The demonologist was a man stuck between logic and faith, the salon and the Hellfire club, who heard the screams of horrific monsters while writing with the sober pen of a naturalist.īut what then of Collin de Plancy’s infernal version? Is it a dictionary by name only, or could the affinities touch a deeper vein? In his Grimoires: A History of Magic Books, the historian Owen Davies writes of how grimoires are marked by a “desire for knowledge and the enduring impulse to restrict and control it”, a description that could certainly be applied to the projects of Johnson and Murray. Collin de Plancy did not just convince himself that demons were real, but indeed he developed a wish to control them through language, a desire as fervent as that of his Enlightenment forebears to categorize and define words and ideas in dictionaries and encyclopedias. He combined the rectilinear logic of men like Voltaire and Diderot with the chthonic visions of the symbolist and decadent poets of a generation later - Rimbaud, Baudelaire, and Verlaine, who drunkenly stomped through the rainy streets of Paris clutching their fleurs du mal. As with the many demonic chimeras that populate his dictionary, Collin de Plancy was a mélange of disparate parts. Like his uncle, Collin de Plancy was originally a partisan of liberty, equality, and fraternity, an enthused reader of Voltaire and a zealous rationalist and skeptic also like his uncle, he would ultimately see himself reconciled to that Church he had rejected, though with a detour through the darker corners of demonology. have come only from deserters of the faith.” The preface authoritatively claimed that Collin de Plancy had “reconfigured his labors, recognizing that superstitious, foolish beliefs, occult sects and practices. By the Dictionnaire’s final edition of 1863, the publishers could assure the reader that the “errors” previously highlighted had now been eliminated, the catalogue now fully congruent with Catholic theology. As he labored at subsequent editions, however, the secular folklorist found himself more and more pulled in by the lure of demonology, a passion which would eventually lead him, by the 1830s, to enthusiastically embrace Catholicism. When the Dictionnaire was first published in 1818, Collin de Plancy was a dutiful student of the new rationalism who set out to catalogue what he called “aberrations and germs or causes of errors”. The illustrations from the Goetia come from Collin de Plancy’s Dictionnaire Infernal illustrations.Astaroth is a convenient symbol for the oddity of Collin de Plancy’s Dictionnaire, for the demon represents a muddle of cultural forces: rationalism and superstition, systematization and the occult, the Enlightenment and the Romantic movement. The Goetia is Book 1 of the Lemegeton (Lesser Key of Solomon), a grimoire that circulated in the 17th century and from the experiences of King Solomon. Popular common translation/compilation comes from SL MacGregor Mathers in 1904. Note – Many of the demons found in the Goetia were initially published in the 16th century by Johann Wier. MacGregor Mathers’ The Goetia: The Lesser Key of Solomon,
Many of these demon illustrations were republished in S.
Collin de Plancy then published the set with brief descriptions in his book “Dictionnaire Infernal.” The book was published in French throughout the 1800s in several editions. Louis Breton created a set of 69 illustrations of demons, which were then engraved by M. It was written by Jacques Auguste Simon Collin de Plancy and first published in 1818. The Dictionnaire Infernal is a book on demonology, describing demons organised in hierarchies. Pseudomonarchia Daemonum (Liber officiorum spirituum) Johann Weyer, ed. Links to the demons below are to external sources.