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The Key of Solomon the King

de Pseudo Solomon

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742230,344 (3.72)Cap
This book, translated and edited by the occultist Samuel Liddell Mathers (1854-1918) and published in 1889, introduced to Victorian England an important work of Renaissance esoterica. Purportedly the deathbed testament of King Solomon to his son, distilling all the angelic wisdom he received in his lifetime, it provided its readers with detailed instructions in conjuring, divining and summoning God's power to work 'experiments', or spells. For Mathers, it represented 'the fountain-head and storehouse of Qabalistical Magic' and formed a central part of his efforts to lend scholarly respectability to occult research. Mathers edited the text using available manuscripts at the British Museum, and it continues to offer authoritative and fascinating insight into both Renaissance occultism and its Victorian revival. Features of this edition include introductions from three distinct manuscripts, a table of the planetary hours and their magical names, and spells for producing invisibility, creating magic carpets and identifying thieves.… (més)
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For my own personal benefit I’d like to note that the deities of the hours (or whatever) go in the following order: Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Sun, Venus, Mercury, Moon. The deity of the day of the week starts off, with the first hour beginning at sunrise; ie probably not 7:00 exactly or whatever.

Since a lot of these rituals are meant to be done at very specific times, I think I’ll just comment on that. Ie, many of them apparently are meant to be done at a specific time of the YEAR, like, oh, it’s not August? It’s December? Well then, don’t need to do it just yet, buddy…. 😹 And I’m not sure that I’d wait months and months to do a spell or ritual, you know. But then, in one of the pagan-perspective YouTube videos from 2009, (yes, I’m in the archive, lol) Cara/cutewitch772 (very much as the portrait of the Millennial as a young person) said although she understood spells worked best at certain times, she wouldn’t even wait for the ‘right’ phase of the MOON to come if she felt she needed magic-right-now, you know. And I don’t know; I’m a modern too, so I get that, but in a normative way, I’m like 😩

You know, it’s like, recentism defeats longer life-spans in terms of what we feel like we ‘have time for’, and whether we can play the long game, you know, as moderns. In the past, I mean, some people were turd-like, but a lot of people played the long game even if that meant looking at their ~next life~, you know, whereas with our medical science, we’ll still be here for much of the future…. But with recentism/youth culture/click bait habits, it’s like, we either think we’ll be as good as dead, or just the thought of the long game just never crosses our addled little minds, you know.

Sometimes life is an emergency, and you have to Move, and not wait, but, realistically, usually it isn’t.

The other point is that also many of the rituals are kinda Christianized/biblical, as the identity of the ‘speaker’, I guess you could call him, (to use the literary term), ‘Solomon’, implies, and my magic will probably be less biblical as I feel like people have more choices now and polytheism provides a lot of choices; however, the exact forms of pre-Christian religion are gone forever for many reasons, and I’m trying to form a type of modern/future religion, not to bow down in loyalty to the departed past, so I think angels and Hebrew words and Bible paraphernalia, although not known to “our pagan ancestors” or whatever, are, at least in part, useful things that the human journey has acquired along the way in its magical journey, and it would be a weird sort of historical re-enactment to pretend that it had never happened. Or that it could never be useful.

Of course, with modern technology versus medieval technology, sometimes a medieval magical intervention doesn’t map obviously onto something that would be helpful now; however, maybe I’m not thinking creatively enough about it all yet.
  goosecap | Dec 31, 2023 |
Although the author of this grimoire was traditionally the biblical King Solomon, it was probably written in the 13th Century A.D. It was translated by S. Liddell MacGregor Mathers in 1888; Mathers subsequently had a lot of influence in the Golden Dawn movement, one of the sources of modern ritual magic; it is said that he co-wrote its rituals with W.B. Yeats. Mathers also translated the Kabbalah.
  oldmanriver1951 | Jun 8, 2007 |
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» Afegeix-hi altres autors (24 possibles)

Nom de l'autorCàrrecTipus d'autorObra?Estat
Pseudo Solomonautor primaritotes les edicionsconfirmat
De Laurence, L. W.Editorautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
MacGregor-Mathers, S.L.Traductorautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
Peterson, Joseph H.Editorautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
Petr z Vlkovaautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
Verschure, J.Traductorautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat
Warwick, TarlEditorautor secundarialgunes edicionsconfirmat

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This book, translated and edited by the occultist Samuel Liddell Mathers (1854-1918) and published in 1889, introduced to Victorian England an important work of Renaissance esoterica. Purportedly the deathbed testament of King Solomon to his son, distilling all the angelic wisdom he received in his lifetime, it provided its readers with detailed instructions in conjuring, divining and summoning God's power to work 'experiments', or spells. For Mathers, it represented 'the fountain-head and storehouse of Qabalistical Magic' and formed a central part of his efforts to lend scholarly respectability to occult research. Mathers edited the text using available manuscripts at the British Museum, and it continues to offer authoritative and fascinating insight into both Renaissance occultism and its Victorian revival. Features of this edition include introductions from three distinct manuscripts, a table of the planetary hours and their magical names, and spells for producing invisibility, creating magic carpets and identifying thieves.

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