“This is one of the most important books on medieval magic to be published in many years. Enormously popular for decades, <i>Ars Notoria</i> was adapted and mutated into many versions, making it very challenging to understand. It is exciting to see an expert translation based on Véronèse’s reliable critical edition of the Latin versions and other primary texts. Matthias Castle’s tome is massive but worth every penny for its encyclopedic but lucid treatment of the many elements, such as the angelology, magical figures, rituals, art of memory, and liberal arts. Given the significant impact <i>Ars Notoria</i> had on later magical texts, including the <i>Key of Solomon</i> and <i>Sworn Book of Honorius</i>, Castle’s edition should be valuable to scholars and practitioners alike.”
Joseph H. Peterson, author, translator, and creator of the Esoteric Archives website
“One of the lost treasures of medieval occultism, the <i>Ars Notoria</i> is a system of Solomonic angelic magic used by students and scholars to attain knowledge of the arts and sciences. Matthias Castle has done an exemplary job in translating the original texts and setting out all the details of the notory art for today’s scholars and practitioners of magic.”
John Michael Greer, coauthor and cotranslator of The Complete Picatrix: The Occult Classic of Astrol
“This volume offers readers for the first time an English translation of this important work of image magic, based on the best available critical edition. Readers can count on a combination of readability and accuracy, and the book represents a substantial contribution by rendering this text accessible to a new audience of students and practitioners alike.”
David Porreca, Ph.D., associate professor and codirector of the medieval studies undergraduate progr
“Offers a methodical foundation for understanding and exploring the various manuscripts of the <i>Ars Notoria</i> tradition and its historical contexts. Richly illustrated with a wide evidentiary range of the <i>Ars Notoria’s</i> sacred diagrams, figures, sigils, and seals from across the manuscript corpus and presenting section-by-section close readings of the prayerful and conjurational texts in question, this book furnishes those enamored of the notory art a deeper understanding of its peculiar prayers and protocols. This work should provide all those interested in medieval angelology, manuscript illumination, grimoiric conjuration, and visual cultures of sacred art a valuable historical resource for understanding and engaging with these most pious and pedagogical of grimoiric traditions.”
Alexander Cummins, Ph.D., historian and coauthor of An Excellent Booke of the Arte of Magicke
The magical text presents a complete system of angelic magic consisting of prayers addressed to angels, using figures called notae, for the purpose of acquiring scholastic and heavenly knowledge. Due to its rising popularity among university students, the magical ritual was reworked time and again, producing five treatises, dating from the 13th to 15th centuries; The Work of Works (Opus Operum), the Book of Flowers of Heavenly Teaching composed by the French Benedictine monk named John of Morigny, The Short Art (Ars Brevis), the abridged version attributed to Thomas of Toledo, and The Pauline Art (Ars Paulina), thereby establishing an entire notorial art tradition.
In this new and complete translation of Ars Notoria, based on Julien Veronese’s critical Latin edition, translator Matthias Castle presents the classic magical text, both short and long versions, including four of the later treatises. Castle explains how these theurgic ritual practices were performed, giving special attention to all the original pictorial figures (notae), and how the art of memory relates to angelic magic. Providing practical instruction, extensive commentary, and in-depth background research and annotations, Ars Notoria: The Notory Art of Solomon is an essential sourcebook on angelic magic for scholar and magician alike.
Acknowledgments
The History, Art, Ritual, and Method of the Ars Notoria
By Matthias Castle
I The Mythical and Material Story of the Ars Notoria
II Elements of the Ars Notoria
III The Knowledge of the Ars Notoria
IV The Art of Memory
V Analysis of the Figures
VI The Complete Ritual Procedures
Ars Notoria Version A
1 Flores Aurei
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
2 [Fragmented Supplements]
Ars Nova
Novem Termini
The Specials Addendum
3 Notae Supplement Version A
Ars Notoria Version B
4 Glosses and Variations
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Ars Nova
Novem Termini
5 Notae Supplement Version B
Branches of the Ars Notoria Tradition
6 Opus Operum (Work of Works)
7 Ars Brevis (Short Art)
8 Ars Notoria Abbreviata (Abridged Notory Art According to Thomas of Toledo)
9 Ars Paulina (Pauline Art [of Seven Figures])
Appendices
A1 Manuscripts and Editions
A2 Magical Figures of the Ars Notoria
A3 Authorship of the Ars Notoria
A4 Medieval Computations of Time
A5 The Enlightened Work from the Wisdom of Solomon
A6 Works Attributed to Apollonius
A7 Works Attributed to Solomon
A8 Annotated Bibliography of Medieval Scholarship
Bibliography
Index of Prayers
General Index