An Inventorie of Demons
An Inventorie of Demons
Couldn't load pickup availability
An Inventorie of Demons provides the catalogue of spirits found in Reginald Scot’s Discoverie of Witchcraft, including ‘Notes on the ‘Names by Brinsley Nicholson.
It is nowadays tolerably well known that the Goetia of Solomon derives its spirit catalogue in great part from Johann Weyer’s De Praestigiis Daemonum et Incantationibus ac Venificiis, in particular the appendix ‘Pseudomonarchia Daemonum’ (Liber officiorum spirituum). From this the Goetia derives, even more specifically, via a translation published in Reginald Scot’s Discoverie of Witchcraft. The lessons to be learned from textual comparisons have yet to percolate out to any significant degree. Limited editions of Scot, in whole or in part, come and go. Students need to be able to compare the text from Scot with the Goetia – and indeed other catalogues now available like the Book of Offices/Book of Oberon – quickly and effectively, and a pamphlet that you can use as a bookmark in other grimoires serves that purpose.
An Inventorie of Demons
Reginald Scot.
Introduction by Jake Stratton-Kent
ISBN 978-1-914166-97-6
A Guide to the Underworld.
Published in June, 2016.
28 pages.

Guides to the Underworld
We've been producing our Guides since 2009 and have over 60 titles in print. From Jake Stratton-Kent's Spirit Work series, Catholic folk magic, Hoodoo, stellar magic, lunar magic, translations of historical treatises on magic, and enough practical magic to fill a lifetime, the Guides are an indispensable part of your magical journey.
In this series of pamphlets we adhere to:
"...the second idea of the radix of the word Pamphlet... that it takes its derivations from παν, 'all', and φιλεω, 'I love', signifying a thing beloved by all; for a pamphlet being of a small portable bulk, and of no great price, is adapted to every one's understanding and reading." (Curiosities of Literature, and the Literary Character Illustrated, Disraeli & Griswold, 1846, p. 91)
Because magic is for everyone.