Skip to product information
1 of 2

The Secrets of Helios: Unlocking the Practical Uses of PGM IV.1596-1715

The Secrets of Helios: Unlocking the Practical Uses of PGM IV.1596-1715

Regular price £4.99 GBP
Regular price Sale price £4.99 GBP
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Format
Quantity

The Secrets of Helios: Unlocking the Practical Uses of PGM IV.1596-1715  seeks to help the reader understand the cultural context and nature of the spell, while also providing directions for the modern practitioner to perform this practical and well-tested magic. 

PGM IV.1596-1715 is an invocation of the sun as eternal lord and ruler of the cosmos and a request for various blessings to be granted contained in the larger collection known as the Greek Magical Papyri (Papyri Graecae Magicae, or PGM). It was written sometime during the third or fourth century C.E. in Thebes as part of a larger document known as the Great Magical Papyri of Paris, which is believed to have been a manual for the professional practitioner of magic. An example of Egyptian heka for personal use, this spell draws on the original and daily vivifying forces of the sun from Egyptian theology, combined with astrological lore surrounding the changing benefits of the sun in the hours, which are found in several other spells of the Greek Magical Papyri.

The Secrets of Helios: Unlocking the Practical Uses of PGM IV.1596-1715
Alison Chicosky
Original translation by Cory C. Childs
Artwork by Adaline Soothtell
ISBN 978-1-914166-70-9
A Guide to the Underworld.
Published November 2022.
20 pages.

View full details

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.