Definition of Heptameron. Meaning of Heptameron. Synonyms of Heptameron

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Definition of Heptameron

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Meaning of Heptameron from wikipedia

- The Heptaméron is a collection of 72 short stories written in French by Marguerite de Navarre (1492–1549), published posthumously in 1558. It has the form...
- name 'Sachiel' originally occurs in the late 1500s grimoire called The Heptameron. In the early mentions of that angel, its name is spelled in various ways:...
- reincarnation of the soul, and many spiritual laws of "change". The Heptameron, ascribed to Petrus de Apono, is based on the Book of Raziel. רזיאל המלאך...
- related works The Sworn Book of Honorius and in (pseudo)-Peter de Abano's Heptameron (the latter also influenced by Sefer Raziel). C****iel's presence in Honorius...
- from Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa's Three Books of Occult Philosophy, the Heptameron by pseudo-Pietro d'Abano, and the Magical Calendar. Weyer's Officium Spirituum...
- were the 1500s grimoires called the Heptameron by pseudo-Pietro d'Abano, and the Key of Solomon. In the Heptaméron, there is only one pentacle, whereas...
- also in regular communication with Marguerite de Navarre, author of the Heptameron. Another 16th-century author was Michel de Montaigne, whose most famous...
- subsequent authors, notably the French queen Marguerite de Navarre, whose Heptaméron (1559) included 72 original French tales and was modeled after the structure...
- The analogy would appear in again in 1582, in George Whetstone's An Heptameron of Civil Discourses: "The dashe of a Pen, is more greeuous than the counterbuse...
- from Agrippa's Three Books of Occult Philosophy and Pietro d'Abano's Heptameron. Previous demonologists such as Binsfeld (1589) had drawn up lists that...