Cousin of Death: Dream Incubation in Early Modern Necromancy

1681151046986.jpg
1681151046986.jpg

Cousin of Death: Dream Incubation in Early Modern Necromancy

$55.00

A one-off self-contained lecture module on dreams, divination, and the dead in early modern occult philosophy and magical practices. It explores dream incubation for contact and working with spirits of the dead from historical evidence and towards practical sorcerous ends. This class-bundle consists of a recording of an hour-and-a-half of illustrated lecture; as well as offering access to full scans of the pre-modern magical texts cited and explored – that is, early modern primary sources on topics including necromancy, cunning-craft, dream interpretation, witchcraft, astrological magic and physick (including fully searchable .txt files scans of these sources), with a bibliography and full set of suggested reading to follow up this class.

Add To Cart

A dictionary published in 1656 defined ‘necromancer’ – amongst other things – as one who ‘lodged among the Graves, that the dead might come to him in a dream, and make known to him that which he asked… that clad themselves with cloathes for that purpose, and spoke certain words, burned Incense, and slept by themselves, that such a dead person might come and talk with them in a dream.’

Dream incubation rites seem to have formed a crucial part of interactions between the living and the dead – as well as the gods and spirits – since records began. Certainly the role and meaning of dreams can be attested in historical witch-trial studies and folkloric crafts of the Sabbat alike. Even as the Reformation pushed back against older Catholic notions of Purgatory and the physical locales of deceased souls, the dead continued to return in the night in both unsolicited visitations and at the call of the nigromancers’ “black arts”.

In this class-bundle, contemporary cunning man and historian Dr Alexander Cummins will lead us on an exploratory journey through the operations and experiments of pre-modern nigromantic practitioners seeking to the dead in their dreams and half-waking visions. We will cover suffumigation practices, protocols of preparation and conjuration, ritual intersections with planetary timings and spirits, and various talismanic tools and materia employed in necromantic dreamwork, as well as analyse and explicate deeper underlying cosmo-visions of the nature and influence of the dead in the days and ways of the living.

This class-bundle includes:

An illustrated lecture of 1 hour 44 minutes duration
The accompanying slides for this lecture
Primary source documents concerning early modern dreaming and the dead
Bibliography of primary and secondary source recommended reading