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Enc of dem in wor rel and cul 98

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Cailleach

91
North by Northwest (see PRINCES OF HELL). He
is in service under the emperor of the West.
Cabariel commands one hundred dukes, fifty of
which are diurnal and fifty which are nocturnal;
only ten from each are named (see SERVITORS OF
CABARIEL). He is summoned for his ability to
disclose betrayals.
Sources: Gettings, Dictionary of Demons, 232; Peterson, Lesser Key of Solomon, 84; Trithemius,
Steganographia, 81.

Cabarim
Duke Cabarim is named in the Theurgia Goetia, the second book of the Lemegeton, as one of
the twelve SERVITORS OF DEMORIEL (see DEMORIEL and DUKES OF HELL).

Sources: Guiley, Encyclopedia of Demons and Demonology, 60; Peterson, Lesser Key of Solomon, 63.

Cabiel
In Enochian lore Cabiel is one of the twentyeight demonic rulers of the lunar mansions (see
ENOCHIAN RULERS OF THE LUNAR MANSIONS).

Sources: Gettings, Dictionary of Demons, 65;
McLean, Treatise on Angel Magic, 42; Scheible, Sixth
and Seventh Books of Moses, 75.

Cac
According to Enochian lore, Cac is a CACODAEMON. His angelic counterpart is unknown
(see ENOCHIAN CACODAEMONS and ENOCHIAN


RULERS OF THE LUNAR MANSIONS).

Sources: Chopra, Academic Dictionary of Mythology,
60; Laycock, Complete Enochian Dictionary, 92.

Cacodaemon DEE
Variations: Cacodemons, Kakadaimon, Kakodaimon, Kakos Daimon
Named for a Greek word meaning “bad
demon” or “bad spirit” that crossed over into the
Enochian language sometime in the sixteenth
century, Cacodaemons were said by some sources
to be the FALLEN ANGELS. Banished from
Heaven and unable to find a place of their own
to call home, they settled down to live in the
space between the earth and the stars. They have
been described as being large and powerfully built
humanoids with dark-hued skin and also as a
swirling black mass.
Cacodaemons are attracted to a particular person at birth; the demon attaches itself to that person and follows them through their life, controlling their impulses and personalities from time
to time. They also act as a messenger between
their charge and the gods.
Hostile by nature, they take pleasure in acting
out revenge and causing injury. Some demonolo-

gists placed them under the command of the god
Hades. Inferior demons, they have dominion over
the twelfth house of the Zodiac. The opposite of
a Cacodaemon is an agathodaemon (AGATHODEMON) or eudemon.

Sources: Hyatt, Book of Demons, 60; Russell, Lucifer,

the Devil in the Middle Ages, 249; Wray, Birth of Satan,
25.

Cahor
Apollonius of Tyana’s Nuctemeron (Night Illuminated by Day) lists Cahor as the demon of deception. He is most powerful during the third
hour of the day.

Sources: Davidson, Dictionary of Angels, 79; De
Givry, Witchcraft, Magic, and Alchemy, 12.

Caiga
In the Theurgia Goetia, the second book of the
Lemegeton, Caiga is one of the sixteen SERVITORS
OF ASYRIEL (see ASYRIEL). Commanding forty
servitors, Caiga, a diurnal demon, is known to
be good-natured and willing to obey his summoner.
Sources: Peterson, Lesser Key of Solomon, 73–4, 77.

Cagrino
Variations: Buecubu, Chagrin, GUECUBU,
Harginn
Originally from the Gypsy demonology from
northwestern India comes the demonic feylike
creature Cagrino. Looking like a small yellow
hedgehog that is a foot and half long and wide,
he is known to mount horses and ride them to
exhaustion, leaving them sick and weary with
their manes tangled and their bodies covered in
sweat.
To prevent Cagrino from stealing off with your

horse, tie the animal to a stake that has been covered with garlic juice and then lay a red thread
on the ground in the shape of a cross. Another
method is to take some of the horse’s hair, salt,
meal, and the blood of a bat, make bread with it,
and rub it on the horse’s hoof. Then, take the
bowl that the mixture was made in and hide it in
a tree, saying the words “Tarry, pipkin, in this
tree, till such time as full ye be.”

Sources: Banis, Charms, Spells, and Curses for the
Millions, 87; Leland, Gypsy Sorcery and Fortune Telling,
91; Spence, Encyclopedia of Occultism, 88.

CailleachCOYCALL
Variations: Beira, Queen of Winter; Bheur
Cailleach; the Black Queen; Cailleach nan Cruachan; Cailliach, the Goddess of Smallpox; Callech the Witch of Ben Cruachan
From Gaelic demonology comes the demon of



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