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2011 Reprint of 1898 Edition. Full facsimile of the original
edition, not reproduced with Optical Recognition Software. This
remarkable grimoire was translated by S.L.M. Mathers from a 15th
century French mauscript. This text has had a huge influence on
modern ceremonial magic, and has been cited as a primary influence
on Aleister Crowley. Abraham of Wurzburg, a cabalist and scholar of
magic, describes a quest for the secret teachings which culminated
in Egypt, where he encountered the magician Abramelin, who taught
him his system in detail. The procedure involves many months of
purification, followed by the invocation of good and evil spirits
to accomplish some very worldly goals, including acquisition of
treasure and love, travel through the air and under water, and
raising armies out of thin air. It also tells of raising the dead,
transforming ones appearance, becoming invisible, and starting
storms. The key to this is a set of remarkable magic squares,
sigils consisting of mystical words which in most cases can be read
in several directions. Of course, these diagrams are said to have
no potency unless used in the appropriate ritual context by an
initiate. Mathers analyzed these words in an extensive set of notes
and gives possible derivations from Hebrew, Greek and other
languages.
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