![]() The Russian translation of this Latin grimoire was published in 2019. ![]() His research focuses on late medieval religious culture, including mystical theology, magic, witchcraft, and church architecture in relationship to parish religion. The book has yet to be published in English translation in its entirety. Richard Kieckhefer (Ph.D., Texas, 1972) is a member of the Religion department and holds a joint appointment in the History department. Portions of the text, in English translation, are presented in Forbidden Rites as well, embedded within the author's essays and explanations on the Munich Manual in specific and grimoires in general. ![]() ![]() Richard Kieckhefer edited the text of the manuscript in 1998 under the title Forbidden Rites: A Necromancer's Manual of the Fifteenth Century. Pages 130 to 133 include a list of 11 demons, similar in part to the one from Ars Goetia. The text, composed in Latin, is largely concerned with demonology and necromancy. The Munich Manual of Demonic Magic or Liber incantationum, exorcismorum et fascinationum variarum is a fifteenth-century grimoire manuscript. The Munich Handbook probably would have gone unremarked in the Munich library without the efforts of Professor Richard Kieckhefer, who published a full edition of the Latin text along with commentary and analysis in his 1997 book, Forbidden Rites. Magic circle from the Munich Manual of Demon Magic ![]()
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