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Enc of dem in wor rel and cul 89

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Bilico

82

more. Ranked as a king and a minister to ARCAN,
Bileth commands eighty-five legions of demons.
When summoned, as soon as Bileth appears,
the summoner must be brave and, using a hazel
wood wand, make a triangle in the air starting at
the south, moving east, and then closing it. Then
he must command the demon to enter into it.
The summoner must be respectful and give the
demon the honor due his rank. The summoner
must also wear a silver ring on the middle finger
of his left hand, and hold this ring up to the
demon’s face so it can be seen at all times. Bileth
appears to the sounding of trumpets and rides
upon a pale horse looking as frightening as possible in an attempt to scare his summoner. He is
summoned because of his ability to cause love to
happen between a man and a woman and for his
talent in teaching mathematics. According to
Pseudomonarchia Daemonum, it was shortly after
the flood had passed that Noah’s son, CHAM,
summoned this demon; together they wrote a
book of mathematics.
Some sources claim that Bileth is a female
demon, saying that she is a protector of Hell. In
these sources she is described as looking like a
winged she-wolf, whose wingspan is some twenty
feet. A third eye, crystal-like, is located on her


forehead between two long horns. She also has
four tails.

Sources: Davidson, Dictionary of Angles, 76; Guiley,
Encyclopedia of Angels, 69; McLean, Treatise of Angel
Magic, 53.

Bilico
Variations: Lord of Manifestation
According to the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the
Mage, Bilico, the demon of manifestations, is one
of the forty-nine SERVITORS OF BEELZEBUB (see
BEELZEBUB).

Sources: Ford, Bible of the Adversary, 93; Mathers,
Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, 120;
Von Worms, Book of Abramelin, 257.

forty-nine SERVITORS
BEELZEBUB).

OF

BEELZEBUB (see

Sources: Belanger, Dictionary of Demons, 74; Mathers, Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, 116;
Von Worms, Book of Abramelin, 257.

BiluBI
A species of vampiric demon from Burma, the

bilu (“blue”) is particularly difficult to detect because it looks exactly like a human, except that it
has blood-red eyes and casts no shadow. A highly
skilled predator with enormous teeth and corrosive touch, very few of its victims ever escape it.

Sources: Balfour, Cyclopædia of India and of Eastern
and Southern Asia, 362; DeCaroli, Haunting the
Buddha, 171; Seekins, Historical Dictionary of Burma,
110; Spiro, Burmese Supernaturalism, 44.

Bime
Variations: Bim, BUNE
In the Ars Goetia, book one of the Lemegeton,
Bime is named as a duke that commands thirty
legions of demons. He appears before those who
summon him as a dragon with three heads, a
dog-headed griffon, or a man. He will answer
truthfully any question asked of him, bestow
riches and wisdom, move corpses from one grave
to another, and create corpse candles.

Sources: Crowley, The Goethia, 39; De Laurence,
Lesser Key of Solomon, Goetia, 29–30; Peterson, Lesser
Key of Solomon, 18; Scott, London Magazine, Vol. 5, 378.

Bine
Variations: Bryth
In Akkadian demonology, Bine, similar to
Cerberus in the Greek and Roman mythology,
is the demonic guardian god. He was condemned
to guard the gates of Hell because being something of a carpenter he supplied hand-crafted

wings to all the demons of Hell, enabling them
to escape. He constructed the wings from souls
he captured; the more wings he added to a set of
wings, the larger they would be.
Sources: Icons, Guardians, 256

Bilifares
Variations: Lord of Division
The Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage lists
Bilifares, the Lord of Division, as one of the
forty-nine SERVITORS OF BEELZEBUB (see
BEELZEBUB).

Sources: Belanger, Dictionary of Demons, 57;
Churchill, History and Practice of Magic, 402; Mathers,
Book of the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, 107.

Bilifor
Variations: Lord of Glory
According to the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the
Mage, Bilifor, the Lord of Glory, is one of the

Biqa
Biqa (Amharic for “good person”) was original
name of KASBEEL, one of the FALLEN ANGELS.
As soon as this angel was created, he turned away
from God, so his name was changed to Kazbeel,
which means “he who lies to God.”

Sources: Davidson, Dictionary of Angels, 168; Fossum, Name of God and the Angel of the Lord, 273–4;

Minchero, Voice from the Jordan, 68.

Biriel
Biriel (“Stronghold of God”) is one of the fifteen SERVITORS OF ASMODEUS AND MAGOTH

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