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Part of a series on
Thelema
Unicursal hexagram
Holy Books and Stele
The Book of the Law
The Holy Books of Thelema
The Stele of Revealing
Key figures
Ankh-af-na-Khonsu
François Rabelais
Aleister Crowley
Jane Wolfe
Karl Germer
Wilfred Talbot Smith
Helen Parsons Smith
Jack Parsons
Phyllis Seckler
Grady McMurtry
Marjorie Cameron
Sara Northrup
Kenneth Grant
Kenneth Anger
Marcelo Ramos Motta
James Lees
Nema Andahadna
Christopher Hyatt
Core concepts
Abrahadabra
Great Work
True Will
The Abyss
Magick
Qabalah
Holy Guardian Angel
Thoth Tarot
Yoga
Gnostic Mass
The Aeon
Methods
Banishing
Body of light
Bornless Ritual
Cake of Light
English Qaballa
Enochian magic
Goetia
Mass of the Phoenix
Night of Pan
Sex magic
Tree of life
Thelemic texts
Aleister Crowley bibliography
Kenneth Grant bibliography
Marcelo Motta bibliography
Thelemic texts
Organizations
A∴A∴
O∴A∴A∴
Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica (EGC)
Ordo Templi Orientis (OTO)
Society Ordo Templi Orientis (SOTO)
Thelemic Order of the Golden Dawn
Typhonian Order (TOTO)
Deities
Nuit
Hadit
Heru-ra-ha
Aiwass
Therion
Babalon
Baphomet
Chaos
Ma'at
Related topics
Abbey of Thelema
Abramelin oil
Agape Lodge
Boleskine House
Choronzon
Dianism
Eroto-comatose lucidity
Magical formulae
Number of the beast
Obeah and wanga
Solar Lodge
Stellar wisdom
Table of magical correspondences
Whore of Babylon
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Abramelin oil, also called oil of Abramelin, is a ceremonial magic oil blended from aromatic plant materials. Its name came about due to its having been described in a medieval grimoire called The Book of Abramelin written by Abraham the Jew (presumed to have lived from c. 1362 – c. 1458). The recipe is adapted from the Jewish Holy anointing oil of the Tanakh, which is described in the Book of Exodus (30:22-25) attributed to Moses.
Abramelin oil became popular in the Western esoteric tradition in the 20th century after the publication of the S. L. MacGregor Mathers English translation of The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage (1897), and especially via Aleister Crowley, who used a similar version of the oil in his system of Magick. There are multiple recipes in use today and the oil continues to be used in several modern occult traditions, particularly Thelema (created in 1904 by Crowley) and the Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica.
Abramelinoil, also called oil of Abramelin, is a ceremonial magic oil blended from aromatic plant materials. Its name came about due to its having been...
Abramelin may refer to: The Book of Abramelin, a 15th century grimoire Abramelinoil, an anointing oil described in the grimoire Abramelin (band), an Australian...
mass), both of which are performed by Mandaean priests. Abramelinoil Holy water Shemen Afarsimon, oil of persimmon, in the Mishnah Washing and anointing Exodus...
Aleister Crowley in 1904. A cake of light contains flour, honey, Abramelinoil, olive oil, beeswing, and bodily fluids such as semen, menstrual blood, vaginal...
. If it were not so, there would be no point in The Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage." In Magick in Theory and Practice, Aiwass is firmly identified...
word in an unknown language popularly carved onto amulets in antiquity Abramelinoil Abraxas stones Acupressure, an alternative to acupuncture using pressure...
operations known as the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, taken from a grimoire called The Book of Abramelin. According to Crowley, in his book The Confessions...
With his old mentor George Cecil Jones, Crowley continued performing the Abramelin rituals at the Ashdown Park Hotel in Coulsdon, Surrey. Crowley believed...
consumes a Cake of Light (a wafer made from meal, honey, olive oil, oil of Abramelin, and blood, semen, or both). "The Sect of the Phoenix" - story by...
angel is central to the 15th-century book The Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage by Abraham of Worms, a German Cabalist. In 1897, this book was...
the hidden stone'). Ancient alchemical formula: Sulfuric acid was called "oil of vitriol" by medieval European alchemists because it was prepared by roasting...