Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; ... Grimoire * List of spirits appearing in grimoires; A. Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches;
A battle in GrimGrimoire, showing types of Glamour familiars.. GrimGrimoire is a two-dimensional (2D) side-scrolling real-time strategy (RTS) video game; players take the role of trainee witch Lillet Blan, who completes both story missions and optional challenge levels.
Demiplane is a company that creates digital toolsets for playing tabletop role-playing games which can be used as an aid to playing in person or remotely online. The Demiplane platform's main services are game matchmaking, game hosting and licensed content via the Nexus digital toolset.
The Ars Notoria (in English: Notory Art) is a 13th-century Latin textbook of magic (now retroactively called a grimoire) from northern Italy.It claims to grant its practitioner an enhancement of their mental faculties, the ability to communicate with angels, and earthly and heavenly knowledge through ritual magic.
This is a comprehensive index of commercial role-playing video games, sorted chronologically by year.Information regarding date of release, developer, publisher, operating system, subgenre and notability is provided where available.
Grimm Fairy Tales; Groo the Wanderer; He-Man and the Masters of the Universe; Heavy Metal; The History of the Runestaff; The Hobbit; Ironwood; Kill Shakespeare; Kull of Atlantis; Lady Death; Little Nemo in Slumberland; Meridian; Michael Moorcock's Multiverse; Monster Allergy; Mouse Guard; Mystic; The New Brighton Archeological Society; Orcs ...
The Book of Ceremonial Magic by Arthur Edward Waite was originally called The Book of Black Magic and of Pacts.It was first published in a limited run in 1898, and distributed more widely under the title The Book of Ceremonial Magic in 1910. [1]
The Grimorium Verum (Latin for True Grimoire) is an 18th-century grimoire attributed to one "Alibeck the Egyptian" of Memphis, who purportedly wrote in 1517. Like many grimoires, it claims a tradition originating with King Solomon .