• Hi guest! As you can see, the new Wizard Forums has been revived, and we are glad to have you visiting our site! However, it would be really helpful, both to you and us, if you registered on our website! Registering allows you to see all posts, and make posts yourself, which would be great if you could share your knowledge and opinions with us! You could also make posts to ask questions!
  • ⚠️ Library Warning!

    In order to view any of the threads in this section OR create a new thread, you must meet one of the following requirements!
    1. You must either be a Benefactor. See here for more: Account Upgrades
    2. OR you must have posted 50 posts in the Occult Sections of the forum (The Order)
    3. OR you must have been registered for OVER a week, AND made at least 1 post in the Occult Sections in the last week

Book – PDF P. Kousoulis (ed.) - Ancient Egyptian Demonology: Studies on the Boundaries between the Demonic and the Divine in Egyptian Magic

Share a PDF of a book.

HoldAll

Librarian
Staff member
Librarian
Joined
Jul 3, 2023
Messages
5,740
Reaction score
28,930
Awards
17
5178xunF97L._SL1000_.jpg


In the Egyptian context, what we term magic and demon, drawing on our own cultural heritage, are not seen as negative aspects of cultural practice and conceptualisation. Similarly, the Egyptian equivalents do not carry the pejorative connotations borne by the modern terms and their Greek antecedents; magic and demons can be forces for good as well as evil. Indeed, the practice of magic and the conceptualisation of personified demonic agents are central to the Egyptian understanding of the workings of the world from the very continuation of the cosmos itself down to the vicissitudes of existence faced by individuals. In particular, the broader practice of magic and articulation of the involvement of demonic agency form one of the crucial links in Ancient Egypt between individual existence on the human level and the level of nature or the cosmos, the realm of the gods. Unlike, though, the explicit recognition of the term demon in the ancient Greek language and religion, as the intermediary between god and mortals, the majority of the demonic names in the Egyptian literature do not possess an apparent ontological essence, or a clearly defined denotation. Their characteristics and role depended momentously on the verbal and performative ritual environment they were part of. The relation between the name of a demon and its cosmic-natural personification is not contradictory as it may seem, but it is closely interwoven in a well established ritual framework of words and actions. This multi-authored volume of 10 essays comprises an up-to-date authorized account of many aspects of ancient Egyptian demonology, including the multiple persona of the demonic or name vs. identity in the Egyptian formation of the demonic, nightmares and underworld demons, dream rituals and magic, categories of demonic entities and the vague distinction between the divine and the demonic in Egyptian cosmology and ritual, the theological and demonic aspects of Egyptian magic, and demons as reflections of human society.

Buy:
Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!


Please, Log in or Register to view URLs content!
 
Last edited:
Top