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Illustrated Anthology of Sorcery, Magic and Alchemy with Three Hundred and Seventy-six Illustrations

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ISBN: 0891040099

395 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1958

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371 people want to read

About the author

Émile-Jules Grillot de Givry

30 books6 followers

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5 stars
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22 (28%)
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Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews
Profile Image for Jennifer.
410 reviews2 followers
February 18, 2017
Written in the 1930's, this book contains everything you would ever want to know about witchcraft and magic in western history including details of spells and symbols. Part history, part art history and part spell book.
Profile Image for Peter J..
Author 1 book8 followers
March 28, 2015
This book was more of an overview of ancient occult artwork than any in depth review of the subject. Also, having read A LOT of occult, the subjects this author chose for review and hints at a belief in were often silly (e.g. Seriously; witches flying up a chimney to the Black Sabbath, where they dance and have orgies with satyrs prior to eating babies? Really?). The only parts that really broke my heart were the many chilling descriptions of the horrible tortures those accused of witchcraft were subjected to; including girls as young as 8 (If memory serves) being burned alive. Tragic.
Profile Image for Nick Tramdack.
131 reviews43 followers
March 10, 2011
I read this book while doing research about alchemy for a novel. It was okay. There's a really cool engraving of a musical instrument like a keyboard, except you play it by yanking on the tails of cats that are imprisoned inside the machine.
Profile Image for Sean Sexton.
724 reviews8 followers
January 13, 2018
My copy of this book was published back in 1971, being a reprint of the first English translation in 1931. But after a little Googling, it appears that the French original probably dates back to 1929.

The author appears to be passionate about the occult and witchcraft, since many of the reproductions or plates in the work mention being from the collection of some book in the author's possession. De Givry does a high-level history of various aspects of witchcraft, mostly putting things into a historical perspective. By this I mean that he talks about people who claimed to have powers, or about people being punished for being suspected of practicing magic or being a witch. But De Givry seems to be right on the edge of believing in everything that he's writing about. He often mentions certain practices as obviously being nonsense, while others are presented more factually.

The end result is mildly interesting, though it can bog down in some areas. (Many pages talking about the variations on diagrams used to contain demons when summoning them). The most interesting chapter--a description of Metoposcopy, or the art of ascertaining someone's future by reading the lines on their forehead.
Profile Image for Constantinos Nterziotis.
90 reviews3 followers
February 3, 2022
Givry continued the medieval propaganda against Witchcraft and it took it a step further, as he considers that the art around witchcraft and magic depicts reality. Yes, you are not crazy, this is what he considers. So, previous writers considered that confessions (sic) of witches were real, he considers that painting depicted the truth. So, the book is full of very nice illustrations, which are commented by the author.
A catholic and a mason, who continues the Christian propaganda in the 20th century. Total loss of time and money, unless you are interested in the arguments of that side.
Profile Image for Blizzard.
5 reviews
November 9, 2015
A wide-ranging classic of the occult. This book delves into the world of shadows, and humanity's urge to adventure within it.

It contains a remarkable collection of illutrations - reproductions of prints, pictures, manuscripts and so on - covering a wide time-span. My particular favourites are the Durer paintings of the fifteenth century, and the Goyas from the nineteenth. "Transformation of Sorcerers" by Goya is a masterpiece of spookiness.

Sorcerers, witches, demons, magic circles, astrology, the tarot... Perfect reading for a dark autumn evening.

Profile Image for Ellis Knox.
Author 5 books38 followers
December 2, 2013
This was my first book on the subject. Still have it. As history it's badly out of date, but it's still a fun read.

This is a hardbound edition from Bonanza Books.
Profile Image for Greyer Jane.
107 reviews20 followers
March 5, 2015
this was one of my Baby books of Witchcraft, my public Library in Madisonville, KY had a copy, that and A. E. Waite's "Book of Black Magic". :)
Displaying 1 - 9 of 9 reviews

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