A complete historical and occult study of the Lesser Key of Solomon, the Ars Goetia, and the seventy two spirits of power. Servants of the Seal explores one of the most infamous and misunderstood texts in Western occult history. The Lesser Key of Solomon has been feared, copied, condemned, studied, and reimagined for centuries, yet its true importance lies far beyond sensational tales of demon summoning.
This book examines the Goetia as a serious document of religious history, ceremonial magic, Jewish mysticism, Christian demonology, Renaissance philosophy, and Western esotericism. It follows the long development of Solomonic magic from ancient Mesopotamian and Egyptian spirit traditions to the Testament of Solomon, the Kabbalistic hierarchy of names and seals, the medieval grimoire tradition, and the seventeenth century manuscripts that preserved the Lemegeton.
Inside, readers will discover:The historical Solomon and the making of the magical kingThe ancient roots of demonology in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Near EastThe role of Jewish mysticism, Kabbalah, divine names, and angelic hierarchyThe development of grimoires from late antiquity to the RenaissanceThe structure and manuscript history of the Lesser Key of SolomonDetailed studies of the kings, dukes, princes, marquises, presidents, earls, and knights of the Ars GoetiaThe symbolism of seals, sigils, circles, triangles, and ritual authorityThe influence of the Goetia on occult revival, modern magic, literature, and popular cultureWritten for readers of occult history, demonology, grimoire studies, religious symbolism, and Western esotericism, Servants of the Seal treats the Goetia with seriousness rather than superstition.
It does not present the Lesser Key as fantasy or simple horror, but as a complex historical artefact shaped by scripture, philosophy, fear, faith, power, and the human desire to map the invisible world. This is a scholarly and atmospheric guide to one of the darkest and most fascinating inheritances of the Western magical tradition.
A complete historical and occult study of the Lesser Key of Solomon, the Ars Goetia, and the seventy two spirits of power. Servants of the Seal explores one of the most infamous and misunderstood texts in Western occult history. The Lesser Key of Solomon has been feared, copied, condemned, studied, and reimagined for centuries, yet its true importance lies far beyond sensational tales of demon summoning.
This book examines the Goetia as a serious document of religious history, ceremonial magic, Jewish mysticism, Christian demonology, Renaissance philosophy, and Western esotericism. It follows the long development of Solomonic magic from ancient Mesopotamian and Egyptian spirit traditions to the Testament of Solomon, the Kabbalistic hierarchy of names and seals, the medieval grimoire tradition, and the seventeenth century manuscripts that preserved the Lemegeton.
Inside, readers will discover:The historical Solomon and the making of the magical kingThe ancient roots of demonology in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Near EastThe role of Jewish mysticism, Kabbalah, divine names, and angelic hierarchyThe development of grimoires from late antiquity to the RenaissanceThe structure and manuscript history of the Lesser Key of SolomonDetailed studies of the kings, dukes, princes, marquises, presidents, earls, and knights of the Ars GoetiaThe symbolism of seals, sigils, circles, triangles, and ritual authorityThe influence of the Goetia on occult revival, modern magic, literature, and popular cultureWritten for readers of occult history, demonology, grimoire studies, religious symbolism, and Western esotericism, Servants of the Seal treats the Goetia with seriousness rather than superstition.
It does not present the Lesser Key as fantasy or simple horror, but as a complex historical artefact shaped by scripture, philosophy, fear, faith, power, and the human desire to map the invisible world. This is a scholarly and atmospheric guide to one of the darkest and most fascinating inheritances of the Western magical tradition.