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Wednesday, 18 April 2007

Survey Of Scottish Witchcraft Database Documentation And Description

Survey Of Scottish Witchcraft Database Documentation And Description Cover

Book: Survey Of Scottish Witchcraft Database Documentation And Description by Anonymous

The following document is a Description and guide to the layout and design of the ‘Survey of Scottish Witchcraft’ database. It is divided into two sections. In the first section appropriate terms and concepts are defined in order to afford accuracy and precision in the discussion of complicated Relationships encompassed by the database. This includes relationships between accused witches and their accusers, different accused witches, people and prosecutorial processes, and cultural elements of witchcraft belief and the processes through which they were documented. The second section is a general Description of how the database is organised. Please see the document ‘Description of Database Fields’ for a full discussion of every field in the database, including its meaning, use and relationships to other fields and/or tables. Three entity models (overview, case attributes and trial attributes) which are graphic descriptions of the table structure of the database are also included to provide a visual map of the database and all the table connections.

Download Anonymous's eBook: Survey Of Scottish Witchcraft Database Documentation And Description

Free eBooks (Can Be Downloaded):

George Lincoln Burr - Narratives Of The Witchcraft Cases
Lizanne Henderson - The Survival Of Witchcraft Prosecutions And Witch Belief In South West Scotland
John Ankerberg - Satanism And Witchcraft The Occult And The West Part Ii
Anonymous - Survey Of Scottish Witchcraft Database Documentation And Description

Wednesday, 11 April 2007

Frabato The Magician

Frabato The Magician Cover

Book: Frabato The Magician by Franz Bardon

Though cast in the form of a novel, Frabato the Magician is in fact the spiritual autobiography of Franz Bardon, one of the 20th century's greatest Hermetic adepts.

Frabato was the author's stage name during his career as a performing magician, and it is Frabato who occupies center stage in the novel as well. Set in Dresdent, Germany, in the early 1930s, the story chronicles Frabato's magical battles with the members of a powerful and dangerous black lodge, his escape from Germany during the final desperate days of the Weimar Republic, and the beginning of the spiritual mission which was to culminate in Franz Bardon's classic books on Hermetic magic.

More than an occult novel, Frabato the Magician is itself a work of magic which illuminates Bardon's other books as well as providing a revealing look into the dark occult forces which lay behind the rise of the Third Reich.

The four Bardon books can be considered unsurpassed classics. You will find more information in one Bardon book than in a hundred other books on this subject. The reader will be pleasantly surprised that nothing is hidden behind the veil of incompetence or arrogance. Everything is out in the open and nothing is omitted. These books have enjoyed a world-wide acceptance since 1958, which we feel will continue to grow. We feel that everyone is entitled to this knowledge and not just a select few, since this was the intention of Divine Providence.

Evidence regarding the events related in this book will be reserved for people trained and developed in magic. Humankind will have to resign itself to the fact that a great deal of evidence concerning the workings of our cosmos can only be furnished through spiritual means.



Buy Franz Bardon's book: Frabato The Magician

Free eBooks (Can Be Downloaded):

Jarl Fossum - Seth In The Magical Texts
Aubrey Bell - The Magic Of Spain
Julius Evola - Against The Neopagans
Franz Bardon - Frabato The Magician

Sunday, 1 April 2007

The Yellow Fairy Book

The Yellow Fairy Book Cover

Book: The Yellow Fairy Book by Andrew Lang

The Yellow Fairy Book - Classic Fairy Tales from Caryn's eBooks -- The Cat and the Mouse, The Wizard King, The Magic Ring, Thumbelina and many more. The Editor thinks that children will readily forgive him for publishing another Fairy Book. We have had the Blue, the Red, the Green, and here is the Yellow. If children are pleased, and they are so kind as to say that they are pleased, the Editor does not care very much for what other people may say. Now, there is one gentleman who seems to think that it is not quite right to print so many fairy tales, with pictures, and to publish them in red and blue covers. He is named Mr. G. Laurence Gomme, and he is president of a learned body called the Folk Lore Society. Once a year he makes his address to his subjects, of whom the Editor is one, and Mr. Joseph Jacobs (who has published many delightful fairy tales with pretty pictures) is another. Fancy, then, the dismay of Mr. Jacobs, and of the Editor, when they heard their president say that he did not think it very nice in them to publish fairy books, above all, red, green, and blue fairy books! They said that they did not see any harm in it, and they were ready to 'put themselves on their country,' and be tried by a jury of children. And, indeed, they still see no harm in what they have done; nay, like Father William in the poem, they are ready 'to do it again and again.'

Download Andrew Lang's eBook: The Yellow Fairy Book

Suggested ebooks:

John Sebastian Marlowe Ward - The Fellow Crafts Handbook
Andrew Lang - The Yellow Fairy Book