Demonology Library


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  • Pseudomonarchia Daemonum by Johan Weyer (32 pages)

  • Compendium Daemonii (Latin) (141 pages) For the Purists in the Crowd

  • Encyclopaedia Arcane - Demonology - The Dark Road (72 pages) dungeon and dragons :p

  • Catalog of Spirits and Entities (18 pages) Marcus Cordey

  • The Demons of Magick by Morton Smith (7 pages)

  • The Devils Dictionary by Ambrose Bierce (153 pages) History, n. an account mostly false, of events mostly unimportant, which are brought about by rulers mostly knaves, and soldiers mostly fools. Marriage, n. The state or condition of a community consisting of a master, a mistress, and two slaves, making in all two. Self-Esteem, n. An erroneous appraisement. These caustic aphorisms, collected in The Devil's Dictionary, helped earn Ambrose Bierce the epithets Bitter Bierce, the Devil's Lexicographer, and the Wickedest Man in San Francisco. First published as The Cynic's Word Book (1906) and later reissued under its preferred name in 1911, Bierce's notorious collection of barbed definitions forcibly contradicts Samuel Johnson's earlier definition of a lexicographer as a harmless drudge. There was nothing harmless about Ambrose Bierce, and the words he shaped into verbal pitchforks a century ago--with or without the devil's help--can still draw blood today.

  • Daemonologie (45 pages) The "Demonologie" of James VI was an important text in the history of Scottish and English Witch trials. James developed something of an obsession with Witches and of hunting them following a plot by the Berwick Witches to shipwreck him when on his way home from Denmark. Following this attempt James wrote the Demonologie and gave his support and whole-hearted approval to the attempt to try and execute Witches within Scotland. After he became King of England in 1603 James' book was then anglicised and reprinted in England.

  • Demonographia: The Fountainhead of Diabolic Portraiture (30 pages) This is a complete collection of the Louis Breton diabolic portraiture from "Dictionnaire Infernal". This collection has never before been published in its entirety and we feel seeing these images in the proper context will help the student of demonology 'flesh out' their ideas of what the descriptions given in works like "The Goetia" intended. Each illustration is reproduced line for line. They have not been reconstructed but are given exactly as in the original source work.

  • The Demonic Bible (58 pages) by Magus Tsirk Susej, Antichrist, Servant and disciple of the Dark Lord, revealed to him by the spirit Azael, his Unholy Guardian Demon. This book contains rituals for Crossing the Gates of Hell and becoming one with the Forces of Darkness. It also contains rituals for the invocation of hundreds of demons and Dark Gods. This may possibly be the most evil book written.

  • Toward a Rectification of Demonology (4 pages)

  • A Brief Handbook of Exorcism (10 pages)

  • A Simple Exorcism (3 pages)

  • Black Witchcraft - The Foundation of Luciferian Path (11 pages)

  • Unholy Spirits (516 pages) Occultism and New Age Humanism

  • History of the Devil and the Idea of Evil (82 pages) This intriguing, informative volume carries on where the Time and Newsweek stories left off: serving up a tantalizing trove of facts and lore on the philosophy and practice of evil down through the ages and around the world. Featuring bewitching black and white illustrations throughout.

  • Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft (135 pages) by Walter Scott. Sir Walter Scott's "Letters on Demonology and Witchcraft" were his contribution to a series of books, published by John Murray, which appeared between the years 1829 and 1847, and formed a collection of eighty volumes known as "Murray's Family" Library. Scott's "Letters," were written and published in 1830, and formed one of the earlier books in the collection.

  • Making a Pact With Satan (3 pages)

  • Demons of the Flesh: The Complete Guide to Left-Hand Path of Sex Magic by Nikolas & Zeena Schreck @500cr 12Mb (486 pages) The sexual and magical activities described in this book are intended exclusively for application by adults who have reached the age of majority, and should only be performed on a consensual basis by individuals possessing sound physical and mental health. Recommendations suggesting that the reader undertake proper training in physical activities that might prove injurious are intended seriously.

  • [ recommended ] Demonomicon by Angelus Degenero (427 pages) @100cr Compilation of demons, names, descriptions, sigils, and illustrations.

  • Liber Satanica by Randall Pike (84 pages)

  • Trident - Grimoirium Verum (86 pages)

  • Goetia: Luciferian Edition (77 pages) @200cr Darkness is always found within first. Your entire life has been found in either an embrace of shadow or a carefully forgotten endless banishing of it. The Luciferian Path instructs the student to awaken darkness, to manifest demons from the abyss of the Subconscious and master them - the end result being self-mastery and the transformation into a Luciferic Spirit. The Luciferian Goetia is a grimoire which presents the 72 Spirits of Solomon as daemonic forces within the mind itself, giving possibility to their anthropomorphic existence outside of humanity itself. The interpretation and experience is as unique as the Shemhamforasch itself. Herein is LEGION, the Book of Howling. Contains a different approach to the 72 Demons, Invocations and Evocations written by a Luciferian and a working methodology on summoning and controlling powerful forces.

  • Lon Milo DuQuette - Illustrated Goetia: Sexual Evocation (119 pages) @500 synopsis "Goetia [refers to] all the operations of that Magick which deals with gross, malignant or unenlightened forces." Goetia is sometimes thought of as a wild card, something that can get out of control, something which expresses the operator's lower desires to control others and improve his own personal life. And, in fact, this potential loss of control, this danger, the desire for self improvement and great power is exactly what attracts many people to Goetia while horrifying and repelling others. Crowley's Goetia is brought to life with vivid illustrations of the demons. Commentary by DuQuette and Hyatt bring the ancient arts into the modern day.

  • The Demonic Bible (58 pages) by Magus Tsirk Susej, Antichrist, Servant and disciple of the Dark Lord, revealed to him by the spirit Azael, his Unholy Guardian Demon. This book contains rituals for Crossing the Gates of Hell and becoming one with the Forces of Darkness. It also contains rituals for the invocation of hundreds of demons and Dark Gods. This may possibly be the most evil book written.

  • The Satanic Bible (99 pages) synopsis A founder of the Church of Satan explains its philosophies of indulgence and freedom, and discusses Satanic rituals. The Satanic Bible claims the heritage of a horde of evil deities--Bile', Dagon, Moloch, and Yao Tzin to name a few--but these ancient gods have no coherent connection between each other or to Satanism, except that all have been categorized by Christianity as "evil." Calling on these ancient names like a magician shouting, "Abracadabra," LaVey attempts to shatter the classical depiction of Satanism as a cult of black mass and child sacrifice. As the smoke clears, he leads us through a surprisingly logical argument in favor of a life focused on self-indulgence. The Satanic Bible is less bible and more philosophy (with a few rituals thrown in to keep us entertained), but this philosophy is the backbone of a religion that, until LaVey entered the scene, was merely a myth of the Christian church. It took LaVey, and The Satanic Bible, to turn this myth into a legitimate public religion.

  • The Satanic Rituals - Anton LaVey (100 pages) Pages of hidden literature, Rituals, Enchantments, Talisman, Beverages, Magic Formulas, Secrets, Invocations, Pacts, Stamps and other forms of Black Arts.

  • The Red Book of Appin Translated by Scarabaeus (26 pages) black magic and demonolatry from the collection of Joseph Appin

  • Grimoirium Imperium/The Book of the Old Spirits (41 pages) The book of the Law and Practices of the Sleeping Dead Learned by Dr.John Dee from the works of Abd Al-Hazred.

  • The Book of Dagon (29 pages) Cursed Writings of Assyrian Priests

  • De Vermis Mysteriis (31 pages) Written in a prison in Prague by Ludwig Prinn in c1542, this terrible Tome has been known to contain knowledge that would drive men to madness. Banned by Pope Pious V, copies may still be found at the Starry Wisdom Church in Providence Rhode Island, at the Huntington Library in California, and at Miskatonic University.

  • The Unsacred Texts Of The Koton (128 pages) @200cr (click here for details) You are about to discover the most evil, vile and disgusting book ever written. It may even be the words of Satan himself! Did Lucifer actually write this shocking and unbelievable ancient text ? You are one of the first human beings to actually experience the ancient wisdom contained in this most unholy of books comprised of texts that may even predate history itself. So powerful and so terrifying that it may have already lead strong willed men to madness... Forget the child's play of fantasy with books like the Necronomicon.... The Unsacred Texts Of The Koton, presented here for the first time in electronic book form gives you the power to discover and master long suppressed ancient sorcery for yourself. Unearthed during the turbulent 1960's, this strange and perverse ancient compendium is both evil and beyond pornographic in its vicious and visceral raw sexual power. Learn for yourself what may very well be the writings of the devil himself.

  • Luciferian Sorcery and Sethanic Magick by Michael W Ford (35 pages) @200cr

  • Black Witchcraft: Foundations of the Luciferian Path by Michael W. Ford (11 pages)

  • Irish Witchcraft and Demonology (135 pages) Irish Witchcraft and Demonology is St. John Seymour's classic study of Ireland's infernal history. In it he traces and describes the most famous witches and witchcraft of Ireland: from Dame Alice Kyteler in the Middle Ages to a trial for witchcraft in a 1911 murder court. Seymour analyzes the accounts of the accused men and women, their familiars, and associated demons and devils. This book will be a welcome read to lovers of occult history.

  • Michael W. Ford - The Book of the Witch Moon: A Grimoire of Luciferian Witchcraft, Vampyrism and Chaos Sorcery (146 pages) @500 The forbidden works of Chaos, Vampiric and Luciferian Sorcery. Containing a grimoire outlining the dark feminine current of HECATE, the book outlines the practice of Satanic or Luciferian Witchcraft from a Cunning craft viewpoint. Witch Moon explores ritual and dream Lycanthropy, Chaos Sorcery and Luciferian Ritual practice. The foundation of Book of the Witch Moon is in the darksome practice of Vampirism and Predatory Spirituality. The Nine Angles and the Trapezoid workings, inspired by Anton LaVey and presented around the cult of Daeva-Yasna, the persian demon-sorcery of Yatuk Dinoih.

 

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 Ceremonial Magic & The Power of Evocation: A System of Personal Power

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 Angels, Demons & Gods of the New Millennium

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Dark Mirror of Magick, 2nd Edition 

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Pacts With the Devil: A Chronicle of Sex, Blasphemy and Liberation

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 A Field Guide to Demons, Fairies, Fallen Angels, and Other Subversive Spirits

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Aleister Crowley's Illustrated Goetia: Sexual Evocation 

   

Pacts With the Devil: A Chronicle of Sex, Blasphemy and Liberation

by S. Jason Black, Christopher S. Hyatt

 

For the first time, a genuine manual of the dreaded "left-hand path." Braving the new Witchcraft Panic that has swept the world, S. Jason Black and Christopher S. Hyatt have written a book that places the Western magical tradition --- and the Western psyche --- in perspective.

 

Sweeping aside both the historical fabrications of "neo-paganism" and the rampant mental illness of the religious right, Black and Hyatt explore history, psychology and anthropology to reveal the true "secret doctrine" of Western culture. This work confronts the reader with his own fears and inhibitions --- and carries him beyond.

 

Comprehensively illustrated, this volume contains a detailed history of European "Black Magic" and includes new editions of 17th and 18th century Grimoires with detailed instructions for their use. Extensively illustrated.

 

 

Angels, Demons & Gods of the New Millennium

Lon Milo DuQuette

 

One of the most widely respected members of the magic community, Lon Milo DuQuette is known for his ability to address the rather intimidating aspects of magick with a casual candor; he makes the subject accessible to the initiate while still holding the interest of the experienced reader. Angels, Demons & Gods of the New Millennium is a collection of loosely connected essays surveying the state of magick in the face of the new millennium. It showcases DuQuette's knack for combining wit with profundity, producing chapters such as "Qabalah-Zen of the West" and "Demons Are Our Friends," while addressing contemporary topics such as initiations and the procession of the equinoxes.

 

 

A History of Heaven

by Jeffrey Burton Russell

 

Well-known for his historical accounts of Satan and hell, Jeffrey Burton Russell here explores the brighter side of eternity: heaven. Dispensing with the cliché images of goodness that can make even heaven seem unbearable, the author stimulates our imagination with a history of how the joy of paradise has been conceived by writers, philosophers, and artists for whom heaven was an imminent reality. Russell not only explores concepts found among the ancient Jews, Greeks, and Romans as well as early and medieval Christians, but also addresses the intellectual problems heaven poses: how does time "pass" in eternity? is heaven a place or a state? who is in and who is not? what happens to the body and soul between death and Judgment Day? Russell stresses that the best way to approach the logic-defying concept of a place occupying neither space nor time is through poetry and paradox, and through the visions of such mystics as Bernard, Julian of Norwich, and Eckhart.

 

After the Revelation of Saint John the Divine, the most sublime and encompassing portrait of heaven to date has come not from a theologian but from a poet--Dante Alighieri in his Divine Comedy. Russell's history of heaven culminates in a lively analysis of how Dante described the glories of the indescribable. The unsurpassed images of light, movement, and community that Dante uses so skillfully to convey the presence of God are rooted in the Jewish picture of heaven as a garden or court and in the Greek picture of the Elysian Fields.

 

Using current scholarly insights together with a vast store of knowledge gathered from the past, Russell takes the idea of heaven as valid and important in itself--something to be understood from the point of view of those believing in it. His very use of language immerses us in the thoughts of those who have sought heaven and provides rich material for contemplation.