Ceremonies to the Moon, Planets, Stars and Constellations
    by Payam Nabarz
    £14.49

  • - Working the Magick of the Four Elements of Air, Fire, Water and Earth in the Western Esoteric Traditions
    by David Rankine
    £14.49

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