Amara

Let’s go into some words that are less known, and actually forgotten. Not so long ago, some of them were used, quite regularly, by the magicians, but now no more. One of those words is Amara. And that word is really very powerful.

Actually, as an unwritten rule, the mightiest words are used in necromancy and exorcism, and one of them is Amara.

It might have Sanskrit origin. In Sanskrit, Amara means “deathless” or “immortal.” Amara is the God’s name given to Adam in the Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses, where it belongs to the third set of Shemhamphorash and should be used when you call the spirits of departed. Amara is also the God’s name given to Adam in Semiphoras und Schemhamphoras Salomonis regis, where it again belongs to he third set of Semiphoras, and there it should be be used to collect winds, devils and spirits.

It is also a God’s name given to Moses in the seven set of Shemhamphoras from Semiphoras und Schemhamphoras Salomonis regis, where it is used to do something wonderful and when you are in great need.

This word has been regularly used in charms since the time of classical antiquity. During the Middle Ages, it was used to deliver a possessed person from the devil. In 1237, an Italian exorcist ritual of Filippo di Greve ended with the words Amara, Tanta, Tyri, Sycalos, and Sycaliri.

This name also appears in the breastplate of Aron from the Excerpt of Magical Kabbalah and the Law of Moses from The Sixth and Seventh Books of Moses, in which it is said it was terrible, as it assembled devils and spirits and caused the dead to appear.

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