Direct evidence November 4, 2008
Posted by egabriel in History of Magic.Tags: ancient, evidence, period, magic, Supernatural, powers, practices, spells, forms, magical, rituals, elements, papyri, tools, symbols, formulas, amulets, stones, mixture, affiliations, incantations, kit, remains, city, bronze, table, base, dish, nail, letters, rings, conclusion, type, permanence, universality, scientists, testimonies
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Thus amulets were actually often a mixture of various formulas from Babylonian, Egyptian, and Greek elements that were worn by those of most affiliations so as to protect against other forms of magic. It is interesting to note that amulets are actually often abbreviated forms of the formulas found in the magical papyri.
Magical tools were thus very common in magical rituals. They were just as important as the spells and incantations that were repeated for each magical ritual. Direct evidence of this – a magician’s kit, probably dating from the third century CE, was discovered in the remains of the ancient city of Pergamon in Asia Minor. The find consisted of a bronze table and base covered with symbols, a dish, a large bronze nail with letters inscribed on its flat sides, two bronze rings, and three black polished stones inscribed with the names of supernatural powers. What emerges then, from this evidence, is the conclusion that a type of permanence and universality of magic had developed in the the Hellenistic period if not earlier. Most scientists agree that although many testimonies about magic are relatively late, the practices they reveal are much older.
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