Explore the latest books of this year!
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Mogg Morgan

    Tankhem
    The Bull of Ombos
    Wheel of the Year in Ancient Egypt
    English Mahatma
    Supernatural Assault in Ancient Egypt
    Aleister Crowley & Thelemic Magick
    • 2024

      Egyptian Genesis of the Nephilim

      • 132 pages
      • 5 hours of reading

      Exploring the ancient narrative of the Nephilim, this book delves into the intersection of divine beings and humanity, revealing the origins of legendary figures known for their strength and fame. It examines the implications of these interactions, the nature of the mighty men born from such unions, and their impact on history and mythology. Through a blend of biblical text and interpretation, it invites readers to reconsider the stories of the past and their relevance to contemporary discussions about power, identity, and the divine.

      Egyptian Genesis of the Nephilim
    • 2022

      Aleister Crowley & Thelemic Magick

      • 236 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      Set against a backdrop of spiritual exploration, the narrative follows a seeker’s tumultuous journey through the world of gurus and enlightenment. The protagonist grapples with the complexities of faith, deception, and the search for true wisdom. As they encounter various spiritual figures, the story delves into themes of authenticity, self-discovery, and the often-blurred lines between guidance and manipulation. Through vivid experiences and introspection, the book challenges conventional notions of spirituality and personal growth.

      Aleister Crowley & Thelemic Magick
    • 2021

      Demonic Calendar Ancient Egypt

      • 236 pages
      • 9 hours of reading

      Exploring the ancient Egyptian calendar, this book delves into the concept of decans, which are 36 weeks of ten days each. It highlights the significance of decans in early magical traditions, predating well-known European texts like the Testament of Solomon and the Goetia. Each decan is associated with specific stars that rise in order throughout the year, observable at dawn, and is characterized by a malign nature, linking them to various spirits in ancient lore.

      Demonic Calendar Ancient Egypt
    • 2020

      Egyptian Magick

      a spirited guide

      • 432 pages
      • 16 hours of reading

      Exploring the unique significance of Egyptian Heka, this book delves into its elevated status compared to its Coptic successor and Western interpretations. It examines the cultural and spiritual dimensions of Heka, highlighting its profound role within ancient Egyptian belief systems. The text offers insights into the complexities of this mystical practice and its enduring legacy.

      Egyptian Magick
    • 2018

      Seth & The Two Ways

      Ways of seeing the "demon" god of Egypt

      • 300 pages
      • 11 hours of reading

      The narrative explores the complex character of Seth, an ancient Egyptian deity often mischaracterized as purely evil. Traditionally seen as a villain for murdering his brother Osiris and usurping his throne, Seth's story is more nuanced, reflecting themes of power, betrayal, and survival. The tale highlights the resilience of Horus, Osiris's son, who, with the help of his mother Isis, ultimately confronts and overcomes Seth. This retelling challenges the simplistic view of Seth as merely a representation of malevolence, inviting a deeper understanding of his role in mythology.

      Seth & The Two Ways
    • 2013

      Phi-Neter

      The Power of Egyptian Gods

      • 226 pages
      • 8 hours of reading

      Exploring the essence of Egyptian magick, this book delves into the concept of Phi-Neter, symbolized by the leopard's hind-quarters, representing a powerful predator. The author expands on foundational techniques used in the cult of Lord Seth, also known as Typhon, and connects these practices to the broader Egyptian pantheon. It serves as both a study guide and a practical resource for those interested in harnessing the ancient powers of magick.

      Phi-Neter
    • 2011

      You are in your bed. It is dark, you hear footsteps coming up the stairs and into your room. There is someone there -- a presence. They lie on you or beside you, gripping you tightly, crushing you into the bed. You can't move. There may be a sound, a grunt or a strange smell. Time passes, you are paralysed with fear. Eventually the entity changes, expanding or contracting, moving away from you, sinking to the floor. With a great effort of will you manage to move the tip of your finger, then the hand until movement returns to your whole body and the experience ends. You have been visited by the old 'hag'. Dreams, the real theatre or perhaps battlefield of magick, influenced by cosmic tides that ebb and flow through us as they did the ancient Egyptians. Over the millennia we have lost contact with these tides, and stand alienated from Nature. To restore that first 'Eden' we must undertake an exercise in the archaeology of knowledge. We must reconstruct the ancient Egyptian Wheel of the Year, revealing archaic, pre-dynastic Mysteries, the Lunar Mysteries of Horus and Seth.

      Supernatural Assault in Ancient Egypt
    • 2010

      This book began life as an extended appendix to "Supernatural Assault in Ancient Egypt" where it provided additional information on the cosmic tides that ebb and flow through us as they did the ancient Egyptians. It concerns the ritual year and offers a conventional summary of the main principles of the ancient Egyptian calendar along with examples of seasonal rites. More radically it presents new material on the older Lunar calendar of the preformal times. Here too the author offers rites for a thirteen of the most archaic Egyptian 'neters' -- beginning with Seth, Sokar and Hathor. Over the millennia we have lost contact with these tides, and stand alienated from Nature. This first 'Eden' is restorable by a return to these ancient principles.

      Wheel of the Year in Ancient Egypt
    • 2008

      A 'Sädhana' is an instrument that leads to a particular goal. In Tantra, it is a technical term denoting worship or spiritual practice. Tantra Sädhana is a collection of related instructional papers designed to aid the aspirant through a foundation Sädhana. Some say effective Sädhana requires an initiation (dékshé) from a qualified guru. This book is designed to act as a taster and to provide a short body of work suitable for the period of about one lunar month. In addition, the author had added several useful appendices - including the previously unpublished Tantrik Knuckle Bone Oracle.

      Tantra Sadhana
    • 2005

      The Bull of Ombos

      • 360 pages
      • 13 hours of reading

      Naqada is a sleepy little town in Upper Egypt, that gives its name to a crucial period in the prehistory of Egypt. In 1895, William Matthew Flinders Petrie, the 'father' of Egyptian archaeology, stumbled upon a necropolis, belonging to a very ancient city of several thousand inhabitants. With Petrie's usual luck, he'd made yet another archaeological find of seismic proportions - not just an ancient city a quarter the size of Ur in Mesopotamia, a rare enough find, but the capital of the earliest state established in Egypt Petrie's fateful walk through the desert led him to a lost city, known to the Greeks as Ombos, the Citadel of Seth. Seth, the Hidden God, once ruled in this ancient place before it was abandoned to the sands of the desert. All this forbidden knowledge was quickly reburied in academic libraries, where its stunning magical secrets had lain, largely unrevealed, for more than a century - until now.

      The Bull of Ombos