The Myth of the Magus

Front Cover
Cambridge University Press, Mar 26, 1993 - Body, Mind & Spirit - 281 pages
The Magus, a legendary magician of superhuman powers, is an archetype central to myth and religion across many cultures. Identifying its anthropological origins in ancient rituals performed by a shaman or wizard to ensure the prosperity of his tribe, E. M. Butler goes on to trace its subsequent development in pre-Christian religious and mystic philosophers, in medieval sorcerers and alchemists, and finally in the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century occult revival. From Zoroaster to Solomon, Merlin to Faust, Cagliostro to Rasputin, legends of the Magus are explored and where possible compared with the historical record in this fascinating account, first published in 1948, of one of the major figures in religious and occult mythology.
 

Contents

THE WISE MEN OF THE EAST
15
B ZOROASTER
20
HEBREW HOLY MEN
29
B SOLOMON
35
THE SAGES OF GREECE
44
B APOLLONIUS OF TYANA
55
THE DOWNFALL OF THE MAGUS
66
B SIMON MAGUS
73
B JOAN AND FAUST
116
C DOCTOR FAUST
121
D FRIAR BACON
144
IN THE LIGHT OF COMMON DAY
160
B GAUFFRIDI AND GRANDIER
172
THE RETURN OF THE MAGI
177
ARISTEAS REDIVIVUS
179
THE MAN OF MYSTERY
185

THE DARK AGES
85
UNDER THE CHRISTIAN CLOUD
87
B THEOPHILUS
91
C GERBERT
94
POSTPAGAN SHADES
98
B MERLIN
104
BENEATH A BLACK SUN
112
THE GRAND COPHT
215
MADAME AND THE MASTERS
243
THE HOLY DEVIL
261
CONCLUSION
264
SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY
269
INDEX
277
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