Volume 1
The history of magic / [J. Ennemoser] ; translated from the German by William Howitt. To which is added an appendix of the most remarkable and best authenticated stories of apparitions, dreams, second sight, somnambulism, predictions, divination, witchcraft, vampires, fairies, table-turning, and spirit-rapping selected by Mary Howitt.
- Joseph Ennemoser
- Date:
- 1854
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The history of magic / [J. Ennemoser] ; translated from the German by William Howitt. To which is added an appendix of the most remarkable and best authenticated stories of apparitions, dreams, second sight, somnambulism, predictions, divination, witchcraft, vampires, fairies, table-turning, and spirit-rapping selected by Mary Howitt. Source: Wellcome Collection.
500/514 page 466
![46(5 ^Materialism current among tlic Egyp- tians, i. 141. iMatikou, theories of a mystical work entitled, i. 276. Matter, Agrippa outlie nature of, ii. 254. Maxwell’s views on magnetism, ii. 257-260. Melampus, celebrated cures of, i. 360. Mesmer, Dr., on animal magnetism, ii. 330. Mesmeric influence of magnetism, ii. 335. Mesmerism, so called after the dis- coverer of animal magnetism, ii. 30. Middle Ages, amulets and charms of the, ii. 95. —, magic of the, ii. 117. iMind, the spiritual in the, ii. 137- Mineral and animal magnetism, ana- logy between, ii. 331. Minerva, mythological parentage of, ii. 49. Miracles and magnetism, i. 33.5. — of the Apostles, i. 317. — performed by jEsculapius, i. 360. — recorded in the Gospels, i. 310. Alirror, divination by means of a, ii. 455. Miss Rachel Baker, the sleeping preacher, ii. 442. Molitor’s researches into the Cabbalah, i. 8. — story of a Jewess, i. 21. Monen, or computation of time, i. 16. Montanism, elements of, ii. 82. Montanists and Paulists, ii. 83. Montezuma’s sister, supposed death of, i. 78. Moral writings of Plutarch, i. 408- 418. Mora, witch-trial <at, ii. 179. Mosaic account of the creation, i. 275. Murder discovered by an ap^jarition, ii. 343-345. — prevented by an apparition, ii. 370. Musscus and Orpheus, i. 353. Mysteries, ancient Egyptian, i. 237. Mysterious monuments of the Egyp- Mystical theories in Matikon, i. 276. Mystic S3mbols in Nature, ii. 29. | Myth, great antiquity of the, ii. 9. — of llereules, ii. 25 ; explained, ii. ; 67. _ i — ])hysical formation of the, ii. 17. Mythical wisdom, the key to the,ii.l9. Mj'tliologic fable, symbolic meaning of, ii. 39. Mythological parentage of ^lineira, ,■ ii. 49. ! Mythology, magic in the, i. 442. ^ —, on magic in, ii. 63. ! — perfected before yoijrda existed, ! i. 349. —, the Greek and German, ii. 5. Napet.lus root. Van Helmont’s ex- periments with the, i. 82. Narcotics, ancient use of, ii. 488. Natural divination, ii. 452. — instincts, Kircher upon, ii. 267. — philosophy conducts to God, ii. 16. — soothsaying, belief of the ancient Greeks in, i. 61. Necromancy among the Romans, i. 441. New Covenant, magical cures men- tioned in the, i. 307. New-Platonists, the, i. 443. —, the founder of the, i. 444. Nichusch, or prophetic indication, i. 16. Nicolaus de la Pliie, extraordinary fasting of, i. 107. Northern mythology the work of the Scalds, ii. 108. Numa, destruction of the hooks of, ii. 11. Numeral 4, the, sacred to the Pytha- goreans, i. 395. Numerical theory, as described iu the Magicon, i. 3*94, 396. Numerals, Plato’s views regarding, i. 399. Oak of Dodona, in Epirus, i. 378. Obcah, or .African witchcraft, ii. 475.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b24871667_0001_0500.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


