Ars Goetia
Translated and Introduced by Paul Summers Young
The Lemegeton - The Little Key of Solomon - is the name of a family of seventeenth and eighteenth-century manuscripts inspired by Johannes Weyer's Pseudomonarchia on the one hand, and Reginald Scot's Discoverie of Witchcraft on the other, drawing upon Agrippa and Peter of Abano along the way. Some of these texts were compiled into the book we now know so well by Mathers and Crowley, the basis for magical thought and practice around the world.
Our series will draw upon various Early Modern sources and related texts, not to establish a definitive text - there is just no such thing - but to explore it as a canon of magical literature made by a subculture relating to the religious radicalism and controversy of the time, and the 'Hermetic Enlightenment'.
Our first volume pulls together a number of versions of the Ars Goetia, with a variety of extracts from source texts that ground the canon in their time and place, and explore the different ways people have interacted with the concepts and symbols, prior to the Occult Revival of the nineteenth century and the text's codification in its first modern published edition.
All the illustrations, seals, and tables of our edition will be restored and carefully reproduced.
Subsequent volumes will explore the Ars Theurgia, Ars Paulina, Ars Almadel and Ars Notoria.
Details
Hardcover bound in red Buckram
Measures 110x170 mm
Printed on 115 g wood-free, age-resistant Arena Ivory Rough paper
Sewn book block