This article originally appeared in theappendix.
Cyprianus was, by all accounts, a shady character. In her book Remedies and Rituals: Folk Medicine in Norway and the New Land, Kathleen Stokker writes that medieval Scandinavians spun tales of a Dane named Cyprianus who was so evil that Satan cast him out of hell: “This act so enraged Cyprianus that he dedicated himself to writing the nine Books of the Black Arts that underlie all subsequent Scandinavian black books.”
What we know for sure is that “Cyprian” became a common pseudonym for people at the edges of society who were trying to do real black magic. And thus we find “Pseudo-Cyprianus” listed as the author of this jaw-dropping book of magical spells from the late 18th century, which the Wellcome Trust has just made public domain. The title is Clavis Inferni (The Key of Hell) and the images are magnificent and thrillingly mysterious:
“Maymon – a black bird – as King of the South.” Cyprianus, Clavis Inferni, late 18th century. Welcome Images
“Uricus – a red-crowned and winged serpent – as King of the East.” Cyprianus, Clavis Inferni, late 18th century. Wellcome Images
“Egyn – a black bear-like animal with a short tail – as King of the North.” Cyprianus, Clavis Inferni, late 18th century. Welcome Images
“Paymon – a black cat-like animal with horns, long whiskers and tail – as King of the West.” Cyprianus, Clavis Inferni, late 18th century. Welcome Images
“Ink and watercolour showing a red-winged dragon wearing a gold crown and devouring a lizard.” Cyprianus, Clavis Inferni, late 18th century. Welcome Images
Beyond this type of basic iconographic reading, those looking for reliable answers about the origin or meaning of these images will be disappointed. The Wellcome Trust itself gives a description of the book that sounds like it’s lifted verbatim from Harry Potter:
Cyprianus is also known as the Black Book, and is the textbook of the Black School at Wittenburg, the book from which a witch or sorceror gets his spells. The Black School at Wittenburg was purportedly a place in Germany where one went to learn the black arts.Hoping to find out more, I posted about this bizarre text on my blog Res Obscura three years ago, and some knowledgeable fans of early modern magic came out of the woodwork to help me with translations. One pointed out to me that the cipher alphabet being used here is Cornelius Agrippa’s Transitus Fluvii “Passing through the River” script, adapted from Hebrew by the famed occultist in 1510 (fun fact: it was also used in the Blair Witch Project):
A 17th century English translation of Agrippa’s Three Books of Occult Philosophy. Wikimedia Commons
Cyprianus, Clavis Inferni, late 18th century. Welcome Images
That doesn’t mean that they’re relics of a “dark age” of superstition and ignorance, however. As Appendix contributor Lisa Smith wrote in her article “Bespelled in the Archives,” the desire to perform magic didn’t die out with the Enlightenment: spellbooks stuffed with black magic actually proliferated in the same period that Voltaire, Hume and Kant were celebrating the dawn of reason.
And this wasn’t necessarily a contradiction: in his fabulous book The Dark Side of the Enlightenment, Princeton professor John Fleming points out that magic and Enlightenment thought could coexist. Worldly sorcerors like Count Cagliostro, Fleming argues, were actually made possible by the globalization of the 18th century, namely “extensive and rapid international communication of ideas” via the Republic of Letters and the “well-organized international intellectual elite of Rosicrucians and Freemasons.”
Today they circulate still, buoyed by the more sophisticated global networks of the internet. Since this post is an invocation of these spells, of a sort, I thought I’d end with the final page of the book, and a rough translation which shows it to be a magical command to a summoned creature to return from whence it came.
Cyprianus, Clavis Inferni, late 18th century. Welcome Images
You can browse high resolution scans of the complete book at Wellcome Images.
February 1 update:
Thought I’d add a translation note from a reader, plus this new image from the manuscript which garnered one of my favorite responses to an Appendix post to date:
Cyprianus, Clavis Inferni, late 18th century. Welcome Images
The top right arc of the circle says “Eloheynu” which means roughly “Our God.” The top left says “Echad” (ch sound as in chutzpah, chanukah) meaning “one.” I’m unsure of the bottom word, but it would be pronounced like A-ra-ree-hah, or A-ra-ray-hah, though the vowel sounds could be different. The center triangle has the word for god that in english is “Yahweh.” the letters are Yud, Hay, Vav, Hey, which would be pronounced “Yahvah” or “yahava” but is never pronounced this way It’s a common word for God in the Torah.

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