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Enc of dem in wor rel and cul 144

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Firneus

137

Faturab

Feurety

In the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage,
book two, Faturab is named as one of the sixtyfive SERVITORS OF KORE AND MAGOTH. His
name is most likely taken from Hebrew, and if
so, would translate to mean “interpretation.”

Variations: Flauros, Flavros, Flereous, HAURAS,
HAURES, Havres
In the Ars Goetia, the first book of the Lemegeton, Feurety is ranked as a duke, grand general,
and lieutenant commander who is possibly in
service under ANDROS. He commands either
twenty or thirty-six legions of demons; sources
vary. Feurety, the demon of fire and wrath, will
appear before his summoner in the form of a
leopard; however, at the summoner’s request he
will take on the form of a man with fiery eyes. In
art, he is often depicted as a humanoid with large
claws. He is also the symbol of passion, personality, power, will, and wrath.
Feurety is summoned for his ability to burn
and destroy the enemies of the one who summoned him. He will also answer honestly questions regarding the past, present, and future. He
will also speak openly about the creation of the
world and the fall of the angels—on the provision
that he has been commanded into a triangle.


Otherwise he will lie very convincingly to the
summoner.

Sources: Mathers, Book of the Sacred Magic of
Abramelin the Mage, Von Worms, Book of Abramelin,
118, 123, 249.

Fecor
The demon Fecor has the ability to call up
tempests, cause fear, cause ghosts to appear, ring
the bells at midnight, and shake the foundations
of homes. He is known to work in conjunction
with ANARAZEL and GAZIEL.

Sources: De Claremont, Ancient’s Book of Magic, 12;
Hibbard, Three Elizabethan Pamphlets, 147; Nash,
Works of Thomas Nashe, 232.

Federwisch
Variations: One of the names for the DEVIL
The devil Federwisch is said to be the demon
of vanity. His name was often used in the Middle
Ages as a synonym for the Devil (SATAN).

Sources: Muchembled, History of the Devil, 15; Russell, Prince of Darkness, 112; Russell, Witchcraft in the
Middle Ages, 256.

Femol
In the Theurgia Goetia, the second book of the
Lemegeton, Femol is ranked as a chief duke who

commands 2,660 duke servitors of his own.
Listed as one of the SERVITORS OF CASPIEL (see
CASPIEL), he has a reputation for being rude and
stubborn.
Source: Peterson, Lesser Key of Solomon, 60.

Fene
From Hungarian mythology comes the demon
of illness and tumors in humans, Fene
(“damn[ed]”). His personal adversary is Isten, the
god of light. There is a Hungarian curse that goes
“egye meg a fene”; it translates as “Fene eat you!”
Sources: Dodson, Uglier Than a Monkey’s Armpit,
n.p.; Lurker, Routledge Dictionary of Gods and Goddesses,
62; Szabó, Hungarian Practical Dictionary, 391.

Fersebus
According to the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the
Mage, book two, Fersebus (“bringer of veneration”) is one of the sixty-five SERVITORS OF KORE
AND MAGOTH.

Sources: Mathers, Book of the Sacred Magic of
Abramelin the Mage, 118; Von Worms, Book of
Abramelin, 249.

Sources: Crowley, The Goetia, 61; Collin de Plancy,
Dictionary of Witchcraft, 62; De Laurence, Lesser Key
of Solomon, Goetia, 42–3; Scot, Discoverie of Witchcraft,
225; Scott, London Magazine, Vol. 5, 378.


Finaxos
In the Sacred Magic of Abramelin the Mage, Finaxos is one of the fifty-three SERVITORS OF
ASHTAROTH AND ASMODEUS (see ASHTAROTH
and ASMODEUS). His name likely came from the
Greek language, and if it did would translate to
mean “worthy in appearance.”

Sources: Mathers, Book of the Sacred Magic of
Abramelin the Mage, 116; Susej, Demonic Bible, 257;
Von Worms, Book of Abramelin, 247.

Fire Devils
Friar Francesco Maria Guazzo’s Compendium
Maleficarum (1628) describes fire devils as one of
the six species of demons (or devils) in Hell. In
service to the DEVIL, these servitor demons of
fire are the most powerful of all the species and
therefore command the five other SPECIES OF
DEVILS: AERIAL DEVIL, AQUEOUS DEVILS, HELIOPHOBIC DEVIL s, subterranean devils, and
TERRESTRIAL DEVILS. Fire demons, according
to Friar Guazzo, live in the upper air.
Source: Kipfer, Order of Things, 255.

Firneus
Variations: Forneaus, FORNEUS
Firneus is named in the Theurgia Goetia, the
second book of the Lemegeton, as one of the sev-




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