2T: An Enochian word meaning 'also', 'it' or 'visit'



T

2T: Enochian- trans. "also", "it" or "visit".

T I (Var. Ti): Enochian- trans. "it is".

T Tz: A name of one of the nine chambers of the Aiq Beker (q.v.).

Ta: (1) Enochian- trans. "as" or "thee". (2) A name used in the use of a "magic carpet" for interrogating spirits in the Greater Key of Solomon. (3) One of the 34 consonants of the Sanskrit alphabet.

Ta Aur: (1) An Egyptian name for the constellation Taurus. (2) A name associated with the Kerub of Water of the Stations of the Kerubim in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Tâ Khu: The twenty sixth of the 64 hexagrams or patterns of the Chinese divination system called I Ching (see fig. 1). It represents good fortune, enjoyment of revenues and advantage.

[pic]

Figure 2 Tâ Kwang

[pic]

Figure 4 Tâ Yû

[pic]

Figure 3 Tâ Kwo

[pic]

Figure 1 Tâ Khu

Tâ Kwang: The thirty fourth of the 64 hexagrams or patterns of the Chinese divination system called I Ching (see fig. 2). It represents the necessity to be unyielding and act appropriately.

Tâ Kwo: The twenty eighth of the 64 hexagrams or patterns of the Chinese divination system called I Ching (see fig. 3). It represents weakness and the necessity for movement.

Tâ Yû: The fourteenth of the 64 hexagrams or patterns of the Chinese divination system called I Ching (See fig. 4). It represents great progress and success.

Taad (Var. Taoad): An angel who is a senior of the west under Ataad in the Book of Supplications and Invocations. Taad is invoked to acquire knowledge of mixture of natures.

Taafah (Deriv. Hebrew term meaning "to join together" or "to connect"): A name that appears on the first line of a gnomonic square used to become beloved "by infidels" in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

|T |A |A |F |A |H |

|A | | | | | |

|A | | | | | |

|F | | | | | |

|A | | | | | |

|H | | | | | |

Taanach (Var. Ta-Nech): Hebrew- trans. "castle".

Ta'aniel: In The Sword of Moses: An angel invoked in conjuration.

Taba (Var. Caba, Tabas, Tabaori, Tabasa, Tebasa): Enochian- trans. "to govern".

Tabaame: Enochian- trans. "prelates" or "governors".

Tabaan (Var. Tabaanu): Enochian- trans. "governor".

Tabaanu: See Tabaan.

Tabaor: A name assigned to one of the three principal elects in the eleventh degree of the Ancient and Accepted Rite of Freemasonry.

Tabaord (Var. Tabaoreda): Enochian- trans. "let her be governed".

Tabaoreda: See Tabaord.

Tabaori: See Taba.

Tabariel: The thirteenth diurnal duke under Usiel in the Operation by the Regal Spirit Usiel.

Tabas: See Taba.

Tabasa: See Taba.

Tabbat: A name that appears on the first line of a double acrostic square used to cause spirits to perform chemical operations in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

|T |A |B |B |A |T |

|A |R |U |U |C |A |

|B |U |I |R |U |B |

|B |U |R |I |U |B |

|A |C |U |U |R |A |

|T |A |B |B |A |T |

Tabejesa: See Tabges.

Tabges (Var. Tabejesa): Enochian- trans. "cave(s)".

Tabitom: A governor of the aethyr or aire Zax listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Tabitom has 1617 servants.

Tabkiel: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Table of 49 Good Angels: See Tabula Angelorum Bonorum 49.

Table of Ifá (Var. Opon Ifá): Santeria. A divination system composed of a round wooden tray, which usually has a rim carved with various African figures, often representations of the Orisha Orunla (q.v.). The Babalawo (q.v.) sprinkles a powder called "Yefa" or "Eyerosun" (q.v.) on the tray and then draws a series of vertical lines in the powder with an Irofa (deer horn) and interprets the pattern according to a series of versicles known as Oddu (q.v.). The Orisha Ifá (q.v.) was the original "owner" of the Table of Ifá, but the Orisha Orunla (q.v.) now owns it. This system is known in Yoruban beleifs as Opon Ifá.

Table of Practice: See Holy Table.

[pic]Figure 5 Table of Shewbread

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Figure 6 Tablet of Air

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Figure 7 Tablet of Earth

Table of Shewbread: This table takes its name from the ancient Hebrew practice of taking twelve loaves of unleavened bread and placing them on the altar before Jehovah every Sabbath. At the end of the week the priests would eat this bread and place fresh Lwaves on the altar. In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: The Table of Shewbread is a ritual table having an elaborate design on it (see fig. 5), used in the opening of the Zelator Grade.

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Figure 8 Tablet of Fire

Tablet of Air: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A symbol listed in "The Book of the Concourse of the Forces". See fig. 6.

Tablet of Earth: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A symbol listed in "The Book of the Concourse of the Forces". See fig. 7.

Tablet of Fire: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A symbol listed in "The Book of the Concourse of the Forces". See fig. 8.

Tablet of Union: An Enochian tablet shown in the Portal Ceremony of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. It is depicted below. The four lines from top to bottom represent the elements of air, water, earth and fire, respectively.

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Figure 9 Tablet of Water

|E |X |A |R |P |

|H |C |O |M |A |

|N |A |N |T |A |

|B |I |T |O |M |

Tablet of Water: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A symbol listed in "The Book of the Concourse of the Forces". See fig. 9.

Tablibik: One of the Genii of the fifth hour, called a "genius of fascination", found in the Nuctemeron of Apollonius of Tyana.

Taboona Tabanu (The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn holds that Taboona is a name derived from the Hebrew name of Sophia"[1] and that it signifies "the Great Mother".[2] They further hold that Tabanu is a permutation of Taboona, representing our desire and longing.[3]): It is a name used in the initiation of the Adeptus Major Grade by the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Tabots: A name used in the second and grand conjurations of Lucifuge Rocofale in the Grand Grimoire.

Tabrasol: A name used in a conjuration of Astaroth in the Grimorium Verum.

Tabris: One of the Genii of the sixth hour, called a "genius of free will", found in the Nuctemeron of Apollonius of Tyana.

Tabula Angelorum Bonorum 49 (Trans. "Table of 49 Good Angels"): Part of John Dee's Heptarchia Mystica (q.v.). The Tabula describes angelic and archangelic operations.

Tabula Angelorum Bonorum Invocationes (Trans. "Table of Invocations of the Good Angels"): An alternate title for the Tabula Angelorum Bonorum 49 (q.v.).

Tabula Sancta (Latin- trans. "Holy Table"): This was a device used in the Enochian magickal system of John Dee. It consisted of a wooden table two cubits high and two cubits square, on which a large rectangular seal containing twelve Enochian letters was inscribed, surrounded by seven circular seals representing the planetary powers. Upon this table was placed a pentacle called the Sigillum Dei Aemeth (q.v.).

Tacaros (Deriv. Greek term meaning "soft" or "tender"): A spirit subordinate to Paimon in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tachael: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 18th degree of Pisces.

Tachan (Deriv. Hebrew term meaning "grinding to powder"): A spirit subordinate to Belzebud in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tachiel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 28th degree of Pisces.

T'achnu: (1) An angel listed in Sepher Raziel. (2) An angel listed in Trachtenberg's Jewish Magic and Superstition. Trachtenberg speculates that the name was formed by manipulating the letters of the Hebrew alphabet.

Taco (Var. Tagco): An angel who is a senior of the west under Olgota in the Book of Supplications and Invocations. Taco is invoked to bring healing.

Tacouin: In Dictionaire Infernal: A type of Fay (q.v.).

Tacritau: One of the Genii of the fifth hour, called a "genius of Goetic Magic", found in the Nuctemeron of Apollonius of Tyana in Levi's Transcendental Magic.

Tadhiel (Var. Tadiel. Hebrew- trans. "righteousness of God"): In Follansbee's Heavenly History: The angel who prevented the sacrifice of Isaac.

Tadiel (Var. of Tadhiel (q.v.)): In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 12th degree of Sagittarius.

Tafel X: In The Sword of Moses: An angel involved in magick.

Tafia: Vodou. Raw rum, used in making ceremonial beverages.

Tafrac: (1) Name for the twentieth hour of the day in the Greater Key of Solomon. (2) The name of the eighth hour of the night in The Magus.

Tafsarim: In 3 Enoch: An order of Merkabah angels grouped with the Elim and Erelim (q.v.).

Taftefiah: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Taftian (Var. Taphi): In The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses: An angelic servant of Alimon (q.v.). He is said to work wonders.

Tagaririm (Var. of Tagiriron (q.v.). Hebrew- trans. "the disputers"): In Transcendental Magic: The Tagaririm whose chief was Belphegor, were the adversaries of the Malachim (q.v.).

Tagariron (Var. of Tagiriron (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A Qlippoth mentioned in the initiation of the Practicus grade.

Tagas: In 3 Enoch: An angelic conductor of the Song Uttering Choirs (q.v.).

Tagiriron (Var. Tagaririm, Tagariron. Hebrew- trans. "The Disputers"): The Qliphoth (q.v.) that is the counterpart of the Sephira Tiphareth (q.v.).

Tagco: See Taco.

Tagiel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: (a) An angel ruling the 12th and 21st degrees of Scorpio. (b) An angel ruling the 21st degree of Sagittarius.

Tagla: A name of Jehovah used in the Second Prayer and first conjuration of Lucifuge Rocofale in the Grand Grimoire.

Tagnon: A spirit subordinate to the four sub princes Oriens, Paimon Ariton and Amaimon in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tagora (Deriv. Coptic term meaning "assembly"): A spirit subordinate to Magot and Kore in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tagried: See Tagriel.

Tagriel (Var. Tagried, Thigra): (1) In Hechaloth lore: Chief of the angelic guards of the 2nd or 7th heaven. (2) An angel ruling over the twenty sixth of the twenty eight mansions of the Moon in The Magus. (3) A variation of the name Atrugiel (q.v.). (4) In Magia Naturalis et Innaturalis: One of the 7 Electors (q.v.).

Tahando: A governor of the aethyr or aire Oxo listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Tahando has 1367 servants.

Tahaoelog (Var. Tahaoeloj): One of four names of "supreme elemental kings" which appear in a paper of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn entitled "Document X: The Book of the Concourse of the Forces". These names were created manipulating the letters and numbers in the outer circle of John Dee's Sigillum Dei Aemeth (q.v.). It was later included in Donald Laycock's Complete Enochian Dictionary, but was never used by Dee. Tahaoelog was the king of Air. The other three kings were Thahebyobeaatanum (Water), Thahaaotahe (Earth) and Ohooohaaton (Fire).

Tahaoeloj (Var. of Tahaoelog (q.v.)): The elemental king of air in Liber Vel Chanokh.

Tahariel: In Sepher Raziel: One of the 70 guardian angels of children.

Tahasiyah: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tahil: See Thil.

Tahila: See Thil.

Tahilada: See Thil.

Tahilanu: See Thil.

Tahoel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 17th degree of Gemini.

Tahuti (Var. of Tehuti (q.v.)): Used by Aleister Crowley.

Takat: A name that appears on the first line of a gnomonic square used to cause snow in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

|T |A |K |A |T |

|A | | | |A |

|K | | | |K |

|A | | | |A |

|T |A |K |A |T |

Takata: Santeria. The Orisha of stones.

Takifiel: Syrian. A spellbinding angel.

Taklith: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A name which is said to be a synthesis of all of the names of the Seven Palaces of Holiness found in the Briatic world, in the Ritual of the Portal of the Vault of the Adepti.

Tal: The eighth letter of the Enochian alphabet, equivalent to the letter "M" in the English alphabet.

Ta-labo: See Talho.

Talac (Deriv. Hebrew term meaning "thy mists"): A name that appears on the first line of a gnomonic square used to make oneself invisible in the eleventh hour of the day or night in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

|T |A |L |A |C |

|A | | | |A |

|L | | | |L |

|A | | | |A |

|C |A |L |A |T |

Talah (Deriv. Hebrew term meaning "a young lamb" or "kid"): A name that appears on the first line of a gnomonic square used to discover the theft of horses and other animals in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

|T |A |L |A |H |

|A |N |I |M |A |

|L | | | | |

|A | | | | |

|H | | | | |

Talako: Santeria. A term meaning "albino".

Talba: See Talho.

Talho (Var. Talba, Ta-labo): Enochian- trans. "cup(s)".

Talia: In Mandaean mythology: One of 10 Uthri (q.v.) that accompany the sun on its daily course.

Taliahad (Var. Talliud, Teljahad, Taljahad): (1) In Papus’s Traite Elementaire de Science Occulte: The angel of water. (2) Called the angel of water, whose name is inscribed on the seventh pentacle of the Sun in the Greater Key of Solomon. (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) The name of the angel associated with the element of water. (b) An angel invoked in the consecration of the ritual cup.

Taliel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 1st degree of Sagittarius.

Tali-fu: A term mentioned in "Comment on Liber VII in class E" in Liber VII: Liber Liberi vel Lapidis Lazuli, Advmbratio Kabbalae Aegyptiorum Svb Figvra VII.

Talimol: A name used to command the elements in the Black Pullet.

Taliobe: See Tliob.

Talisman (Var. Telesma, Telesmata (q.v., cf. Charm). French, deriv. Arabic "tilsam" (“magic figure” or “Horoscope”). May also be related to the Greek "telesma" ("incantation")): An object believed to have magick properties. The Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn refered to them as Telesma.

Talismanic Figures (Var. Telesmatic Emblems): Formed by drawing lines from point to point of the Geomantic figures (Cf. Sigils).

Taljahad: See Taliahad.

Talliud (Var. of Taliahad (q.v.)): Used for an angel of water used in the twenty ninth degree of the Ancient and Accepted Rite of Freemasonry.

Talmai: (1) In The Zohar: An evil spirit who descended from the giants. (2) An angel invoked used in the consecration of parchment in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Talmid (Var. of Talmud (q.v.)): Used in the Theosophia Pneumatica, refering to a magickal aspirant.

Talmud (Var. Thaelmud. Deriv. Hebrew "talmudh" ("to learn")): The collection of writings constituting the Jewish civil and religious law, consisting of two parts: The Mishnah (text) and the Gemara (commentary).

Talvi: The magickal name of the spring in The Magus.

Tamael: In the Heptameron: An angel of Friday residing in the 3rd heaven and invoked in the east.

Tamaii: A name used in the consecration of the sacred pen in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Taman (Deriv. Hebrew term meaning "to hide or conceal"): A name that appears on the first line of a gnomonic square used to make oneself invisible in the ninth hour of the day or night in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

|T |A |M |A |N |

|A |P |A |T |E |

|M | | | |D |

|A | | | |E |

|N |E |D |A |C |

Tamarid: In the Lemegeton: An angel of the 2nd hour of the night who is a chief officer under the angel Farris.

Tamas: (1) One of the three forms of Being (Gunas) in Hindu metaphysics, the others being Sattvas and Tamas. Tamas means "darkness". Tamas is believed to make the body heavy and to cloud the faculties. (2) A term which Crowley equates with Convection, one of the three forms of what Crowley calls the "wheel of force" in magic.

Tambor (Spanish- trans. "drum"): Santeria. A ceremony in which the drums (Bataa) are played. Also known as a Bembe or a Guemilere. It commences with the Oru (q.v.), the Toques (rhythyms-q.v.) played to honor the Orishas.

Tambour (Creole- trans. "drum"): Vodou. A term used for the drums (q.v.).

Tambour Maringuin (Var. Mosquito Drum): Vodou. A drum which is associated to the Lwa Guede (q.v.).

Tamel: See Tamiel.

Tamen: An name used in the process of taking a lustral bath (q.v.) in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tammuz (Var. Thammuz or Thamuz. Trans. "son of life"): (1) An Assyro-Babylonian God of vegetation, who died and was resurrected in seasonal cycles. He was the husband of the Goddess Ishtar. (2) The tenth month of the Hebrew civil calendar. (3) A Hebrew month used in the calendar of the Scottish rite of Freemasonry.

Tamiel (Var. Tamel, Temel, Tamuel, Tumael, Tuniel, Tumiel. Hebrew- trans. "perfection of God"): (1) In Enoch I: One of the fallen angels. (2) In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 13th and 22nd degrees of Aquarius.

Tamo-Guna (Var. of Tamas (q.v.)): A name for the principle of Inertia and Darkness used in Liber LXXI: The Voice of the Silence.

Tamtemiyah: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tamuel (Var. of Tamiel (q.v.)): One of the angels of the third heaven ruling in the east on Friday in The Magus.

Tan: (1) The seventeenth of the thirty Aires of Dee's 48 Claves Angelicae. (2) The seventeenth aethyr or aire listed in Liber Vel Chanokh. (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: The seventeenth aethyr of the Fourty Eight Angelical Keys or Calls. (4) The seventeenth Aethyr of the nineteenth part of The Word of Set.

Tandal: In Hechaloth lore: One of the 64 angelic wardens of the 7 celestial halls.

Tandariel: An angel listed in Voltaire's Of Angels, Genii and Devils and in Historia Religionis Veterum Persarum.

Ta-Nech (Var. of Taanach (q.v.)): An entity mentioned in Liber Al Vel Legis.

Taneha: A name used in an invocation of the four quarters in circle casting in The Magus.

Tangedem: A minister of Almiras, the master of invisibility, who is named in a spell for invisibility in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tangiel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 10th degree of Virgo.

Tanha: A term meaning the instinct for self preservation in Liber LXXI.

Taninivver: In Bamberger's Fallen Angels: Oen of the 7 surviving evil emanations of Jehovah.

Tankf'il: Arabic. A guardian angel invoked in exorcism rituals.

T'an-Mo: Chinese. (1) A Chinese devil of covetousness and desire. (2) One of the Infernal names listed in Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible.

Tantarez: A name used to enter houses and read people's thoughts in the Black Pullet.

Tantra (Hindu- trans. "loom, thread, web, ritual or doctrine"): A school of Mahayna Buddhism in Northern India, teaching that Satori can be realized through Theurgic practices. Much of the Tantric philosophy concerns the physcial manifestations of sex and sexuality.

Tantric: Pertaining to Tantra (q.v.).

Tao: See Dao.

Tao Teh King: An alternate name for the eighth installment of a serial journal of volume III of Crowley's The Equinox, appearing in this form in 1975.

Taoad: See Taad.

Taoagla (Var. Taongla): A governor of the aethyr or aire Tex listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Taoagla has 4632 servants.

Taongla: See Taoagla.

Taotzem: A name used in an invocation to Vti in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Tap: See Gaap.

Tapamal: A governor of the aethyr or aire Loe listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Tapamal has 2658 servants.

Taphael: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 7th degree of Aries.

Taphat: See Japhet.

Taphi: See Taftian.

Taphtir Sixtah Koti Kot Kphtitah Kab Teni'ah Sat Hatot Wiph Titah: A phrase used on a seal used to drive forth an enemy in Henri Gamache's Mystery of the Long Lost 8th, 9th and 10th Books of Moses.

Taphthartharath (Var. of Toptharthareth (q.v.)): (1) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A spirit associated with Conjunctio and Albus. (b) The spirit of Mercury. (c) A name used in the ceremony of the Practicus Grade. (2) In The Magus: (a) A name "answering to the numbers of Mercury." (b) A name representing the spirit of Mercury. (3) A name answering to Mercury in Liber O.

Taphtharthareth: See Tophtharthareth.

Tar: In Mandaean mythology: One of 10 Uthri (q.v.) that accompany the sun on its daily course.

Tara (Probably deriv. Hebrew "tarah" ("station")): (1) An angel listed in La Kabbale Pratique. (2) One of the seventy two names of Jehovah given in The Royal Masonic Cyclopedia.

Tarab: One of the Genii of the twelfth hour, called a "genius of extortion", found in the Nuctemeron of Apollonius of Tyana in Levi's Transcendental Magic.

Tarados: A spirit subordinate to the four sub princes Oriens, Paimon, Ariton and Amaimon in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Taralim (Hebrew- trans. "mighty strongholds"): A spirit subordinate to Amaimon in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Taran (Var. of Taranus): Celtic. The Welsh God of Thunder, cognate with Taranus. This is still the Welsh word for thunder.

Tarananu: See Tranan.

Taranava: In the Lemegeton: An angel of the third altitude of the Almadel.

Taranus (Var. Taran. Trans. “the thunderer”): Celtic. The Gaulish God of thunder and the wheel of the year.

Taraziel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 9th degree of Pisces.

Tarchimache: In the Grimorium Verum: (a) A subordinate of Beelzebub. (b) A co-ruler of African spirits along with the spirit Fleurety.

Taret: A spirit subordinate to Astarot and Asmodee in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tarfaniel: In Hechaloth lore: One of the angelic guards of the gates of the west wind.

Tarfiel (Var. Tarpiel. Hebrew- trans. "God norishes"): (1) In Hechaloth lore: One of the angelic guards of the gates of the east wind. (2) In Vocabulaire de L'Angelologie: An angel invoked to cure ignorance.

Tarianu: See Trian.

Tariel: One of the angels of summer in The Magus.

Tarihimal: In the Grimorium Verum, Tarihimal and Agalierept govern the spirit Elelogap.

Tarinuta: See Trint.

Tarmiel: One of the angels of the second heaven ruling in the east on Wednesday in The Magus.

Tarmitzod: In the Lemegeton, a lesser officer under the angel Mendrion.

Tarniel: (1) In Hechaloth lore: An angelic guard of the gates of the east wind. (2) In the Heptameron: An angel of Wednesday residing in the 3rd heaven and invoked in the east.

Tarocchi: See Tarot.

Tarocco: See Tarot.

Tarofe: See Trof.

Tarot: A French term for a set of cards used for divination, from which modern playing cards are derived. This was derived from the Italian term for these cards, Tarocchi. The term Tarocco was also used, though this is actually the singular form of the plural Tarocchi. Other names used for these cards are the Italian "Atutti" and the French "Atouts".

There are many different variants of the Tarot, the oldest dating back to the late fifteenth century CE in Italy: the Charles VI deck and the Visconti-Sforza deck. A deck of Tarot cards is divided into two parts: The Major Arcana (greater secrets), consisting of twenty two named cards, and the Minor Arcana (minor secrets). The word arcana is derived from the Latin term "arcanus" ("hidden", "closed"). The Minor Arcana consists of four suits (Cups, Wands or Rods, Pentacles and Swords) each having 10 cards and four face cards (Page, Knight, Queen and King). The Major Arcana is also often known as the Trumps. A person using Tarot selects a number of the cards and lays them out in one of several traditional patterns and reads them to divine the future.

Modern playing cards have omitted most of the Major Arcana, keeping only the card named "The Fool" as the "Joker" card. Modern decks have also eliminated the "Page" card from the suits of the Minor Arcana, the Knights being renamed "Jacks".

2) A name in the Black Pullet used to enter houses and read people's thoughts.

Tarpiel: See Tarfiel.

Tarquam: (1) In the Heptameron: An angel of autumn. (2) One of the angels of autumn in The Magus.

Tarshish (Hebrew- trans. "pearl"): (1) In The Zohar: One of the chief angles of the order of Tarshishim (q.v.). (2) In the Bible: A coastal place, mentioned in several books of the Bible, including Genesis, 1 Chronicles, Psalms, Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Jonah.

Tarshishim (Var. Tarsisim, Tharshishim. Hebrew- trans. "brilliant ones"): Judaic. An angelic order.

Tarsisim: See Tarshishim.

Tartago: Santeria. A type of plant used in Despojos (q.v.) and Riegos (q.v.) to dispell evil influences.

Tartaruch (Var. of Tartaruchus (q.v.)): In the apocryphal Vision of Paul: An angel of punishment.

Tartaruchi: Plural of Tartaruch (q.v.).

Tartaruchus (Var. Tararuch, Tartaruchi, Tatirokos. Probably deriv. of Tartarus (q.v.)): In the Apocalypse of Paul: The chief of the angels controlling the torments of Hell.

Tartarus: Greek. An infernal abyss below Hades (q.v.) into which the God Zeus cast the rebellious Titans.

Tarwan: In Mandaean mythology: One of 10 Uthri (q.v.) that accompany the sun on its daily course.

Tasataxa: See Tustax.

Ta-sert (Var. Tchesert, Ta-tcheseret): A common Egyptian name for a tomb.

Tashiel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 13th and 22nd degrees of Capricorn.

Tashriel: In Hechaloth lore: An angel guarding the entrance to the 1st heaven.

Tasma (Deriv. Hebrew/ Chalean terms meaning "weak"): (1) In The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage: (a) A spirit subordinate to the four sub princes Oriens, Paimon Ariton and Amaimon. (b) A name that appears on the first line of a double acrostic square used to fly anywhere in a black cloud. This square is reproduced below:

|T |A |S |M |A |

|A |G |E |I |M |

|S |E |V |E |S |

|M |I |E |G |A |

|A |M |S |A |T |

Tastax: See Tustax.

Tastoxo: A governor of the aethyr or aire Oxo listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Tastoxo has 1886 servants.

Tata Legua: Palo Mayombe. A nkita (q.v.) that is the equivalent of Eleggua in Santeria (q.v., cf. Pengun Futila).

Tata Nkisi: Palo Mayombe. An alternate term for a Mayombero (q.v.), meaning owner of the Nkitas (q.v.).

Tata'il: Islamic. A guardian angel invoked in exorcism rituals.

Tatan (Var. Tatanu): Enochian- trans. "wormwood".

Tatanu: See Tatan.

Ta-tcheseret: See Ta-sert.

Tatirokos: See Tartaruchus.

Tatonon: A name used in the process consecrating the lustral bath with salt in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tatriel: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tatrusia: In Sepher Raziel: One of the 70 guardian angels of children.

Tattwa (Var. Tatwa): A Hindu term for the five elements that issue from Swara (q.v.) the great breath, cognate with the five elements found in Western systems: Privithi (earth), Vayu (air), Tejas (fire), Apas (water) and Akasa (spirit). Each of the Tattwas has a characteristic symbol that is used for meditation and for skrying.

Tatwa (Var. of Tattwa (q.v.)): Meditation exercises referred to in Liber LXXI.

Tau: (1) The twenty second and final letter of the Hebrew alphabet (ץ), equivalent to "T" or "Th" in English. It represents both the phallus and the sign of the cross and is a mark of the "chosen ones". It is assigned the numerical value of "400" in the Qabalah. (2) The nineteenth letter of the Greek alphabet (τ). (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) An Egyptian term meaning "tomorrow". (b) A name which appears on the Seven Branched Candlestick (q.v.). (4) In the Greater Key of Solomon: (a) A anem used in conjuration. (b) A name of Jehovah, used in a conjuration. (c) A name used in the consecration of pentacles. (5) A symbol of Royal Arch Freemasonry. (6) In Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli: (a) A symbol mentioned in the cry of the aethyr Zid. (b) A term used in the cry of the aethyr Deo.

Tau Cross: The Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art tells us that the tau cross was placed upon the doorposts of Israelite homes at the first Passover in Egypt .[4] This may have been copied from the Egyptian practice of placing an Ankh on the doorposts as a charm to bring good fortune. This in turn may have been what gave some people the reverse notion that the Ankh was created from the Tau cross. The Tau cross has shown up in many different cultures. D’Aviella referred to the tau cross as “Saint Anthony’s Cross” although the connection to this saint is a myth.[5] Saint Phillip is another saint often associated with the tau cross.

Taueret (Var. Opet, Apet, Thouerist): Egyptian. The hippopotamus Goddess of childbirth.

Taul: A name used in an invocation to Scirlin in the Grimorium Verum.

Tauriel: In Mandaean lore: An Uthri summoned by the fingering of phylacteries. (2) In Agrippa's Three Books of Occult Philosophy: A governing angel of the zodiac.

Ta-urt (Var. Apt, Sheput): Egyptian. A Goddess who is the wife of the God Set or Typhon. She is depicted as a hippopotamus with a disc, horns and plumes on her head. Sometimes she is depicted with a woman's head. Her titles include "mistress of the Gods" and "bearer of the Gods".

[pic]

Figure 10 Taurus

Taurus: Greek. (1) Zeus took the form of a bull to court Europa. Afterward Zeus placed the image of the bull, Taurus, in the sky. (2) In Astrology: One of the twelve signs of the Zodiac, represented as a bull. Its symbol is depicted in figure 10. Its sun sign period lasts from 21 April to 21 May. Positive Taurean traits include practicality, reliability, patience, endurance, persistence, strong will, devotion, and trustworthiness. Negative Taurean traits include self-indulgence, tediousness, inflexibility, greed, stubborness, indignance, and obession with routines. (2) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A sign of the Zodiac related to: (i) YHHV. (ii) Vau. (iii) Ephraim. (iv) Asmodel. (v) The Colour red-orange.

Taus Melek: See Melek Taus.

Taus-e Malak: See Melek Taus.

Tavael: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 11th degree of Libra.

Tavtavel: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Taxs: See Faxs.

Tazael: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 29th degree of Virgo.

Tazbun: In Sepher Raziel: One of the angels of the months.

Tbl: See Tilb.

Tcha-Tcha: Santeria. The smaller head of the Bataa (q.v.).

Tcham: (1) A sceptre, bearing representations of the head and tail of of the God Set, which was once the symbol of Pharaonic authority. (2) A sceptre which is a symbol of the God Set used by the Temple of Set.

Tchesert: See Ta-sert.

Tchornibog: "The Black God". A Russian deity mentioned in "Homage to Tchort" in LaVey's The Satanic Rituals.

Tchort (Var. Tchortu): (1) A Russian name for the Christian Devil, the name being derived from the name Tchornibog (q.v.). (2) One of the Infernal names listed in Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible. (3) A Russian name for the devil used in "Homage to Tchort" in LaVey's The Satanic Rituals.

Tchortu: See Tchort.

Tdim (Var. Tdnim): (1) An angel who is a senior of the west under Atdim in the Book of Supplications and Invocations. Tdim is invoked to move things to other places. (2) A name used to invoke the Kerubim in Liber Vel Chanokh.

Tdnim: See Tdim.

Teaa: (1) One of the names of Jehovah according to the Book of Supplications and Invocations. (2) A secret name of Jehovah used in the opening of the temple in the fifth degree in Liber Vel Chanokh. (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A name of Jehovah associated with: (a) Virgo. (b) The Tribe of Naphthali. (c) The archangel Hamaliel. (d) The Governing Angel Zurchol.

Teba'at: In apocalyptic literature: One of the 7 leaders of the apostate angels.

Tebas: See Taba.

Tebeth: (1) The fourth month of the Hebrew civil calendar. (2) A Hebrew month used in the calendar of the Scottish rite of Freemasonry.

Tebliel: In The Heirarchy of the Blessed Angels: One of 7 angels ruling the earth.

Tebunah: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A synonym for Aima (q.v.) used in the initiation of the Philosophus grade.

Techial: In Hechaloth lore: An angel guarding the entrance to the 5th heaven.

Tedoand: See Tedoond.

Tedoond (Var. Tedoand): A governor of the aethyr or aire Vta listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Tedoond has 2673 servants.

Tefar (Yoruban- trans. "to write" or "to mark"): Santeria. A term for the marking of the Table of Ifa (q.v.) with the Irofa (q.v.).

Tefnut: Egyptian. (1) A lion Goddess of dew and rain, whose name means "the spitter". She was the daughter of Ra and twin sister and wife of the air God Shu. Sometimes she was combined with her brother Shu into one aspect called Shuti (q.v.). She was beleived to take away the thirst of the spirits of the deceased. (2) A God mentioned in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Teh King (Var. of I Ching (q.v.)): A name for the I Ching used by Aleister Crowley in "Comment on Liber VII in class E" in Liber VII: Liber Liberi vel Lapidis Lazuli, Advmbratio Kabbalae Aegyptiorum Svb Figvra VII.

Tehom: In The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses: A ministering angel invoked in magick rituals.

Tehomedehee: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A spirit governing Water and Earth mentioned in the section on Enochian Tablets.

Tehoriel: In Hechaloth lore: One of the angelic guards of the gates of the south wind.

Tehuti (Var. Djehuti, Astennu, Ap-rehui, Thoth (Greek), Tho-oth, Tahuti. Egyptian- trans. “the measurer”): Egyptian. The God of wisdom and writing. He represents the divine intelligence and was the scribe of the Gods. He created himself and is attributed with the invention of the arts and sciences. He is usually depicted as a man with the head of an ibis. In his aspect as the judge of the Gods he is known as Ap-rehui ("the judge of the two combatants"). The animal sacred to Tehuti is a dog headed ape, and sometimes Tehuti is depicted as an ape holding a pallette full of writing reeds. His wife is the Goddess Ma'at.

Teiaiel: In La Kabbale Pratique: An angel of divination who is the patron of maritime and commercial ventures. Teiaiel is a Throne angel who is associated to Syth (q.v.).

Teiazel: In La Kabbale Pratique: An angel of the order of Powers who is the patron of literature, art and libraries. He is associated to Aterichinis.

Tejas (Var. Agni (q.v.)): One of the five Tattwas (q.v.), symbolizing the element of fire, whose symbol is a red equilateral triangle (see fig. 11). The taste associated with this Tattwa is spicy, its principle is heat and the sound associated with it is the word "Ram".

Telaah (Possibly deriv. Hebrew "ThVLOH" ("worm")): A name that appears on the first line of a gnomonic square used to prevent caves from falling in in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

[pic]

Figure 11 Tejas

|T |E |L |A |A |H |

|E | | | | |A |

|L | | | | |L |

|A | | | | |A |

|A | | | | |A |

|H |A |A |L |E |T |

Telal: A Sumerian word translated as "wicked demon warrior" in the Necronomicon.

Telantes: An angel invoked in the preparation of virgin earth and wax in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Telchines (Deriv. Greek "thelgein" ("to enchant")): Greek. (1) The Telchines were the aboriginal inhabitants of the island of Rhodes, named after a Nymph by that name who lived there. The sea God Poseidon had fallen in love with a Telchine named Halia and Halia had given birth to Rhodes and six sons. The six sons later insulted Aphrodite and committed other acts so foul that Poseidon sank them underground and they became evil demons. The three Danae (q.v.) were also referred to as the Telchines. (2) Six demons mentioned in The Magus, whom Barrett also calls the "Alastores", identified as Acteus, Megalezius, Ormenus, Lycus, Nicon and Mimon.

Telekinesis: See Psychokinesis.

Telemene: Palo Mayombe. A term meaning "to spy".

Telemene nkisi: Palo Mayombe. An order to a spirit to spy on someone.

Telepathy (Greek “tele” (“far”) and “pathy” (“feeling”)): The transmission of sensory data and/or thoughts from one mind to another without the use of normal sensory communication.

Telesma: See Talisman.

Telesmata: In Occidental Ceremonial Magick: (a) Images built up in the imagination using letters of the Divine or Angelic Name to provide the character and nature of the form. (b) Another name for a talisman (q.v.).

Telesmatic Emblems: See Talismanic Figures.

Telesmatic Figures (Var. Telesmatic Images): The Telesmatic Figures or Images are said to belong to Yetzirah (q.v.). A system of using the spelling of a spirit's name to create a visual image of that spirit. In this system the first letter is taken to represent the spirit's head and the last letter its feet. Each letter is related to its equivalent letter in the Hebrew alphabet, each of these being associated with certain characteristics (See table, below). The sex of the figure created is determined by one of two methods:

(a) The first relies upon the predominence of feminine or masculine letters in the name.

(b) The second assigns gender depending upon whether or not the sound of the Hebrew letter is arrested (masculine) or prolonged (female).

|Hebrew Letter |Attributes |

|Aleph |spiritual, winged, epicene, male tendency, thin |

|Beth |active and slight, male |

|Gimel |grey, beautiful, full face and body, female |

|Daleth |beautiful, attractive, full face and body, female |

|Heh |fierce, strong, fiery, female |

|Vau |steady, strong, heavy, clumsy, masculine |

|Zayin |thin, intelligent, male |

|Cheth |full face, rather expressionless, female |

|Teth |strong, fiery, female |

|Yod |white, delicate, female |

|Caph |big, strong, male |

|Lamed |well proportioned, female |

|Mem |relflective, dreamy, epicene, female tendency |

|Nun |square and determined face, dark, male |

|Samekh |thin, expressive, male |

|Ayin |mechanical, male |

|Peh |fierce, strong, resolute, female |

|Tzaddi |thoughtful, intellectual, female |

|Qoph |full face, male |

|Resh |proud, dominant, male |

|Shin |fierce, active, epicene, male tendency |

|Tau |dark, grey, epicene, male tendency |

Telesmatic Images: See Telesmatic Figures.

Teletarchae: Chadean. Celestial intellligences or luminaries.

Teletiel: In Agrippa's Three Books of Occult Philosophy: One of the governing angels of the zodiac.

Teli: One of the seventy two names of Jehovah given in The Royal Masonic Cyclopedia.

Teljahad: See Taliahad.

TeLwah: See Teloc.

Telo: Celtic. A horse Goddess of the Dordogne.

Teloc (Var. TeLwah, Teloch, Teloca, Telocahe, Telokake): Enochian- trans. "death".

Teloca: See Teloc.

Telocahe: See Teloc.

Teloch: See Teloc.

Telokake: See Teloc.

Tely: A name used in a conjuration of Astaroth in the Grimorium Verum.

Tem (Var. of Atum (q.v.)): (1) Egyptian. A name for the Underworld. (2) A name for the underworld used in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Teman (Hebrew- trans. "on the right hand"): (1) A Biblical tribe first mentioned in Genesis 36:11. (2) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A Biblical tribe mentioned in the initiation of the Philosophus grade.

Temel: See Tamiel.

Temeluch (Var. Temlakos, Temeluchus, Abtelmoluchos, Temleyakos): In Apocryphal literature: (a) A guardian angel of children. (b) An angel of Gehinna (hell).

Temeluchus: See Temeluch.

Temira De-Temirin (Hebrew "TMIRA DTMITIN" ("the Concealed of the Concealed")): A title given by the Golden Dawn to Kether (q.v.).

Temlakos: See Temeluch.

Temleyakos: See Temeluch.

Tempast: In the Lemegeton: An angel of the 1st hour of the night who is a lesser officer under the angel Gamiel.

[pic]Figure 12 Temperance

Temperance: In Tarot, the fourteenth card of the Major Arcana (q.v.), depicted in fig. 12. Depending upon its position in the reading, it may represent: economy, moderation, frugality, management, accomodation.

Tempha: In Waite's The Occult Sciences: A planetary genius of Saturn.

Temphioth: One of the Genii of the Qlippoth in Liber CCXXXI.

Templars: See Knights Templar.

Temple of Set: Michael Aquino, a former high ranking member of Anton LaVey's Church of Satan, left the Church of Satan in 1975 with about two thirds of the membership and founded a new organization called the Temple of Set.

The membership of the Temple of Set is organized into groups called Pylons. Members are referred to as Setians. There are six degrees of initiation within the Temple of Set. In order from lowest to highest, they are: Setian, Adept, Priest or Priestess of Set, Magister or Magistra Templi, Magus or Maga, and Ipsissimus or Ipsissima. Each of these ranks has a particular colour cord or trim for their ritual robes, as outlined in the following table:

|RANK |COLOUR |

|Setian |White |

|Adept |Red |

|Priest or Priestess |Silver |

|Magister or Magistra Templi |Blue |

|Magus or Maga |Purple |

|Ipsissimus or Ipsissima |Gold |

Temple of Solomon the King, The: A magickal commentary written by Aleister Crowley.

Tempters (Var. Ensnarers): (1) In The Magus: (a) One of the nine orders of devils, the others being False Spirits, Spirits of Lying, Vessels of Iniquity, Airy Powers, Avengers of wickedness, Furies, Jugglers and Sifters or Triers. (b) One of the ten orders of the damned, the others being Airy Powers, Lying Spirits, Revengers of Wickedness, Jugglers, False Gods, Furies, Sifters or Triers, Vessels of Iniquity and Wicked Souls Bearing Rule. (c) One of the twelve degrees of the damned and of devils, the others being Apostates, Jugglers, Vessels of Iniquity, Infidels, Furies, False Gods, Revengers of Wickedness, Sifters or Triers, Witches, Airy Powers and Lying Spirits.

Temu (Probably var. of Atum or Tem (q.v.)): A God mentioned in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Temura (Var. ThMVRH, Themura or Temurah. Hebrew ThMVRH ("permutation")): A method of reinterpreting Hebrew words and phrases to gain mystical insights. The literal Qabalah (q.v.) is divided into three parts: GMTRIA ("Gematria"), NVTRIQVN ("Notariqon") and ThMVRH ("Temura"). In Temura, letters were substituted for letters following or preceding them in the Hebrew alphabet according to certain rules, forming new words.

One set of possible combinations are tabulated in the "Table of Combinations of TzIRVP (tziruph)". There are twenty two methods in this table: ALBTh (Albath), ABGTh, AZBV, ALBK, APBO, AThBSH, AHDTh, AChBZ, AMBL, ATzBP, ADBG, ATBCh, ANBM, AQBTz, AHBD, AIBT, ASBN, ARBQ, AVBH, AKBI, AOBS and AShBR. Two additonal methods are sometimes added: ABGD and ALBM.

There are other tables used in Temura:

(a) A "Rational Table of Tziruph", which also has twenty two combinations.

(b) Thashraq (ThShRQ). Thashraq is simply a method involving writing a word backwards.

(c) The "Qabalah of the Nine Chambers" or AIQ BKR (Aiq Beker). The Aiq Beker creates sigils from names by assigning numerical values to letters of the Hebrew alphabet and arranging them into nine groups or chambers of a square according to the similarity of their numerical equivalents. For example, the letters Aleph (1), Yod (10) and Qoph (100) are grouped together as they all begin with 1, the letters Beth (2), Caph (20) and Resh (200) are grouped together as they all begin with 2, and so on through the whole alphabet. Once the letters of the name are assigned their numerical values a line is drawn on the magic square of the Aiq Beker, tracing the reduced numericals equivalents in the order in which they spell out the name, creating a sigil. A small circle is placed at the end of the figure thus produced, completing it.

(d) Three "Tables of the Commutations", known as the "Right", the "Averse" and the "Irregular". The Tables of Commutations are formed by writing in the letters into a table containing 484 sqares. For the Right table the letters are written across from right to left, each new line starting one letter further into the alphabet (ie: first line begins with "a", second line with "b" and so on). For the Averse table the alphabet is written from left to right backwards. The Irregular table is too complex to bother describing here.

(2) A term used in the cry of the aethyr Deo in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Temurah: See Temura.

Tenaciel: (1) In The Heptameron: An angel of Friday residing in the 3rd heaven and invoked in the east. (2) One of the angels of the third heaven ruling in the east on Friday in The Magus.

Tenancy: In Astrology: The location of a planet in a Sign or House (q.v.).

Tendac: See Tendec.

Tendec (Var. Tendac): An angel whose name is invoked in the obtaining of blood from a bat in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Teneba: A name used in an invocation of the four quarters in circle casting in The Magus.

Tenet (Latin- trans. "he holds"): In the Greater Key of Solomon. (a) A name used in a spell for favour and love. (b) A name inscribed in the double acrostic (q.v.) on the second pentacle of Saturn.

Tenochtitian: (1) The capital city of the Aztec empire. (2) A city mentioned in the Statement of Asmodeus in the Diabolicon.

Tentator: A name used in a love spell in the Book of True Black Magic.

Tephras: See Tephros.

Tephros (Var. Tephras): In The Testament of Solomon: A demon of ashes who brings darkness and sets fire to fields.

Tepiseuth: In La Kabbale Pratique: One of the hourly angels.

Ter amb rosam oleo: A phrase used in an invocation to Nia in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Terafniel: In Vocabulaire de L'Angelologie: An angel of prey.

Teraphim (Hebrew- trans. "obscenity"): In The Zohar: Male and female idols.

Terata: A name used in the use of a "magic carpet" for interrogating spirits in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Terathel (Var. of Ierathel (q.v.)): In La Kabbale Pratique: An angel of the order of Dominations who promotes light, civilization and liberty.

Terfita: A name used to destroy opposition and compel rebelious spirits in the Black Pullet.

Teriapel: In The Secret Grimoire of Turiel: An intelligence of the planet Venus.

Terly (Var. of Irix (q.v.)): In the Grimorium Verum: A spirit who can procure the garter of a loved one.

Terpandu: A name used to transport a person anywhere in the world in the Black Pullet.

Terpsichore: Greek. The Muse (q.v.) of music and dancing.

Terra (Var.Terrae. Latin- trans. “earth”): A name used in the second conjuration of Lucifuge Rocofale in the Grand Grimoire.

Terreiros: The name for temples of Candomble (q.v.) and Macumba (q.v.) in Brazil.

Terribilis ardet rex (Latin): A phrase used in an invocation to Nia in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Tes: See Teth.

Teser: The name of the red crown of Horus, one of the two crowns of Upper and Lower Egypt combined in the crown of the Pharaoh (See Sekhet).

Tesorit: A name used to confer profound knowledge in the Black Pullet.

Tessub: One of the names of Rimmon (q.v.).

"Testament of Solomon, The": An article by Frederick Conybeare in The Jewish Quarterly Review, vol.11, pp. 1-45, in 1898.

Testanar: A name used to bestow virtue in the Black Pullet.

Testipas: A word used in the spell of the Gold Finding Hen in the Black Pullet.

Tetahatia: One of the Spirits listed in the Grimoire of Armadel. Tetahatia is described as a spirit who offers protection from one's enemies and can make you appear formidable. His sigil, depicted in figure 13, is used to blind enemies with darkness, to cause fear and to show how blessings may fall.

Tetelestai: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A term used in the Evocation of the Angel Chassan to Visible Appearance.

Teteoinan: See Tonantzin.

[pic]

Figure 13 Sigil of Tetahatia

Teth (Var. Tes): (1) The ninth letter of the Hebrew alphabet (ט), equivalent to the letter "T" in the English alphabet. It means "serpent" or "snake". It is assigned the numerical value of "9" in the Qabalah. (2) A name used in conjuration in the Greater Key of Solomon. (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A letter invoked in the consecration of the Lotus Wand. (b) A letter associated with Leo.

Tetra: (1) A "great angel" called upon in the conjuration of Wednesday in The Magus. (2) In The Secret Grimoire of Turiel: An angel invoked to fulfil the desires of the invocant.

Tetragram: (1) A word of four letters. (2) A name used in the grand conjuration in the Grand Grimoire.

Tetragrammation (Var. of Tetragrammaton (q.v.)): A name of Jehovah used in a conjuration in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tetragrammaton (Var. Tetragrammation, Thetragrammaton. Greek- trans. "four letter word"): (1) This title refers to the four Hebrew letters Yod He Vau He ("YHVH", "JHVH" or "IHVH"), which was said to be the unpronouncable name of God. Because of the belief that once you know the real name of a thing you can create it by its sound the ancient Hebrews had prohibitions about speaking aloud the name of their God, creating the Tetragrammaton and using corruptions of the pronounciations of the Tetragrammaton such as "Yahweh", which later became "Jehovah". As a point of interest the early Hebrews, like the Phonecians, didn't usually use vowel characters, which is why there aren't any in the Tetragrammaton. (2) A name used in an invocation for sacrifice and in an invocation to Scirlin in the Grimorium Verum. (3) A name used in the preparation of parchment in The True Book of Black Magic. (4) In the Lemegeton: (a) A name inscribed on the triangle of Solomon. (b) A name inscribed on the pentacles surrounding the candles outside of the magickal circle. (c) A name inscribed on the ring of the exorcist. (d) A name used in the First, Second and Third Conjurations of a spirit. (e) A name used in the Invocation of the King. (f) A name used in the Chain Curse. (g) A name inscribed on the pentagram of Solomon. (5) A name inscribed in the Circle of White Magic in the Grand Grimoire. (6) In the Grimoire of Honorius: (a) A name used in circle casting. (b) A name used in a conjuration of Lucifer. (c) A name used in a universal conjuration. (d) A name used in a conjuration of Surgat. (e) A name used in the conjuration of the book. (f) A name inscribed on the grand pentacle of Solomon. (g) One of the seventy two names of Jehovah. (7) A name invoked in a rite of necromancy in the Verus Jesuitarum Libellus. (8) In the Greater Key of Solomon: (a) A name used in conjuration. (b) A name used in the process of taking a lustral bath. (c) A name used in the preparation of parchment. (9) A spirit invoked in a "Kabalistic Invocation of Solomon" to evoke Judaic spirits in Levi's Transcendental Magic. (10) In The Magus: (a) A name inscribed on the back of a sacred pentacle . (b) One of the ten general names of Jehovah. (c) A name inscribed in the inner circle in the casting of the magic circle. (d) A name inscribed on the magician's sword. (e) A name invoked at the beginning of the circle casting. (f) A name used in an exorcism of the spirits of the air. (11) A name inscribed on a base for a crystal for receiving visions according to Trithemius. (12) In Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli: (a) The name of the eyes mentioned in the cry of the aethyr Ikh. (b) A name of Jehovah found in the cry of the aethyr Zax. (c) A "holy name of God" used in the invocation of the aethyr Zax. (d) A name used in the cry of the aethyr Deo. (e) A name used in the cry of the aethyr Paz. (13) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A name used in the ceremony of the Practicus and Philosophus grades. (b) A name associated with the Palace of Benevolence, one of the Seven Palaces of Holiness found in the Briatic world, in the Ritual of the Portal of the Vault of the Adepti. (c) A name of power used in the Evocation of the Angel Chassan to Visible Appearance. (d) One of the Divine names attributed to the Sephira Chokmah (q.v.). (14) In the Grimoire of Armadel: (a) One of the names of Jehovah used in the conjuration of spirits. (b) One of the names which appears on the Sigil of Gabriel.

Tetragrammaton Adonai: An alternative title for Thoth used in Liber O.

Tetragrammaton Elohim: (1) One of the Ten Principal Names of Jehovah in The Magus, the others being Eheia, Jod, El, Elohim Gibor, Eloha, Tetragrammaton Sabaoth, Elohim Sabaoth, Sadai and Adonai Melech. (2) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A name of Jehovah. (b) A name used in the initiation of the Zelator Grade. (c) A name used in the initiations of the Practicus and Philosophus Grades. (3) A name of Jehovah used in The Grimoire of Armadel.

Tetragrammaton Jehovah: A name used in an invocation following the invoctaion of the four quarters in circle casting in The Magus.

Tetragrammaton Sabaoth (Var. of Jehovah Tzabaoth (q.v.). Also appears as Adonai Sabaoth): One of the Ten Principal Names of Jehovah in The Magus, the others being Eheia, Jod, El, Elohim Gibor, Eloha, Tetragrammaton Elohim, Elohim Sabaoth, Sadai and Adonai Melech.

Tetragrammaton Tzabaoth (Var. Tetragrammaton Tzaboath): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A name of Jehovah used in the initiation of the Philosophus grade.

Tetragrammaton Tzaboath (Var. of Jehovah Tzabaoth (q.v.)): A name of Jehovah used at the opening of the temple in the fifth degree in Liber Vel Chanokh.

Tetrahedron: (1) A solid figure with four triangular faces. (2) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, the admission badge for the Path of Shin, representing the simple fire of Nature and the latent or hidden fire.

Tetrasiyah: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Teu (Var. Jen): A word used in the Grand and Supreme Appellation in Apono's Magickal Elements.

Teumiel: Qabalistic.: A name for the 7th of the qlippoth (q.v.).

Teut: One of the seventy two names of Jehovah given in The Royal Masonic Cyclopedia.

Teutates (Var. Totates, Tutates. Trans. “the God of the People”, deriv. Goedelic “teuta” (“the people”)): Celtic. A Gaulish God of the arts, journeys and commerce. He appears to have originally been a Germanic tribal god. Caesar equated him with the Roman God Mercury. The name comes to us from the writings of the Roman Lucan, and may not have been the original name. The Celts refered to their Germanic neighbours as "Teutons", a name still used to refer to Gemanic peoples.

Teveni: (1) A name that is used in a spell of invisibility in the Greater Key of Solomon. (2) A name used in a spell of invisibility in the English edition of the Book of True Black Magic.

Tex: (1) The thirtieth and lowest of the thirty Aires of Dee's 48 Claves Angelicae. (2) The thirtieth and lowest aethyr or aire listed in Liber Vel Chanokh. (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: The thirtieth aethyr of the Fourty Eight Angelical Keys or Calls. (4) The thirtieth Aethyr of the nineteenth part of The Word of Set.

Tezalel: In La Kabbale Pratique: An angel who controls marital fidelity.

Tezcatlipoca (Aztec- trans. "smoking mirror"): Aztec. God of the Sun. He is also the god of music and dancing. (2) One of the Infernal names listed in Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible. LaVey calls him the "Aztec God of Hell", probably because prisoners were sacrificed to Tezcatlipoca, although Tezcatlipoca was not a God of the Dead.

T.G.A.O.T.U. (Acronym for "The Grand Architect Of The Universe"): Freemasonry. A title of the Supreme Being.

Th. A. M: See Theoricus Adeptus Minor.

Tha: One of the 34 consonants of the Sanskrit alphabet.

Thaelmud (Var. of Talmud): Vodou. The fourth of the five degrees of the Lwa uniting the macrocosm and microcosm.

Thagrinus: One of the Genii of the fourth hour, called a "genius of confusion", found in the Nuctemeron of Apollonius of Tyana.

Thahaaotahe: (1) One of four names of "supreme elemental kings" which appear in a Golden Dawn paper entitled "Document X: The Book of the Concourse of the Forces". These names were created manipulating the letters and numbers in the outer circle of John Dee's Sigillum Dei Aemeth (q.v.). It was later included in Donald Laycock's Complete Enochian Dictionary, but was never used by Dee. Thahaaotahe was the king of Earth. The other three kings were Tahaoelog (Air), Thahebyobeaatanum (Water), and Ohooohaaton (Fire). (2) The elemental king of earth in Liber Vel Chanokh.

Thahebyobeaatanum (Var. Thahebyobeeatan): One of four names of "supreme elemental kings" which appear in a Golden Dawn paper entitled "Document X: The Book of the Concourse of the Forces". These names were created manipulating the letters and numbers in the outer circle of John Dee's Sigillum Dei Aemeth (q.v.). It was later included in Donald Laycock's Complete Enochian Dictionary, but was never used by Dee. Thahebyobeaatanum was the king of Water. The other three kings were Tahaoelog (Air), Thahaaotahe (Earth) and Ohooohaaton (Fire).

Thahebyobeeatan (Var. of Thahebyobeaatanum (q.v.)): The elemental king of water in Liber Vel Chanokh.

[pic]

Figure 14 Thâi

Thâi: The eleventh of the 64 hexagrams or patterns of the Chinese divination system called I Ching (see fig. 14). It represents minimal loss and great gain, progress and success.

Thaine: Name for the eighth hour of the day found in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Thalia (Greek- trans. "bloom"): Greek. (a) The Muse (q.v.) of comedy and idyllic poetry). (b) A Goddess who was one of the three Graces (q.v.): sister Goddesses who were the patronesses of pleasure, charm, elegance and beauty. The other two were Euphrosyne ("joy"), and Aglaia ("brilliance").

Thalsster-a-dekerval (Var. θalςξer-_-dekerval): One of the Genii of the twenty two scales of the serpent in Liber CCXXXI.

Thami: The name of the third hour of the night in The Magus.

Thamic: The name of the eighth hour of the day in The Magus.

Thamiel (Var. of Thaumiel (q.v.)): In Transcendental Magic: The Thamiel, the "double headed ones", whose chiefs are Satan and Moloch, are the adversaries of the Chaioth Ha-Qadesh (q.v.).

Thammuz (Var. of Tammuz (q.v.)): (1) A fallen angel in Paradise Lost. (2) One of the Infernal names listed in Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible.

Thamur: (1) Name for the sixth hour of the day in the Greater Key of Solomon. (2) The name of the sixth hour of the day in The Magus.

Thamuz (Var. of Tammuz (q.v.)): A demon listed by Wierus as Beelzebuth's ambassador to Spain.

Thamy: In The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses: An angel of the order of Powers invoked in qabalistic rituals.

Thantifaxath: One of the Genii of the qlippoth in Liber CCXXXI.

Thanu: Name for the fifteenth hour of the day in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Thaoth: The Enochian name for the planet Mars.

Thaphabaoth (Var. Thauthabaoth): In Origen's Contra Celsus: An angel or demon hostile to humans, one of the 7 rulers of the lower realms.

Thaq: A Mandaean angel.

Tharpesh (Var. Tharpesht, Tharpheshest): Egyptian. (1) A Goddess of fire. (2) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A Goddess associated with the Kerub of Fire of the Stations of the Kerubim. (b) One of the Pyramid Gods.

Tharpheshest: See Tharpesh.

Tharpesht (Var. of Tharpesh (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A Goddess mentioned in the Rosicrucian Ritual of the Relation Between Chess and Tarot.

Tharshis (Var. of Tharsis (q.v.)): An angel whose name is inscribed on the seventh pentacle of the Sun in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tharshishim (Var. of Tarshishim (q.v.)): An angelic host assigned to the Sephira Netzach by the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Tharsis (Var. Tharshis, Tharsus): (1) In the Greater Key of Solomon: (a) An angel whose name is inscribed on the sixth pentacle of Jupiter. (b) The ruler of the element of earth. (2) In The Magus: One of the four rulers of the elements. (3) In The Hierarchy of the Blessed Angels: An angel governing the element of water. (4) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) The name of the angel associated with the element of water. (b) The ruler and prince invoked in the consecration of the ritual cup.

Tharsus: See Tharsis.

Thartach: An alternate name for Astaroth (q.v.), one of the seven genii of the week, listed in the Scale of the Number Seven in The Royal Masonic Cyclopedia.

Thashraq (Hebrew ThShRQ): A method of Temura (q.v.) involving writing a word backwards.

Thath'th'thithsthuth-thist (Var. Thath'th'thithςthuth-thiξ): One of the Genii of the twenty two scales of the serpent in Liber CCXXXI.

Thaum-Aesch (Abbrev. of Thaum-Aesch-Niaeth (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A Goddess mentioned in the Initiation of the Neophyte Grade.

Thaum-Aesch-Niaeth (Var. of Thoum-aesh-neith (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A Goddess mentioned in the Initiation of the Neophyte Grade.

Thaumiel (Var. Thamiel. Hebrew- trans. "The two contending forces"): (1) The Qliphoth (q.v.) that is the counterpart of the Sephira Kether (q.v.). (2) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A Qlippoth mentioned in the initiation of the Practicus grade.

Thaune (Poss. corruption of Tau (q.v.)): A term which appears in The Grimoire of Armadel.

Thaur: Arabic. An angel invoked in incantations.

Thausael: In Voltaire's Of Angels, Genii and Devils: One of the leaders of the fallen angels.

Thauthabaoth: See Thaphabaoth.

[pic]Figure 15 Sigil of Thavael

Thavael: One of the Spirits listed in the Grimoire of Armadel. Thavael is described as the spirit who conducted Mary and Joseph into Egypt when they were fleeing the persecution of Herod. He is said to teach the virtues of herbs and simples and the science of gardening and may be invoked at any time. His sigil, depicted in fig. 15, is used as a talisman against sudden death.

Theban: A magickal alphabet that first appeared in Johannes Trithemius' Polygraphia, which appeared in 1518 CE. Cornelius Agrippa subsequently borrowed it for his De Occulta Philosophia. This first appeared in English in 1651. Francis Barrett then reproduced it in The Magus in 1801. The alphabet may be found in the appendix on magical alphabets in this book.

Theban has been adopted as the standard magical alphabet used in the Wiccan religion.

Thebel (Var. Cheled): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) One of seven earths (q.v.) mentioned in the initiation of the Theoricus grade. (b) A heaven between Gehenna and Eden mentioned in the initiation of the Practicus Degree.

Thegri: In the apocryphal Hermas Visions: An angel with dominion over beasts.

Theit: A name of Jehovah used in a conjuration in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Thelema (Var. Thelhma. Greek- trans. "will"): (1) The religious-magical-philosophical system founded when Aleister Crowley received the Book of the Law (Liber Legis) in 1904. It’s principle tenets can be summarized by the opening lines of Liber Legis: “Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law. Love is the Law, love under will.” Thus it is a term used by Aleister Crowley to describe one's personal will. Crowley borrowed it from Rabelais's novel Gargantua (1534 C.E.). Aleister Crowley created the A.·.A.·. (Astrum Argentinum) to teach this system, which was subsequently incorporated into the O.T.O. (q.v.) during Crowley’s leadership of that organization. (2) A term used for personal will in The Crystal Tablet of Set.

Thelemites: Followers of the teachings of Aleister Crowley, so named because they believe in Thelema (q.v.).

Thelesis (Deriv. Greek term meaning "free will"): Gnostic. One of the 4 luminaries emanating from the divine. Thelesis is sometimes identified with the angel Raguel (q.v.).

Thelhma: See Thelema.

Theliel: A spirit of love invoked in a love spell in the Book of True Black Magic.

Themura: See Temura.

Theodinias: See Theodonias.

Theodonias (Var. Theodinias): (1) A name used in a vesting prayer in the Lemegeton. (2) A name used in a vesting prayer in The Magus.

Theodoniel: A name used in a rite to purify ritual clothing in The Book of True Black Magic.

Theological Discourse on Angels, A: An angelic text published by Benjamin Camfield in London in 1678.

Theoretici: The second degree within the Rosicrucian system, represented by the formula 8,2.

Theoricus: The second grade of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Theoricus Adeptus Minor (Abbreviation: Th. A. M.): A subgrade above that of Zelator Adeptus Minor in the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Theos (Greek- trans. "god"): (1) A name of Jehovah found in the Enchiridion of Pope Leo. (2) A name invoked in a rite of necromancy in the Verus Jesuitarum Libellus. (3) A name used in the second conjuration of a spirit in the Lemegeton. (4) A name used at the beginning of the circle casting in The Magus.

Theoska: In The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses: A ministering archangel invoked in magick rituals.

Theosophia Pneumatica: A German work which first appeared in 1686, with the title Claviculae Salomonis, vel Theosophia Pneumatica ("The Little Keys of Solomon or Theosophia Pneumatica"). It also appears in the third volume of J Scheible's Das Kloster. Obviously based on (and thus very similar to) the Arbatel.

Theosophy (Greek "theos" ("god") and "sophia" ("wisdom")): A very old concept, based on the premise that God must be experienced directly to be known at all. Variations of theosophy can be found in many cultures, the oldest being described in the earliest of the Indian Vedas. Pythagoras and Plato both subscribed to Theosophical thought.

Modern Theosophy was formulated by Madame H.P. Blavatsky, who drew many of her ideas from Hinduism and Buddhism (See Blavatsky). Theosophy holds that all religions are simply different versions of one esoteric truth. The universe consists of seven overlapping "planes" and each person has seven bodies that correspond to these planes: Divine, Spiritual, Intuitional, Mental, Emotional, Etheric, and Physical. The first three make up the ego or "overself" which reincarnates countless times, experiencing karma (q.v.).

In modern times the Theosophical Society was founded by H. P. Blavatsky and H.S. Olcott in New York in 1875. In 1877 the headquarters was moved to India and it is currently based in Adyar, Madras. The objectives of the Theosophical Society are: (1) To form a universal brotherhood of humanity; without distinction of race, creed, sex caste or colour. (2) To encourage the study of comparitive religion and philosophy. (3) To investigate unexplained laws of nature. Theosophists are extremely interested in psychic phenomena.

Therion (Greek- trans. "wild beast"): In the works of Aleister Crowley: (a) A title which Aleister Crowley gave to himself. (b) A name used in an invocation in Liber V Vel Reguli. (c) A name used in Liber DCL vel De Fons Aquae Vitae.

Theta: The eighth letter of the Greek alphabet (θ).

Thetis (Var. Theutus): Greek. One of the Nereids. Thetis attempted to escape the mortal man Peleus by repeatedly transforming herself, but Peleus eventually won her and married her. She was the mother of Achilles.

Thetragrammaton (Var. of Tetragrammaton (q.v.)): A name engraved on a magic handbell used in necromancy described in Girardius Parvi Lucii libellus de mirabilibus naturae arcanis.

Theu: A name used in a conjuration of Beelzebuth in the Grimorium Verum.

Theurgia Goetia: Second book of the Lemegeton, described in this book as being a "book of spirits, partially evil and partially good".

Theurgy (Deriv. Greek "theos" ("god") and "ergon" ("work")): Originally this word referred to the intervention of the gods in the lives of humans. Later it became a synonym for magic or sorcery.

Theutus (Poss. var. of Thetis (q.v.)): A demon described as a vessel of wrath or a vessel of iniquity in The Magus.

ThIAF: A name used in the invocation of Air in Liber Samekh. Also appears as “Lion-Serpent Sun”.

Thiazi: Norse/Asatru. A giant whose daughter inherited his stronghold Thrymheim.

Thiel: (1) In The Heptameron: An angel of Wednesday residing in the 2nd heaven and invoked in the north. (2) In The Secret Grimoire of Turiel: an angel serving in the thrid heaven. (3) One of the angels of the second heaven ruling in the north on Wednesday in The Magus. (4) In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 10th degree of Capricorn.

Thigh, The: The original Egyptian name for the Constellation Draco (The Dragon). It so name as it was believed to be the Thigh of the God Set. It is a name used in the Book of Coming Forth by Night.

Thigra: See Tagriel.

Thikarathin: See Tikarathin.

Thikarthin: See Tikarathin.

Thil (Var. Thiln, Thild, Tahil, Tahila, Tahilada, Tahilanu): Enochian- trans. "seat(s)".

Thild: See Thil.

Thiln: See Thil.

Thincsus (Var. Mars Thincsus): Celtic. A Teutonic God of war whose consorts were the Alaisiagae, Beda and Fimmilena. His totem animal appears to have been the goose.

Thiniana: The name of a substance compounded from powdered bones, mentioned in The Grimoire of Armadel.

Thirama: A name that appears on the first line of a double acrostic square used to know all things in the future in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square appears as follows:

|T |H |I |R |A |M |A |

|H |I |G |A |N |A |M |

|I |G |O |G |A |N |A |

|R |A |G |I |G |A |R |

|A |N |A |G |O |G |I |

|M |A |N |A |G |I |H |

|A |M |A |R |I |H |T |

Third Adept: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: One of the officials in the Ritual of the Portal of the Vault of the Adepti.

Third Daughter: See Geomancy.

Third Mother: See Geomancy.

Third Nephew: See Geomancy.

Third Resultant: See Geomancy.

Thirst, The: Vampyre. The craving or need to drink blood.

Thirteen Rules of Community, The: See Black Veil.

Thmaah (Var. of Thma-Est (q.v.)): A deity mentioned in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Thmaa-est (Var. of Thma-est (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A Goddess mentioned in the Initiation of the Neophyte Grade.

Thma-Est (Var. Thmaah, Thmah, Thmaa-est, Thm-a-oe, Thm-a-oe-St, Thma-oe-Sh, Thma-oe-Tt): (1) An Egyptian Goddess. (2) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) An Egyptian Goddess. (b) A deity mentioned in The Ring and The Disc with The Working of the Tripod.

Thma-esh (Var. of Thma-Est (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A deity mentioned in The Ring and The Disc with The Working of the Tripod.

Thma-Eth (Var. of Thma-Est (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A deity mentioned in The Ring and The Disc with The Working of the Tripod.

Thmah (Var. of Thma-Est (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A name used in The Ring and The Disc with The Working of the Tripod.

Thm-a-oe: An earth aspect of the Goddess Thma-Est mentioned in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Thma-oe-Sh: A fire aspect of the Goddess Thma-Est mentioned in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Thm-a-oe-St: An air aspect of the Goddess Thma-Est mentioned in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Thma-oe-Tt: A water aspect of the Goddess Thma-Est (q.v.) mentioned in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

ThMVRH: See Temura.

Thokath: A word used in the twelfth degree of the Ancient and Accepted Rite of Freemasonry.

Thomatos: A name used to invoke a genii in the Black Pullet.

Thomax: In the Lemegeton: An angel of the 8th hour of the night who is a lesser officer under the angel Narcoriel.

Tho-oth (Var. of Thoth (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A deity mentioned in the Ritual of the Portal of the Vault of the Adepti.

Thopitus: In La Kabbale Pratique: An angel invoked in incantations.

Thor: Norse/Asatru. God of the sky and thunder. Thor is son of the God Odin (q.v.). His symbol is his magic hammer, Mjolnir (q.v.). His wife is the golden haired Sif. Thor is said to have slaughtered two goats to feed his host and then to have resurrected these goats the following day by waving Mjolnir over their bones. Thus he is revered as a God of plenty, resurrection and sacrifice. Thor used Mjolnir to bless Balder’s funeral pyre. Thus Thor is said to be the God of hallowing and warding. Thursday is named after him. His festival is Thorrablot (q.v.). (2) A God whose hammer is mentioned in the cry of the aethyr Arn in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Thorrablot (var. Thor’s Feast): Asatru. January Full Moon (or Friday between 19th and 25th). Thorrablot marked the beginning of the Old Norse month of Snorri. This festival, sacred to Thor and the ancient Icelandic Winter Spirit Thorri, is still observed in Iceland with parties and a mid-winter feast.

Thor’s Feast: See Thorrablot.

Thor's Hammer: See Mjolnir.

Thorah: Vodou. The second of the five degrees of the Lwa uniting the macrocosm and microcosm.

Thotanf: A governor of the aethyr or aire Paz listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Thotanf has 2360 servants.

Thoth (Var. Tho-oth): (1) The Greek name of the Egyptian God Tehuti (q.v.). (2) One of the Infernal names listed in Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible. (3) In Liber O: (a) The ruler of the planet Mercury. (b) A name compared with the names Tetragrammaton Adonai and Elohim Tzabaoth. (4) A name used in the cry of the aethyr Maz in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli. (5) A name which appears on the Pantacle of Frater V.I.O. in Liber CLXV. (6) A name used in a nostrum to heal a man from enchantment or affliction by a spirit in Henri Gamache's Mystery of the Long Lost 8th, 9th and 10th Books of Moses. (7) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A God mentioned in the initiation of the Adeptus Major Grade. (b) A God associated with the office of Cancellarius in the Initiation of the Neophyte Grade.

Thouerist (Var. of Taueret (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A God mentioned in the Rosicrucian Ritual of the Relation Between Chess and Tarot.

Thoum-aesh-neith (Var. Thaum-Aesch-Niaeth): Egyptian. A Goddess of fire.

ThPARTh: See Tiphareth.

Thraa (Var. Shaar (q.v.). Chaldean- trans. "gate"): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A term used in the opening of the Zelator Grade.

Thrall (bef. 950 Middle English, deriv. Old English/Old Norse “thræll” (“slave”)): Vampyre. A term borrowed from the SMBD community. It refers to a person in a relationship who is the “slave” to a Regnant (q.v.) or Master.

Three Mothers: One of three classes of letters in the Hebrew alphabet according to the Sepher Yetzirah (q.v.), the other two classes being the Seven Doubles and the Twelve Singles. The Three Mothers are the letters Shin, Mem and Aleph.

Thrgar: (1) In Sepher Raziel: One of the monthly angels. (2) An angel mentioned in Trachtenberg's Jewish Magic and Superstition.

Thribiel: In the Lemegeton, a lesser officer under the angel Osgaebial.

Thrones: (1) One of the several categories of angels listed in the letters of Paul in the New Testament. The others listed by Paul include: Virtues, Powers, Principalities and Dominions. Many grimoires list the Thrones by their Hebrew name: Aralim (q.v.). (2) One of both the nine orders of angels and the nine orders of demons listed by Michaelis in his Admirable History of the Possession and Conversion of a Penitent Woman. (3) In The Magus: (a) Thrones are one of the six orders of angels "which are not sent to inferiors". The other five listed in The Magus were Seraphim, Cherubim, Dominations, Powers and Virtues. (b) One of the nine choirs of angels listed in the Scale of the Number Nine, ruled by Zaphkiel. (c) One of the "ten orders of the blessed according to Dionysius", the others being Cherubim, Dominations, Seraphim, Powers, Virtues, Principalities, Archangels, Angels and Blessed Souls. (d) One of the twelve orders of blessed spirits, the others being the Principalities, Seraphim, Archangels, Martyrs, Virtues, Powers, Angels, Confessors, Dominations, Innocents and Cherubim.

Thronus: One of 15 Throne angels listed in The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses.

Thrudheim: Norse/Asatru. Thor’s realm in Asgard (q.v.) and the site of his hall in Bilskirnir.

Thrymheim: Norse/Asatru. Stronghold of the giant Thiazi which was passed on to his daughter Skadi.

ThShRQ: See Thashraq.

Thubal Cain (Hebrew- trans. "worldy possessions"): Used in the Master Mason's degree in Freemasonry. The Freemasons list Thubal Cain as the first worker of metals.

[pic]

Figure 17 Thun

Thummim (Var. Tummim. Hebrew- trans. "perfection"): (1) The Zohar (Exodus 234b) defines Thummim as "the nonluminous speculum [mirror] made of the Divine Name as manifested in the 22 letters [of the Hebrew alphabet]". (2) The Thummim and Urim were gems or engraved figures on Aaron's breastplate according to Exodus 20:30, Leviticus 8:8, Deuteronomy 33:8, Ezra 2:63 and Nehemiah 7:65 in the Old Testament of the Bible. (3) One of the three signs of the degree of Magi in Rosicrucianism, the other two being Shemhamphorash and Urim.

Thun: The thirty third of the 64 hexagrams or patterns of the Chinese divination system called I Ching (see fig. 17). It represents slight advantage.

[pic]Figure 18 Thung Zån

Thung Zån: The thirteenth of the 64 hexagrams or patterns of the Chinese divination system called I Ching (see fig. 18). It represents progress, success, advantage, advantage through maintainance of superiority.

Thurible (Deriv. Latin "thuribulum" ("a censer"), deriv. Latin "thuris" (“frankincense”)): An incense burner or brazier. Often used in ritual as a symbol of the the element Air (q.v.).

Thurifer: (1) In Christianity: An acolyte or altar boy who carries the thurible (q.v.). (2) A person who holds the thurible (q.v.) in the performance of a Black Mass in LaVey's The Satanic Rituals.

Thymitzod: In the Lemegeton, a lesser officer under the angel Sarquamich.

Ti: See T I.

Ti Baka: See Pititt.

Ti Bon Ange: Vodou. The spirit or conscience of a person. This is considered to be different than the person's soul, which is called the Gros Bon Ange (q.v.).

Ti Brutus: See Brutus Jean.

Ti Congo: Vodou. The third of the three drums of the Congo battery of drums (q.v.).

Ti Gougoune: Vodou. One of the Pethro Lwas.

Ti Jean: "Little John". Vodou. A Lwa of both the Rada and the Nago traditions.

Ti Jean Dan-Tor: Vodou. One of the Dantor Lwas.

Ti Jean Pethro: Vodou. One of the Lwas of the Pethro nanchon. He is a Lwa of the sky and life energy.

Ti Jean Pied-cheche (Creole- trans. "Little Jean Dry Foot"): Vodou. One of the Pethro Lwas.

Ti Kitha Demembre: See Ti Quitta.

Ti Pierre (Trans. "Little Peter"): Vodou. One of the Lwas.

[pic]Figure 19 Veve of Ti Pierre Dan-Tor

Ti Pierre Dan-Tor (Var. Ti Pierre Dantor): Vodou. A Lwa of the Rada, the Dantor and the Nago Lwas. His Veve is depicted in fig. 19.

Ti Pierre Dantor: See Ti Pierre Dan-Tor.

Ti Puce: See Guede Nibho.

Ti Quitta (Var. Ti Quitta Demembre, Ti Kitha Demembre): Vodou. One of the Quitta Lwas. She is a Lwa of sexuality and fertility.

Ti Quitta Demembre: See Ti Quitta.

Tia: An Enochian word. Translated in Regardie's The Complete Golden Dawn System of Magic as "unto us". Translated in Laycock's Complete Enochian Dictionary as "his".

Tiacou-Tiacou: Vodou. One of the Lwas.

Tiamat (Var. Zi-kura, Zi-kum): (1) An Assyro Babylonian primordial sea goddess. Her mate is Apsu or Absu ("sweet waters"). She is often depicted as a serpent who begat the original chaotic world. The younger Gods defeated Tiamat, Apsu being overcome by the God of wisdom Ea and Tiamat being slain by the sky God Marduk. Tiamat's body was divided in two to form the sky and the earth. She has a likeness to the Biblical Leviathan. The Hebrew word for "waters" in Genesis is "tehom", a corruption of "Tiamat". (2) An evil Goddess called the Queen of the Ancient Ones in the Necronomicon.

Tianta (Var. Tianuta, Tianti): Enochian- trans. "bed".

Tianti: (1) A variation of the Enochian word Tianta. (2) In Regardie's The Complete Golden Dawn System of Magic, this word is assigned the additional meaning "she is".

Tianuta: See Tianta.

Tiarpax: A governor of the aethyr or aire Lit listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Tiarpax has 5802 servants.

Tiazolteotl: See Tonantzin.

Tib: See Tilb.

Tibibf: See Tibibp.

Tibibipe: See Tibibp.

Tibibp (Var. Tibibf, Tibibipe): Enochian- trans. "sorrow".

Tibl: See Tilb.

Tiel: In Hechaloth lore: One of the angelic guards of the gates of the north wind.

Tifareth: See Tiphereth.

Tiferiel: See Tiphtheriel.

Tiftheriel: See Tiphtheriel.

Tigrafon: A spirit subordinate to Magot and Kore in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tiiio (Deriv. by reversing Oiiit (q.v.)): A cacodemon commanding the cacodemons of Earth of Air in the Book of Supplications and Invocations.

Tijel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 19th degree of Virgo.

Tijmneik: In The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses: An angel of the Seal.

Tikarathin (Var. Thikarathin, Thikarthin): Gnostic. The lord of hosts.

Tilaba: See Tilb.

Tilabe: See Tilb.

Tilath (Var. Silat): A name used in a preparatory prayer in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tilb (Var. Tbl, Tib, Tiobl, Tilaba, Tilabe, Tibl, Tiobela): Enochian- trans. "her" or "of her".

Tileion: An name used in the process consecrating the lustral bath with salt in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tiler (Var. Tyler): (1) In Freemasonry: A Master Mason who stands guard at the door of the Lodge to prevent the uninitiated from entering or eavesdropping. (2) A term used in Wicca in reference to a person who guards the path to a ceremony or circle, to prevent the uninitiated from entering or eavesdropping.

Tilonas: A name used in the consecration of the sacred pen in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Timayal (Var. Timeguel): A name that is used in a spell of invisibility in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Timebal: Vodou. The second of the three drums of the Congo battery of drums (q.v.).

Timeguel (Var. of Timayal (q.v.)): A name used in a spell of invisibility in the Book of True Black Magic.

Timing: In many books of Occidental Ceremonial Magick there is a great emphasis put on determining the correct time to carry out a particular magickal operation. This originates in Electional Astrology: Astrology used to determine the most auspicious time for a particular purpose. Examples of this can be found in two of the most common grimoires, The Greater Key of Solomon and the Book of True Black Magic. Both of these texts insist that magickal operations should be conducted only during specific hours and days that are ruled by the spirits and angels appropriate to the objective of the magickal work in question. These Grimoires include elaborate tables and lists for calculating the correct and auspicious times for magickal work. The tables for the spirits involved are included with the listings for these spirits in this Lexicon. The Book of True Black Magic associates different planets with each hour of the day:

|Hour |Sunday |Monday |Tuesday |Wed. |Thursday |Friday |Sat. |

|1 |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUPITER |VENUS |SAT. |

|2 |VENUS |SATURN |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUP. |

|3 |MERC. |JUP. |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |

|4 |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUP. |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |

|5 |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERCURY |JUP. |VEN. |

|6 |JUP. |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC |

|7 |MARS |MERC. |JUPITER |VENUS |SATURN |SUN |MOON |

|8 |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUPITER |VENUS |SAT. |

|9 |VENUS |SATURN |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUP. |

|10 |MERC. |JUP. |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |

|11 |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUP. |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |

|12 |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERCURY |JUP. |VEN. |

|13 |JUP. |VENUS |SATURN |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC |

|14 |MARS |MERC. |JUP. |VENUS |SATURN |SUN |MOON |

|15 |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUPITER |VENUS |SAT. |

|16 |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUP. |

|17 |MERC. |JUP. |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |

|18 |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUP. |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |

|19 |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERCURY |JUP. |VEN. |

|20 |JUP. |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC |

|21 |MARS |MERC. |JUP. |VENUS |SATURN |SUN |MOON |

|22 |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUPITER |VENUS |SAT. |

|23 |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |MERC. |JUP. |

|24 |MERC. |JUP. |VENUS |SAT. |SUN |MOON |MARS |

The Lemegeton dictated that the best days for working with the moon were the even numbered days following the new moon (2, 4, 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 days after). The hours appropriate for calling upon the various spirits listed in the Lemegeton depended upon the rank of the spirit involved:

|RANK |HOURS |RESTRICTIONS |

|CHIEF KINGS |9 AM TO 12 NOON | |

| |3 PM TO SUNSET | |

|MARQUISES |3 PM TO 9 PM | |

| |9 PM TO SUNRISE | |

|DUKES |SUNRISE TO 12 NOON |ONLY ON CLEAR DAYS |

|PRELATES |ANY HOUR | |

|KNIGHTS |DAWN TO SUNRISE | |

| |4 PM TO SUNSET | |

|PRESIDENTS |ANY TIME EXCEPT TWILIGHT AT NIGHT |EXCEPT WHEN KING WHO RULES THEM IS INVOKED |

|EARLS OR COUNTS |ANY HOUR |ONLY IN THE WOODS OR DESERTED AREAS |

You will note that in the Lemegeton many of the spirits have two ranks. For example the spirit Vine is both a king and an earl. This means that he can be called upon under the rules for either rank.

Timira (Deriv. Hebrew term meaing "palm"): A spirit subordinate to Astarot and Asmodee in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Timo: A name used in a conjuration of Beelzebuth in the Grimorium Verum.

Tin: In traditional Western Ceremonial Magic the metal tin is related to the planet Jupiter and the Sephiroth Hod (q.v.) and Binah (q.v.).

Tina: One of the Etruscan Novensiles (q.v.), the God of thunder and fire.

Tinarmes: An angel invoked in the consecration of wax and clay in The Book of True Black Magic.

[pic]

Figure 20 Ting

Ting: The fiftieth of the 64 hexagrams or patterns of the Chinese divination system called I Ching (see fig. 20). It represents great progress and success.

Tinne (Irish Gaelic- trans. “holly tree”): (1) The eighth letter of the Celtic Ogham alphabet. (2) The eighth month of the Tree Calendar (q.v.), July 8/August 4.

Tiobela: See Tilb.

Tiobl: See Tilb.

Tioron: A spirit subordinate to Astarot and Asmodee in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tios: One of the seventy two names of Jehovah given in The Royal Masonic Cyclopedia.

Tipharah (Var. of Tiphareth (q.v.)): A name that appears on the first line of a gnomonic square used to find and seize silver not magickally guarded in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

|T |I |P |H |A |R |A |H |

|I | | | | | | | |

|P | | | | | | | |

|H | | | | | | | |

|A | | | | | | | |

|R | | | | | | | |

|A | | | | | | |I |

|H | | | | | |I |T |

Tipharas: See Tiphareth.

Tiphareth (Var. ThPARTh, TPhARTh, Tifareth, Tiphereth, Tipharah, Tipharas. Hebrew "ThPARTh" ("beauty", "mildness", "glory", or "shining thing")): (1) The sixth Sephira on the Qabalistic "Tree of Life" (See Sephiroth). It represents the sphere of the Sun, of harmony, giving and illumination. (2) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) The following are assigned to Tiphareth: (i) The Divine names ALVH VDOTh, ELwah Va-Daath, YHVH ELwah ve Daath and MLK or Melekh. (ii) The angelic host of the Melakim or the Shinanim. (iii) The archangel Raphael. (b) A Sephira invoked in the consecration of the Rose Cross. (3) A sephira mentioned in "Comment on Liber VII in class E" in Liber VII: Liber Liberi vel Lapidis Lazuli, Advmbratio Kabbalae Aegyptiorum Svb Figvra VII.

Tiphereth (Var. of Tiphareth (q.v.)): (1) A name used in a spell for favour and love in the Greater Key of Solomon. (2) The spirits of this Sephira are invoked in a "Kabalistic Invocation of Solomon" to evoke "spirits belonging to religions issued from Judaism" in Levi's Transcendental Magic. (3) Associated with the "triangle of the universe" in Liber Yod. (4) A term used in the cry of the aethyr Deo in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli. (5) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: The sixth Sephira on the Qabalistic Tree of Life (Cf. Tiphareth).

Tiphtheriel (Var. Tiferiel, Tiftheriel): The name of the Sephira Tiphareth in the Briatic World (q.v.).

Tipperah: See Zipporah.

Tir: (1) Persian. Th angel governing the 13th day of the month and the planet Mercury. (2) Islamic. The demon of fatal accidents, one of the five sons of Eblis (q.v.). Tir is represented as having the body of a fish and the face of a boar, having one black arm and one white.

Tir Na Nog (Trans. “land of the forever young”): Celtic. The Otherworld where the spirits of the departed rest.

Tira: A name used in the consecration of a "magic carpet" in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tiraim (Deriv. Hebrew term meaning "filling up"): A spirit subordinate to Magot and Kore in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tirana: A spirit subordinate to the four sub princes Oriens, Paimon, Ariton and Amaimon in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tiresias: A name which is used in the cry of the aethyr Paz in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Tiriel: (1) A name "answering to the numbers of Mercury" and representing the intelligence of Mercury in The Magus. (2) The intelligence of Mercury in Liber O. (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A name representing the intelligence of Mercury. (b) A name used in the ceremony of the Practicus grade.

Tiril: In Voltaire's Of Angels, Genii and Devils: One of the leaders of the fallen angels.

Tiros: A name used in a conjuration of Lucifer in the Grimoire of Honorius.

Tirtael: In Hechaloth lore: One of the angelic guards of the gates of the east wind.

Tirthika: A name mentioned in Liber LXXI.

Tishbash: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tishgash: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tisiphone: See Ctesiphone.

Tisri: (1) The first month of the Hebrew civil calendar. (2) A Hebrew month used in the calendar of the Scottish rite of Freemasonry.

Tistator: A name used in spells for mockery, invisibility and deceit in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Titache: A name of Jehovah used in a conjuration in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Titahion: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: One of seven infernal abodes (q.v.) mentioned in the initiation of the Theoricus grade.

Titan (Greek- trans. "lords"): (1) Greek. The giant children of the God Uranus, who ultimately rose up against him under the leadership of Cronus and castrated Uranus. (2) A deity mentioned in the cry of the aethyr Paz in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli. (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A mythical figure mentioned in the initiation of the Adeptus Major Grade. (3) A deity mentioned in Liber VII: Liber Liberi vel Lapidis Lazuli, Advmbratio Kabbalae Aegyptiorum Svb Figvra VII.

Titcip (Var. of Titeip (q.v.)): A name used in an exorcism of the spirits of the air in The Magus.

Titeip (Var. Titcip): A word used in the Grand and Supreme Appellation in Apono's Magickal Elements.

Titiksha: An ultimate state of consciousness decribed in Liber LXXI.

Titmon: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tityos (Var. of Tityus (q.v.)): One of the guardians of the ninth and final circle of hell in Dante's Inferno.

Tityus (Var. Tityos): Greek. A giant son of Zeus who was killed by Apollo and Artemis for attempting to violate Leto as she was engaged in devotions.

Tixmion: A name used in the process consecrating the lustral bath with salt in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tlachtga: Celtic. An Irish Goddess, for whom the Hill of Ward (originally the Hill of Tlachtga) in County Meath was named. She is related to the Samhain festival.

Tliob (Var. Taliobe): Enochian- trans. "separate".

TMIRA DTMITIN: See Temira De-Temirin.

Tmoumathph (Var. of Tuamautef (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) One of four Canopic Gods or Genii of the Hall of the Neophytes. (b) One of the Pyramid Gods. (c) A God mentioned in the Rosicrucian Ritual of the Relation Between Chess and Tarot.

Tmoumathv: See Tuamautef.

Tmsmael: In The Sword of Moses: An evil angel invoked to separate a husband from his wife.

Tmu (Var. Thoomoo): Egyptian. (1) A solar deity. (2) A deity mentioned in Liber Israfel. (3) A God associated with the Kerub of Water of the Stations of the Kerubim In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Toad: Ancient folk beliefs did hold that toads were poisonous (and some actually are), but their use in "witches spells and brews" is Inquisitional propaganda. The European folklore about toads eventually made it’s way into some “occult crime manuals”. For example, Shane Westhoelter claims that toads were "Originally considered to be poisonous, used in many witches spells and brews to do harm”.[6] This is nonsense, the kind of things that the Inquisitors tried to get people to confess to under torture.

Toantom: A governor of the aethyr or aire Asp listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Toantom has 5635 servants.

Toatar (Var. Toatare): Enochian- trans. "hearken".

Toatare: See Toatar.

Tobh: Hebrew- trans. "goodness".

Tobias: An individual mentioned in The Grimoire of Armadel. The Armadel refers to the "fish preserved by Tobias" and to the "Book of Tobias". This is obviously a reference to the apocryphal Book of Tobit, in which Tobit's son Tobias makes a journey, guided by the angel Raphael.

Tobiel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 20th degree of Libra.

Tocarzi: A governor of the aethyr or aire Tan listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Tocarzi has 2634 servants.

Toco (Var. Togco): An angel, ruled by the angels Obgota and Aabco in the Book of Supplications and Invocations. Toco is skilled in medicine.

Todatamael: In Hechaloth lore: One of the angelic guards of the gates of the east wind.

Todnaon: A governor of the aethyr or aire Zid listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Todnaon has 7236 servants.

Tofagilo: See Tofglo.

Tofajilo: See Tofglo.

Tofejilo: See Tofglo.

Tofglo (Var. Toglo, Tofagilo, Tofajilo, Tofejilo, Tofijilo, Tofijila, Tol Glo): Enochian- trans. "everything" or "all things".

Tofijila: See Tofglo.

Tofijilo: See Tofglo.

Togco: See Toco.

Toglas: One of the Genii of the eighth hour, called a "genius of treasures", found in the Nuctemeron of Apollonius of Tyana.

Toglo: See Tofglo.

Toh: See Homtoh.

Tohcoth: Enochian- trans. "fairy" or "fairies".

Tohiel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: (a) An angel ruling the 17th degree of Taurus. (b) In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 30th degree of Libra.

Tohomaphala: The name of an Enochian guardian angel who appears in the works of John Dee.

Toibl: Enochian- trans. "within her".

Toitt: See Tott.

Tol (Var. Ton, Tonu): Enochian- trans. "all".

Tol Glo: See Tofglo.

Toliel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 1st degree of Scorpio.

Toltorg (Var. Torg, Torgi): Enochian- trans. "creature" or "creatures of earth".

Tomael: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 2nd degree of Capricorn.

Tomimiel: In Agrippa's Three Books of Occult Philosophy: A governing angel of the zodiac.

Ton: See Tol.

Tonantzin (Var. Teteoinan, Tiazolteotl, Our Lady of Guadalupe): (1) Aztec. The Great Mother Goddess. She has many aspects, including Xochiquetzal (q.v.) and Chalchiuhtlicue (q.v.). Later, under the influence of the Catholicism of the conquistadors she became synchretized with Santa Maria (The Virgin Mary). (2) On 9 December, 1531, at the shrine of Tonantzin on Tepeyac Hill near the village of Cuautlalpan, a villager named Juan Diego had a vision of Tonantzin in her aspect of Santa Maria: a dark skinned madonna dressed in blue, standing on a golden crescent. The Spanish had trouble pronouncing the name of the village and called it "Guadalupe", so after this vision she became known as Our Lady of Guadalupe.

Tonelle: Vodou. A thatched canopy used as an impromptu Peristyle (q.v.).

Tonu: See Tol.

Tonug (Var. Tonuji): Enochian- trans. "let them be defaced".

Tonuji: See Tonug.

Tooart: See Tooat.

Tooat (Var. Tooart, Tooata): Enochian- trans. "furnish" or "provide".

Tooata: See Tooat.

Toom (Var. of Atum (q.v.)): A God mentioned in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Tophiel: In Hechaloth lore: One of the angels guarding the entrance to the 1st heaven.

Tophnar (Var. Tophrag): In Hechaloth lore: One of the angels guarding the entrance to the 1st heaven.

Tophrag: See Tophnar.

Tophtharthareth (Var. Taphtharthareth, Taphthartharath): In Paracelsus's Four Treatises: A spirit of the planet Mercury.

Toque: Santeria. A term for the rhythym of the Bataa (drums). The Tambor (q.v.) or Guemilere (q.v.) commences with the Oru, which is a series of Toques played on the Bataa to honour the Orishas. Each Toque is dedicated to a particular Orisha and the order of the Toques played is always as follows: Eleggua, Oggun, Ochosi, Obaloke, Inle, Babalu-Aye, Osain, Osun, Obatala, Dada, Oggue, Aganyu, Orunla, Ibeyi, Orisha-Oko, Chango, Yewa, Oya, Oshun, Yemaya, Obba and Oddua. Each Toque has a name: Aguere (Ochosi), Chen-che Kururu and Rumba Llesa (Oshun), Kan-Kan, Tui-Tui and Meta-Meta (Chango), Lalu Banche (Eleggua).

Tor: (1) The twenty third of the thirty Aires of Dee's 48 Claves Angelicae. (2) The twenty third aethyr or aire listed in Liber Vel Chanokh. (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: The twenty third aethyr of the Fourty Eight Angelical Keys or Calls. (4) The twenty third Aethyr of the nineteenth part of The Word of Set.

Torah (Hebrew- trans. "the law"): (1) The name of the first five books of the Bible. (2) The main text of Judaism.

Torezodu: See Torzu.

Torezodul: See Torzu.

Torezodulape: See Torzu.

Torfora: A spirit subordinate to the four sub princes Oriens, Paimon, Ariton and Amaimon in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Torg: See Toltorg

Torgi: See Toltorg.

Torgu: See Torzu.

Toro Pethro (Var. "The Bull"): Vodou. One of the Pethro Lwas.

Torquaret: (1) In the Heptameron: The angel of autumn. (2) The head of the sign of autumn in The Magus.

Tortos: A name used to punish enemies in the Black Pullet.

Tortaviel: In Hechaloth lore: (a) An angel guarding the entrance to the 5th heaven. (b) A seal holder.

Torvatus: One of the Genii of the second hour, called a "genius of discord", found in the Nuctemeron of Apollonius of Tyana in Levi's Transcendental Magic.

Torzoxi: A governor of the aethyr or aire Pop listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Torzoxi has 6236 servants.

Torzu (Var. Torezodu, Torezodul, Torezodulape, Torzul, Torgu, Tor-zulp): Enochian- trans. "arise".

Torzul: See Torzu.

Tor-zulp: See Torzu.

Tosael: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 2nd degree of Aquarius.

Totates: See Teutates.

Totocan: A governor of the aethyr or aire Khr listed in Liber Scientiae, Auxili et Victoriae Terrestris, in Liber Vel Chanokh and in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Totocan has 3634 servants.

Totrisi (Var. Trotosi X): In The Sword of Moses: One of the angels appointed by Jehovah to the sword.

Tott (Var. Toitt): An angel who is a senior of the east under Idoigo in the Book of Supplications and Invocations. Tott is invoked to bring healing.

Totza: See Tox.

Toucan: A bird mentioned in "Comment on Liber VII in class E" in Liber VII: Liber Liberi vel Lapidis Lazuli, Advmbratio Kabbalae Aegyptiorum Svb Figvra VII.

Toum: Probably a short form of the name Tou-mathaph (q.v.). In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A God mentioned in the Rosicrucian Ritual of the Relation Between Chess and Tarot.

Tou-mathaph (Var. of Tuamautef (q.v.)): A deity associated with the southeast in the Stations of the Children of Horus In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Toumathph: See Tuamautef.

Toun: A spirit subordinate to Asmodee and Magot in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Touriel: See Turel.

Touto Ecti To Iiothpion Tou Haimatoc Mou: A ritual phrase used in the consecration of the elements in Aleister Crowley's version of the Gnostic Mass.

Touto Ecti To Sherma Mou...: A ritual phrase used in the mystic marriage and consummation of the elements in Aleister Crowley's version of the Gnostic Mass. The full phrase is: "Touto Ecti To Sherma Mou. Ho Iiathp Ectin Ho Huioc Dia To Iineuma Hagion. Aumgn. Aumgn. Aumgn."

Touto Esti To Soma Mou: A ritual phrase used in the consecration of the elements in Aleister Crowley's version of the Gnostic Mass.

[pic]

Figure 21 The Tower

Tower, The: In Tarot, the sixteenth card of the Major Arcana (q.v.), depicted in fig. 21. Depending upon its position in the reading it may represent: misery, distress, indigence, adversity, calamity, disgrace, deception, ruin, unforseen catastrophe.

Tox (Var. Totza, Toxa): Enochian- trans. "of him".

Toxa: See Tox.

Toxai: A spirit subordinate to Astarot in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Toxisiel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 6th degree of Taurus.

Tozael: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 9th degree of Taurus.

Tpau (Var. Tplau): An angel who is a senior of the east under Evtpa in the Book of Supplications and Invocations. Tpau is invoked to move things to other places.

TPhARTh: See Tiphareth.

Tplabc: A name derived by reversing the name of the angel Cbalpt (q.v.). A cacodemon commanding the cacodemons of Earth of Earth in the Book of Supplications and Invocations.

Tplau: See Tpau.

Trabajo: A Term for an magic spell in Espiritismo.

Traci (Poss. deriv. Greek "Trachus" ("harsh" or "rude")): A spirit subordinate to the four sub princes Oriens, Paimon, Ariton and Amaimon in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tracing Board: A framework bearing the emblems of the three main degrees of Freemasonry, so called because in former times the symbols were drawn in chalk or charcoal on each occasion and later erased.

Tractatu: The angel for whom the third book of Sepher Raziel is named.

Tractatus Thymiamatum: Third book of the Sepher Raziel, named for the angel Tractatu.

Trads: See Tradition.

Tradition (Var. Trads): (1) Wicca. A denomination of Wicca. The Wiccan community is made up of many different traditions, each with its own customs and philosophies. (2) Vampyre. The Vampyre community consists of different traditions, each with it’s own customs and philosophies.

Traditions, The (Var. The Masquerade): The rules governing Vampire society in the role playing game Vampire: The Masquerade.

Trail of the Serpent: A newsletter published by the Temple of Set's Order of Leviathan for several years.

Traite Elementaire de Science Occult: See Absolute Key to Occult Science.

Traitement (Creole- trans. "treatment"): Vodou. A herbal cure administered by a Houn'gan (q.v.) or Mam'bo (q.v.).

Tranan (Var. Tarananu): Enochian- trans. "marrow".

Transcendental Magic: Arthur Edgar Waite's English translation of Eliphas Levi's magickal text entitled Dogme et Rituel de la Haute Magie. The English translation first appeared in 1896.

Transidim: A minister of Almiras, the master of invisibility in the Greater Key of Solomon. Transidim is named in a spell for invisibility.

Transin: A name of Jehovah used in a conjuration in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Translation of Light: In Astrology: When one planet, separating but still within orb of aspect (q,v,) to another planet, applies to an aspect to a third planet.

Translucid: A term used by Eliphas Levi to describe human imagination. Another term that Levi used was "diaphane".

Trapezoid: A quadrilateral which has only two parallel sides. In modern Satanic lore, trapezoids are a potent magickal symbol. The founder of the Church of Satan, Anton LaVey, wrote a law called the "Law of the Trapezoid": "All obtuse angles are magickally harmful to those unaware of this property. The same angles are beneficial, stimulating and energizing to those who are magickally sensitive to them."

Trapis (Deriv. Greek word for "turning"): A spirit subordinate to the four sub princes Oriens, Paimon, Ariton and Amaimon in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Treasure of the Old Man of the Pyramids: See Black Pullet.

[pic]Figure 22 Tredecile

Tredecile: In Astrology: A weak Aspect (q.v.) on a Horoscope in which two planets are separated by 108 degrees. This aspect is found in older texts and is not often used nowadays. Its symbol is depicted in fig. 22.

Tree Calendar: This is a calendar created by Robert Graves, based on Celtic symbolism. It is a much easier calendar to use than the Coligny calendar (q.v.) and is based on the Celtic Ogham tree alphabet. While Graves' tree calendar is an interesting and beautiful one, there is no evidence that the ancient Celts divided their year into tree months as Graves has in this calendar. The Ogham alphabet he based it on is traditionally an alphabet of trees, not a calendar. This is Graves' Celtic Tree Calendar:

|Date |Tree for which the Month is named|Type of Tree |

|December24/January 20 |Beth |Birch |

|January 21/February 17 |Luis |Quick-beam (Rowan) |

|February 18/March 17 |Nion |Ash |

|March 18/April 14 |Fearn |Alder |

|April 15/May 12 |Saille |Willow |

|May 13/June 9 |Uath |Hawthorne |

|June 10/July 7 |Duir |Oak |

|July 8/August 4 |Tinne |Holly |

|August 5/September 1 |Coll |Hazel |

|September 2/September 29 |Muin |Vine |

|September 30/October 27 |Gort |Ivy |

|October 28/November 24 |Ngetal |Reed |

|November 25/December 22 |Ruis |Elder |

You'll note that in this calendar December 23 is an extra day, which Graves calls "The Secret of the Unhewn Stone". He arrived at this by assigning each month a line in the traditional Irish "Song of Amergin", with the 23 of December taking the final line: "Who but I knows the secrets of the unhewn dolmen?" You'll also notice that Grave's calendar does not start with the new year at Samhain, as traditional Celtic seasons were reckoned. Instead he starts it at Yule, which is a Saxon custom.

Tree of Life: The Qabalah teaches that the universe was created through a series of emanations from the supreme Godhead or Ain Soph Aur, travelling downward through 10 stages called Sephiroth, arranged in a structure refered to as the OTz ChIIM ("Otz Chaiim" or "Etz Chayim") which translates as "Tree of Life". The Tree of Life is used by the Qabalists to organize everything in existence. Its ten ascending Sephiroth (q.v.) are arranged across three pillars called Severity, Equilibrium and Mercy.

The Tree of Life is sometimes listed as evidence of Satanism by ill informed Christian “experts”. For example, Mary Ann Herold lists it in A Basic Guide to the Occult for Law Enforcement Agencies.[7]

Tremendum (Deriv. Latin "tremendus" ("to be trembled at")): A name used in a conjuration of Lucifer in the Grimoire of Honorius.

Tres annos regimen oraculi (Latin): A phrase used in an invocation to Nia in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Trgiaob: (1) In The Sword of Moses: One of the nomina barbara, the patron of wild fowl and creeping things. (2) A name used in a nostrum to conjure a spirit in Henri Gamache's Mystery of the Long Lost 8th, 9th and 10th Books of Moses.

Trian (Var. Tarianu, Larianu): Enochian- trans. "shall be".

Triangle: A geometric figure bounded by three lines and having three angles. (1) A red triangle is the Tattwic symbol of Tejas or Fire (See Tattwas). (2) A metal triangle is one of the instruments played in Voodoo ritual. (3) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn, a symbol associated with Saturn. (4) In Occidental Ceremonial Magick: A triangle is often traced on the ground outside of the magick circle into which the magician will call the entities conjured in his ritual. An example of this is the Triangle of Solomon (q.v.). (5) Australian aboriginies worshipped the Goddess Kunapipi (“Old Mother”) in a triangular dancing area. (6) In some cultures triangular cakes are baked for religious festivals, examples being triangular hamantaschem for the Jewish festival of Purim.

Triangle of Solomon: In the Lemegeton: A triangular symbol drawn upon the ground outside of the magickal circle into which the spirit called upon is directed. The Lemegeton directs that this triangle should be placed in the quarter appropriate to the spirit called (See Circle).

Trianlier: Vodou. The Houn'gan (q.v.) who plays the triangle in rituals.

Tribus annulis regna olisbon: A phrase used in an invocation to Nia in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Triers: See Sifters.

Trigons: See Triplicities.

Trimasel: A demon subordinate to Satanachia and Sataniciae in the Grimorium Verum. Trimasel has knowledge of alchemy and legerdemain.

Trimethius: Joannis Tritemii (Johannes Trithemius), an abbot born in Trittenheim in 1462 and who died in Wurxbourg in 1516 who wrote a number of monastic chronicles and works on occult sciences, including Steganographia, De Septem Secudiis and Polygraphia. Trithemius is said to have been the teacher of Cornelius Agrippa.

[pic]

Figure 23 Trine

Trine: Astrology. A powerful aspect (q.v.) on a Horoscope in which two planets are separated by 120 degrees. This aspect has an orb of 8-9 degrees. The symbol of this aspect is depicted in fig. 23.

Trinitas (Latin- trans. "threefold"): One of the seventy two names of Jehovah in the Grimoire of Honorius.

Trint (Var. Tarinuta): Enochian- trans. "sit".

[pic]

Figure 24 Triple Circle

Triple Circle: The Triple Circle or Triple Ring consists of three overlapping circles (see fig. 24). Amongst the interpretations attached to the triple circle over the years are: (a) Perfection in thought, word and deed; (b) Love, power and wisdom; (c) Body, mind and shadow. (d) In Greek mythology: An ancient symbol which represented the three Fates (See Moerae). The group which seems to have re popularized this symbol in modern times is the rock group Led Zepplin, who used this symbol, amongst others, on their record albums. This has in turn led to some fundamentalist Christian authors to interpret this symbol as being Satanic.

Triple Vocabulaire Infernal, Le: An obscure grimoire by Finellan, combining the Black Pullet, the Green Butterfly, The Queen of the Hairy Flies and the Black Screech Owl.

Triplicities (Var. Trigons): Astrology. The signs of the Zodiac are grouped into four groups of three called Triplicities, each associated with one of the elements: Air, Earth, Fire and Water. The Air signs include Libra, Gemini, and Aquarius. The Water signs include Pisces, Cancer and Scorpio. The Fire signs include Sagittarius, Leo and Aries. The Earth signs include Virgo, Capricorn and Taurus.

Trisaga (Deriv. Greek term meaning "directing by triads"): A spirit subordinate to Amaimon and Ariton in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Trismegistus, Hermes (Greek- trans. "Hermes the Thrice Greatest"): As recently as 1800 the authors of grimoires have alleged that Hermes Trismegistus was an actual Egyptian philospher who lived in Old Testament times. Actually this is a Greek name for the ancient Egyptian God Tehuti (q.v.), also known as Thoth. Hermes Trismegistus is often identified as the person who first created the system of organizing things into animal, vegetable and mineral kingdoms.

[pic]

Figure 25 Tristitia

Tristitia: (1) A Geomantic figure associated with the Zodiacal sign Aquarius (See fig. 25). (2) A Geomantic figure that appears in The Magus.

Trof (Var. Tarofe): Enochian- trans. "building".

Trois Carrefours (Creole- trans. "Three Crossroads"): Vodou. One of the Pethro Lwas.

Trois Feuilles-Trois Racines (Creole- trans. "Three Leaves-Three Roots"): Vodou. One of the Pethro Lwas.

Tromes (Deriv. Greek term meaning "wound" or "disaster"): A spirit subordinate to Belzebud in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Trono: Santeria. A term meaning "throne".

Trotosi X (Var. of Totrisi (q.v.)): In The Sword of Moses: An angel who communicated the divine name to Moses.

Trsiel: (1) In Merkabah lore: An angel having dominion over rivers. (2) An angel invoked in a nostrum to influence a man's heart in Henri Gamache's Mystery of the Long Lost 8th, 9th and 10th Books of Moses.

True Book of Black Magic: See Book of True Black Magic.

True Magickal Work of the Jesuits: See Verus Jesuitarum Libellus.

Trumantrem: A name used to give one power over animals in the Black Pullet.

Tsade: See Tzaddi.

Tsadi'ael: In Hechaloth lore: An angel guarding the entrance to the 6th heaven.

Tsadkiel (Var. of Zadkiel (q.v.)): In The Zohar: The angel of justice.

Tsaftsefiah: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tsaftsefiel: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tsahtsehiyah: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tsaltselim: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tsaltseliyah: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tsaphah (Deriv. Hebrew "TzPH" ("covering or shroud")): A name that appears on the first line of a gnomonic square used to make oneself invisible in the second hour of the day or night in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

|T |S |A |P |H |A |H |

|S | | | | | | |

|A | | | | | | |

|P | | | | | | |

|H |I |T |N |E |R |A |

|A |N |A |O |R |I |S |

|H | | | | | | |

Tsaphiel: In Papus's Traite Elementaire de Science Occulte: One of the angels of the moon.

Tsaphkiel: See Tzaphquiel.

Tsaraat (Hebrew- trans. "plague"): A name that appears on the first line of a gnomonic square used to heal leprosy in the Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage. This square is reproduced below:

|T |S |A |R |A |A |T |

|S |I |R |A |P |L |A |

|A | | | | | | |

|R | | | | | | |

|A | | | | | | |

|A | | | | | | |

|T | | | | | |G |

Tsavniyah: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tsavtsiyah: In 3 Enoch: One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tse'an: In Hechaloth lore: An angel guarding the entrance to the 6th heaven.

Tsedeck: See Tzedeq.

Tshku: Lord of the Annunaki in the Necronomicon.

Tshndrnis: In Sepher Raziel: One of the nomina barbara ruling the months of the year.

Tsilah Wedo (Var. Tsillah Wedo): Vodou. An aspect of the Lwa Erzulie (q.v.) as a great virgin of wealth and beauty.

Tsillah Wedo: See Tsilah Wedo.

Tsirya: In Sepher Raziel: One of the 70 guardian angels of children.

Tsuria: In Sepher Raziel: One of the 70 guardian angels of children.

Tsuriel: See Zuriel.

Tual: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel related to: (a) The element of earth. (b) The planet Venus. (c) The sign of Taurus (q.v.).

Tuamautef (Var. Tou-mathaph, Toum, Duamutef, Tmoumathv, Tmoumathph, Toumathph): An Egyptian jackal headed deity, also known as "the cutter" or "the divider". One of four Canopic Gods or Children of Horus (q.v.) that guarded the preserved internal organs of the mummified corpse. The other three were Amset, Ahephi and Qebhsennuf.

Tuat: (1) An Egyptian name for the abode of departed spirits. Some translate this term as "underworld", but this is not correct as it was not considered to be underground. It is not strictly analogous to "Hell", "Hades" or "Jehanna" either, though it contained places of darkness and fire and monsters to punish the enemies of the Gods. (2) A term used in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. (2) A gate mentioned in several parts of Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli, probably a reference to the Pillars of Shu or the gate of Tchesert, the Northern gate to the Tuat in Egyptian mythology.

Tuatha Dé Danann (Trans. “people of the Goddess Danu”): A race of divine beings. Irish myth lists them as the occupants of Ireland before the arrival of the Gaels. They are now said to live in the Otherworld of Sidhe (q.v.).

Tuaut: A name of a holy oil mentioned in Henri Gamache's Mystery of the Long Lost 8th, 9th and 10th Books of Moses.

Tubatlu: In The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses: One of the 8 angels of omnipotence.

Tubiel (Var. of Tubuel (q.v.)): (1) In The Heptameron: An angel of summer. (2) The head of the sign of summer in The Magus. (3) In Vocabulaire de L'Angelologie: An angel invoked to bring the return of small birds.

Tubuas: (1) One of the 7 angels reprobated at the church council in Rome in 745 C.E. (2) An angel mentioned in The Hierarchy of the Blessed Angels.

Tubuel (Var. Tubiel): One of the 7 angels reprobated at the church council in Rome in 745 C.E.

Tufiel: In Hechaloth lore: An angel guarding the entrance to the 1st heaven.

Tufriel: In Hechaloth lore: An angel guarding the entrance to the 6th heaven.

[pic]

Figure 26 Tui

Tui: The fifty eighth of the 64 hexagrams or patterns of the Chinese divination system called I Ching (see fig. 27). It repressents the necessity to be resolute and act appropriately.

Tuiel: An angel mentioned in Sepher Raziel.

Tui-Tui: Santeria. One of the Toques (rhythyms) played on the Bataa (q.v.) for the Orisha Chango (q.v.) at the Tambor (q.v.).

Tukiphat: One of the Genii of the eighth hour, called a "genius of the Schamir (q.v.)", found in the Nuctemeron of Apollonius of Tyana.

Tuku: Lord of "baneful magick, vanquisher of the Ancient Ones" in the Necronomicon.

Tulatu: In The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses: One of the 8 angels of omnipotence.

Tule: One of three most secret names of Jehovah in the cry of the aethyr Oxo in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Tulitas: A name used to bring good fortune in a lottery in the Black Pullet.

Tulot (Deriv. Chaldean term meaning "triple"): A spirit subordinate to the four sub princes Oriens, Paimon, Ariton and Amaimon in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Tum (Var. of Atum (q.v.)): (1) An Egyptian God mentioned by Crowley in Liber Al Vel Legis. (2) An Egyptian God mentioned in the cry of the aethyr Zax in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli. (3) An Egyptian God mentioned in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Tumael: See Tamiel.

Tumiel: See Tamiel.

Tummim: See Thummim.

Tumoriel: In the Lemegeton: An angel of the 11th hour of the night who is a chief officer under the angel Dardariel.

Tuniel: See Tamiel.

Tunrida: One of the Infernal names listed in Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible.

Tura: One of the seventy two names of Jehovah given in The Royal Masonic Cyclopedia.

Turan: A name used to bestow virtues in the Black Pullet.

Turbs (Var. Turebesa): Enochian- trans. "their beauty".

Turebesa: See Turbs.

Turel (Var. Turiel, Touriel. Hebrew- trans. "rock of God"): In Enoch I: One of 200 fallen angels listed who were followers of Semyaza.

Turiel (Var. of Turel (q.v.)): (1) One of the angels of the third heaven ruling in the west on Friday in The Magus. (2) In The Secret Grimoire of Turiel: (a) The angel after which the text is named. (b) A spirit of the planet Jupiter. (c) A messenger of the angel Sachiel or Setchiel (q.v.).

Turitel (Deriv. Hebrew term meaning "mountain cast down"): A spirit subordinate to Oriens in The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage.

Turlos: A name used in the preparation of parchment in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Turmiel: In Hechaloth lore: One of the angelic guards of the gates of the west wind.

Turn: Vampyre. To make someone into a Vampyre. People who have become Vampyres are referred to as “turned.”

Turner, Robert: A well known English translator of many of the old Grimoires, who lived from 1620-1665.

Tus: One of the three ministers of the angel Varcan, who rules Sunday in The Magus.

Tusmas: In the Lemegeton: An angel of the 7th hour of the day who is a lesser officer under the angel Barginiel.

Tustax (Var. Tasataxa, Tastax): Enochian- trans. "go before" or "precede".

Tutatis: See Teutates.

Tutiel: In Vocabulaire de L'Angelologie: A mysterious spirit invoked in conjurations.

Tutrbebial: In Hechaloth lore: The last of the 64 angelic wardens of the 7 celestial halls.

Tutresiel (Hebrew- trans. "piercing God"): In 3 Enoch: (a) An angelic prince to whom the angel Hamon gives homage. (b) One of the names of Metatron (q.v.).

Tutrusa'i: In Hechaloth lore: An angel guarding the entrance to the 1st heaven.

Tutu: A spirit who protects the household and brings joy to those who are sad in the Necronomicon.

Tutúlu: A term used in Liber VII: Liber Liberi vel Lapidis Lazuli, Advmbratio Kabbalae Aegyptiorum Svb Figvra VII.

Tuwahel: In The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses: A ministering angel invoked in magick rituals.

Twelve Singles: One of three classes of letters in the Hebrew alphabet according to the Sepher Yetzirah (q.v.). The other two classes are the Three Mothers and the Seven Doubles. The Twelve Singles are the letters Gimel, Heh, Vau, Zayin, Teth, Yod, Lamed, Samekh, Ayin, Tzaddi, Qoph and Tau.

Tychagara: (1) In Sepher Raziel: One of 7 exhalted angels of the order of Thrones. (2) In Agrippa's Three Books of Occult Philosophy: One of 7 exhalted angels of the order of Thrones.

Tyler: See Tiler.

Typhon (Var. Szathan Typhon. Greek- trans. "stupefying smoke" or "hot wind"):. (1) A snake headed giant who sired many of the monsters in Greek mythology. He was born parthenogentically to the Goddess Hera due to her rage at her husband Zeus giving "birth" to Athena (q.v.). In the time of the nineteeenth Dynasty in Egypt the Hyksos raiders brought this name into Egypt, where it became an alternate name for the God Set (q.v.). (2) In Agrippa's Three Books of Occult Philosophy: An agnel identified with Sammael (q.v.). (3) One of the guardians of the ninth and final circle of hell in Dante's Inferno. (4) One of the Infernal names listed in Anton LaVey's Satanic Bible. (4) A deity named in Das Tierdrama in LaVey's The Satanic Rituals. (5) In Liber O: (a) A name used in the Lesser Ritual of the Hexagram. (6) The sign of Apophis and Typhon is used in the opening of the portal in Liber Vel Chanokh. (7) In Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli: (a) A name of a sphinx mentioned in an invocation to Khr. (b) A name which appears in the cry of the aethyr Arn. (8) A God mentioned in Liber CCXXXI. (9) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A God mentioned in the initiation of the Practicus Grade. (b) A God mentioned in the Rite of the Pentagram and the Five Paths. (10) A deity mentioned in Liber VII: Liber Liberi vel Lapidis Lazuli, Advmbratio Kabbalae Aegyptiorum Svb Figvra VII.

Tyr: Norse/Asatru. The God of war, courage, and justice. He is said to have sacrificed his own hand so that the Gods could bind the evil wolf Fenrir. Since he gave up his hand to honor an oath, Tyr is seen as the God of honor, laws and oaths. Tyr was once the chief of the Aesir (q.v.), but passed this job on to Odin (q.v.). Tyr is remembered at the Summer solstice. His wife is the Goddess Zisa.

Tzabaoth (Var. Sabaoth, Sebaoth, Sabao, Zabaoth, TzBAVTh, Zevao. Hebrew "RzBAVTh" ("hosts" or "armies")): (1) A name used for Jehovah in the prophetic books of the Old Testament. (2) In the Greater Key of Solomon: (a) A name of Jehovah used in a conjuration. (b) A name used in the process of taking a lustral bath. (c) A name inscribed on a wooden trumpet used in preparing a ritual site. (d) A name used in the consecration of the ritual sword. (e) A name used in the consecration of salt and water. (2) A name used in the first and second conjuration of spirits in the Lemegeton.

Tzaddi (Hebrew- trans. “fish hook” or “javelin”): (1) Tzaddi, Tsade or Sadhe is the eighteenth letter of the Hebrew alphabet (ס), equivalent to "Tz" in English . It is assigned the numerical value of "90" in the Qabalah, unless it is used as a final letter, which gives it the value "900". (2) In the Qabalah: The name of the path between Netzach and Yesod on the Tree of Life. (3) A name used in conjuration in the Greater Key of Solomon. (4) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A letter invoked in the consecration of the Lotus Wand. (b) A letter associated with Aquarius. (5) A letter mentioned in "Comment on Liber VII in class E" in Liber VII: Liber Liberi vel Lapidis Lazuli, Advmbratio Kabbalae Aegyptiorum Svb Figvra VII.

Tzadeq: See Tzedeq.

Tzadiqel: See Zadkiel.

Tzadkiel (Var. of Zadkiel (q.v.)): In Hechaloth lore: An angelic guardian of the gates of the east wind.

Tzadqiel (Var. of Zadkiel (q.v.)): (1) In the Greater Key of Solomon: An archangel related to: (a) The angel Sachiel. (b) Jupiter. (c) Tin. (d) The colour blue. (e) Thursday. (2) An archangelic name associated with the Sephira Chesed in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Tzajael: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 8th degree of Libra.

Tzakiel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 7th degree of Virgo.

Tzakmaqiel (Var. Ssakmakiel): In Prince of Darkness: A spirit of the sign of Aquarius.

Tzaniel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 10th degree of Aquarius.

Tzaphniel: An angel invoked in the use of a "magic carpet" for interrogating spirits in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tzaphon: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) The name of the cardinal point associated with the element of earth. (b) A name used in the consecration of the pentacle or pantacle.

Tzaphkiel (Var. of Tzaphquiel (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A name which appears on the Seven Branched Candlestick (q.v.).

Tzaphqiel (Var. of Tzaphquiel (q.v.)): (1) In the Greater Key of Solomon: An archangel related to: (a) The angel Cassiel. (b) Saturn. (c) Lead. (d) The colour black. (e) Saturday. (2) An archangel name associated with the Sephira Binah in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Tzaphquiel (Var. Tzaphqiel, Tzaphkiel, Tsaphkiel. Hebrew- trans. "contemplation of God"): In The Zohar: The third of the 10 Sephira or Archangels.

Tzarmiel: In Hechaloth lore: One of the angelic guards of the gates of the north wind.

Tzartak (Var. Tzortaq): In Sepher Raziel: One of the 70 guardian angels of children.

Tzathel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 9th degree of Scorpio.

Tzaugel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 9th degree of Sagittarius.

TzBAVTh (Var. of Tzaboath (q.v.)): A name used when making the invoking pentagram of water in the opening of the temple of the third degree in Liber Vel Chanokh.

TzDQ: See Tzedeq.

Tzedek (Var. of Tzedeq (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A name which appears on the Seven Branched Candlestick (q.v.).

Tzedekiel (Var. of Zadkiel (q.v.)): In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: A name which appears on the Seven Branched Candlestick (q.v.).

Tzedeq (Var. Tsedeck, Tzedek, Tzadeq, Zedex, Tzedeqiah. Hebrew “TzDQ”): (1) Old Hebrew name for the planet Jupiter. (2) The fourth of the ten houses or heavens of the Qabalistic world of Assiah (q.v.), representing the Sphere of Jupiter. (3) A name for Jupiter related to Thursday, which appears in the Greater Key of Solomon. (4) In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: (a) A name for the planet Jupiter. (b) The equivalent of the Sephira Chesed in the material world, representing righteousness.

Tzedeqiah (Var. of Tzedeq (q.v.)): An angel whose name is inscribed on the first pentacle of Jupiter in the Greater Key of Solomon.

Tzediq Jesod Olahm (Hebrew- trans. "The Righteous is the Foundation of the World"): Used in the cry of the aethyr Ikh in Liber Aervm Vel Saecvli.

Tzelladmiron (Trans. "little limpid blood"): One of the orders of Qliphoth listed in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Tzelmoth: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: One of seven infernal abodes (q.v.) mentioned in the initiation of the Theoricus grade.

Tzephariron (Trans. "little earthy ones"): One of the orders of Qliphoth listed in the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.

Tzephon: See Zephon.

Tziah: In the magickal system of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn: One of seven earths (q.v.) mentioned in the initiation of the Theoricus grade.

Tzisiel: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 6th degree of Gemini.

Tzophal: In the Ars Paulina of the Lemegeton: An angel ruling the 6th degree of Pisces.

Tzortaq: See Tzartak.

Tzuflifu: One of the Genii of the qlippoth in Liber CCXXXI.

Tzurel: In Hechaloth lore: One of the angelic guards of the gates of the south wind.

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    [1] REGARDIE, Israel: The Complete Golden Dawn System of Magic, vol. 7, pg 156.

    [2] ibid.

    [3] ibid.

[4] Hall, James. (1974). Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art, Harper & Row, NY, pg 78.

[5] D’Aviella, Count Goblet. (1956). The Migration of Symbols, University Books, NY, pg 16.

[6] Westhoelter, Shane. (1989). General Information Manual With Respect to Satanism and the Occult, National Information Network, pg 71.

[7] Herold, Mary Ann. (1984). A Basic Guide to the Occult for Law Enforcement Agencies, pg 16.

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