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{{short description|A hidden name of God in Judaism}} {{short description|Hidden name of God in Judaism and occultism}}
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'''''Shem HaMephorash''''' ({{langx|he|שֵׁם הַמְּפֹרָשׁ}} ''Šēm hamMəfōrāš'', also '''''Shem ha-Mephorash'''''), meaning "the explicit name", was originally a ] term for the ].{{sfnp|Bacher|n.d.}} In ], it may refer to a name of God composed of either 4, 12, 22, 42, or 72 letters (or triads of letters), the latter version being the most common.{{sfnp|Trachtenberg|1939|pp=90-98, 288ff}}
The '''Shem HaMephorash''' (Hebrew: {{lang|he|שם המפורש}}, alternatively '''Shem ha-Mephorash''' or '''Schemhamphoras'''), meaning ''the explicit name'', is an originally ] term<ref name="JewishEnyclopedia">{{cite web|url=http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=593&letter=S&search=Shem%20ha-Mephorash |title=Jewish Encyclopedia, Shem Ha-Meforash |publisher=Jewishencyclopedia.com |access-date=2013-07-22}}</ref> describing a hidden name of God in ] (including ] and ] variants), and in some more mainstream ] discourses. It is composed of either 4, 12, 22, 42, or 72 letters (or triads of letters), the last version being the most common.<ref name="Arguing">''Arguing with Angels: Enochian Magic and Modern Occulture'', by Egil Asprem, SUNY Press, 2 Apr 2012, </ref><ref name="BlackArts">''The Black Arts'', by Richard Cavendish, Penguin Group, p.119</ref><ref name="Encyclopedia">''Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology'' (Fifth edition), "Shemhamphorash", ed. J. Gordon Melton, Gale Group, p. 1399</ref><ref name="JewishMagic">'''', by Joshua Trachtenberg, Behrman's Jewish Book House, 1939; hosted at , 2008; and </ref><ref name="MagicMystery">''Magic, Mystery, and Science: The Occult in Western Civilization'', by Dan Burton and David Grandy, Indiana University Press, 2004, </ref><ref name="Raziel">''Sepher Rezial Hemelach: The Book of the Angel Rezial'', trans. Steve Savedow, Weiser Books, p.18</ref><ref name="Rudd">''The Goetia of Dr Rudd'', by Thomas Rudd, Ed. Stephen Skinner & David Rankine, 2007, Golden Hoard Press. p.14, 39-44, 67-73</ref>


Early sources, from the ] to the ], only use "Shem haMephorash" to refer to the four-letter ].{{sfnmp|1a1=Bacher|1y=n.d.|2a1=Ginsburg|2y=1925|2p=182}}
== 12-, 22-, and 42-letter versions ==
] thought the Shem ha-Mephorash was used only for the four letter ].<ref name="JewishEnyclopedia" />


== 12- and 42-letter names ==
A 12-letter variant appears in the Talmud, though it was unknown in later Kabbalah and completely absent from Jewish mysticism.<ref name="JewishMagic" />
In addition to the Shem haMephorash, ] 72a describes a 12-letter name and a 42-letter name.{{sfnp|Trachtenberg|1939|pp=90-98, 288ff}} The medievals debate whether the 12-letter name is a mundane euphemism,{{sfnp|Maimonides|1904|loc=}} unknown,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Rashi on Kiddushin 71a:12:4 |url=https://www.sefaria.org/Rashi_on_Kiddushin.71a.12.4?lang=he |access-date=2024-08-07 |website=www.sefaria.org}}</ref> YHVH-EHYH-ADNY (אהיה יהוה אדני),<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ben Yehoyada on Kiddushin 71a:2 |url=https://www.sefaria.org/Ben_Yehoyada_on_Kiddushin.71a.2 |access-date=2022-05-17 |website=www.sefaria.org}}</ref> or YHVH-YHVH-YHVH (יהוה יהוה יהוה).<ref>{{Cite web |title=Sefer HaBahir 10 |url=https://www.sefaria.org/Sefer_HaBahir.10 |access-date=2022-05-17 |website=www.sefaria.org}}</ref> ]<ref name="Bacher-1878">{{Cite book |last=Bacher |first=Wilhelm |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NCsVAAAAYAAJ |title=Die Agada der babylonischen Amoräer: ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Agada und zur Einleitung in den babylonischen Talmud |date=1878 |publisher=K. J. Trübner |pages=18 |language=de}}</ref> and ]<ref name="Franck-1926">{{Cite book |last=Franck |first=Adolphe |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1oU2AQAAIAAJ |title=The Kabbalah: Or, The Religious Philosophy of the Hebrews |date=1926 |publisher=Kabbalah Publishing Company |pages=71 |language=en}}</ref> suggest that the 12-letter name was '']-]-]'' (חכמה תבונה דעת), but the doctrine of the Sefirot originated in the 13th century, roughly a thousand years after the 12-letter name was first described.{{sfnp|Ginsburg|1925|p=182}} A. Haffer suggests that it is אל יהוה אלהינו (''El YHVH Elohenu'') from Deut. 6:4.<ref name="L. Blau-1912">{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=qsWJs5l0o0YC |title=ha-Tsofeh mi-erets ha-Gar |date=1912 |publisher=L. Blau |language=he}}</ref>


]<ref name="Bacher-1878" /> and ]<ref name="Franck-1926" /> suggest that the 42-letter name was the full ], but the Sefirot did not yet exist in Talmudic times.{{sfnp|Ginsburg|1925|p=182}} J. Goldberger argues that the 42-letter name was derived by gematriya, representing either אהיה אהיה or אלוה.<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gAxFAAAAcAAJ&pg=RA2-PA411-IA8 |title=Ben Chananja: Monatsschrift für jüdische Theologie und für jüdisches Leben in Gemeinde, Synagoge und Schule |date=1867 |publisher=Burger |language=de}}</ref> Ignatz Stern wrote that it represents the names listed by ''Sifra d'Tziuta'' Ch. 4,{{Efn|Stern lists these as "אהיה אשר אהיה יה יהויה אל אלהים יהוה צבאות אל חי אדני" to make 42 letters. In the text only "אהיה יה יהו אל אלהים צבאות שדי אדני".}}<ref>{{Cite book |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=P3spAAAAYAAJ |title=Ben-Chananja |date=1860 |publisher=S. Burger |pages=261 |language=de}}</ref> winning the support of ],{{sfnp|Ginsburg|1925|p=182}} but this passage is not even as old as the '']''.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Webmaster |title=Hilufim Terumah SdT 2 176b - 179a |url=https://www.sup.org/zohar/aramaic/variants/?sel=197#link_foot7 |access-date=2024-08-08 |website=www.sup.org |language=en}}</ref> ] derives it from Ex. 34:6.{{Efn|יהוה יהוה אל רחום וחנון ארך אפים ורב חסד ואמת נוצר חסד}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Eisler |first=Robert |date=1926 |title=Le mystère du Schem Hammephorasch |url=https://www.persee.fr/doc/rjuiv_0484-8616_1926_num_82_163_5506 |journal=Revue des études juives |volume=82 |issue=163 |pages=157–159 |doi=10.3406/rjuiv.1926.5506}}</ref> A. Haffer suggests that it is יהוה אחד ברוך שם כבוד מלכותו לעולם ועד.<ref name="L. Blau-1912" />
A 22-letter variant is first written down in the '']'',<ref name="JewishMagic" /><ref name="Raziel" /> without interpretation, as {{lang|he|אנקתם פסתם פספסים דיונסים}} (likely transliterated as ''{{lang|he-Latn|Anaktam Pastam Paspasim Dionsim}}''). Its origins are unknown, with no connection to Hebrew or Aramaic being found, and no agreement on any particular Greek or Zoroastrian origin. There are ] precedents for the name, indicating that the name is older than Sefer Raziel.<ref name="JewishMagic" />


According to ] and Rashi, the 42-letter name is unknown,{{sfnp|Maimonides|1904|loc=}}<ref>{{Cite web |title=Rashi on Kiddushin 71a:12:4 |url=https://www.sefaria.org/Rashi_on_Kiddushin.71a.12.4?lang=he |access-date=2024-08-07 |website=www.sefaria.org}}</ref> but ] says it is the acronym of the medieval ] ],<ref>Hayy ben Sherira, This responsum is #1110 on . See notes of B. M. Lewin, , p. 23.</ref> and ] argues that Hayy's tradition may legitimately represent the Talmudic intent.{{sfnp|Trachtenberg|1939|pp=90-98, 288ff}} By the start of the ], the term "Shem haMephorash" could also be used for the 42-letter name and this interpretation was retrojected into the Mishnah,<ref>, , etc. See Hayy's responsum of previous note and cf. '''' vol. II p. 97 and Albeck's notes, and the parallels noted there and in ]'s p. 62.</ref> although even Hayy did not claim to know its pronunciation. According to Hayy,
A 42-letter variant was described by ] as {{lang|he|אבגיתץ קרעשטן נגדיכש בטרצתג חקבטנע יגלפזק שקוצית}}. He wrote "Although the consonants of this name are well known, its proper vocalization is not rendered by tradition. Some pronounce its first part ''Abgitaẓ'', and others ''Abigtaẓ'', and the last part is sometimes read ''Shakvaẓit'', and sometimes ''Shekuẓit'', but there is no definite proof." This variation in pronunciation was understood by ] to indicate that this version is quite ancient, the vowels in Hebrew being easily lost over time. It is, by some means, derived from the first 42 letters of the Hebrew Bible.<ref name="JewishMagic" /> Like the 22-letter name, it is found in the ''Sefer Raziel HaMalakh''.<ref name="Raziel" />


<blockquote>Though the letters of the 42-letter name are known, the pronunciation has not been transmitted. Some say that it begins אַבְגִיתַץ ''ʾabgîtaṣ'' while others say that it begins אַבַגְיְתַץ ''ʾabagyǝtaṣ'', and some say that it concludes שְׁקוּצִית ''šǝqûṣît'' while other say that it concludes שַׁקְוַצִית ''šaqwaṣît'',{{Efn|Each manuscript of Hayy's responsum contains different proposed pronunciations. This follows MS Oxford heb. d.2.}} and there are many more disputes besides which none can resolve. </blockquote>
== The 72-fold name ==
The "72-fold name" is highly important to Sefer Raziel,<ref name="JewishMagic" /><ref name="Raziel" /> and a key (but often missing) component to the magical practices in the '']''.<ref name="Rudd" /> It is derived from Exodus 14:19–21,<ref name="Arguing" /><ref name="Encyclopedia" /><ref name="JewishMagic" /><ref name="MagicMystery" /> read ]ically<ref name="BlackArts" /><ref name="Rudd" /> to produce 72 names of three letters. This method was explained by ], (b. Sukkah 45a).<ref>''The Scholar's Haggadah: Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Oriental Versions'', Heinrich Guggenheimer, Jason Aronson, Incorporated, 1 Dec 1998, p. 300.</ref> Kabbalist and occultist legends state that the 72-fold name was used by ] to cross the ], and that it can grant later holymen the power to cast out demons, heal the sick, prevent natural disasters, and even kill enemies.<ref name="MagicMystery" />


] (1235-1310) records that:<ref>שו"ת הרשב"א חלק א סימן רכ</ref>
The 72-fold name is mentioned by ], who complained about a book titled ''Liber semamphoras'', more specifically the linguistic corruption that occurred in translating Hebrew to Latin.<ref>''Invoking angels'', by Claire Fanger, Penn State UP, pp. 60-61</ref> The angels of the Shemhamphorash factored heavily into the cosmology of ],<ref name="Dictionary">''Dictionary of Gnosis & Western Esoterism'', ed. Wouter Hanegraaf, Brill Publishers, p. 625</ref> influencing ]<ref name="BlackArts" /> and ].<ref name="Dictionary" /> ] featured the 72 angels in his magic,<ref name="Arguing" /> as a balancing force against the evil spirits of the '']''<ref name="Rudd" /> or in isolation.<ref>''Dr. Rudd's Treatise on Angel Magick'', by Thomas Rudd, ed. Adam McLean, Weiser Books, 2006 reprint. pp. 43-50.</ref> Rudd's material on the Shemhamphorash was later copied and expanded by ], whose manuscripts were in turn used by ] in his works for the ].<ref name="Rudd" />


<blockquote>Different places have different pronunciations . Some pronounce it as fourteen words composed of three letters each, while others pronounce it as seven words composed of six letters each. The scholars of this land follow the latter method, and such is the tradition received from Hayy, but I heard that the scholars of Ashkenaz pronounce it as fourteen three-letter words. There are also differences between the letters of our version and those of Ashkenaz as to what you say, that each three-letter word is pronounced shewa-patah, there is one word pronounced shewa-shuruq, which is the thirteenth: the shin with a shewa and the waw with a shuruq.{{Efn|This is compatible with options mentioned in Hayy, if read to represent אֲבַגְ/יְתַץ and שְׁקוּ/צִית.}}</blockquote>
Using the 'Reversal Cipher' of the Shematria Gematria Calculator, the 72-fold name comes to the total value of 9000.


Piyyutim which used this 42-letter name as their ] were popular among the ], and many different poems were composed based on different versions of the name. The only one of these to survive in Jewish liturgy is ].<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=חלמיש |first1=משה |last2=Hallamish |first2=Moshe |date=2015 |title=Anna Be-Kho'ah / על הפיוט אנא בכח |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/24235662 |journal=Daat: A Journal of Jewish Philosophy & Kabbalah / דעת: כתב-עת לפילוסופיה יהודית וקבלה |issue=78 |pages=55–75 |jstor=24235662 |issn=0334-2336}}</ref>
==In LaVeyan Satanism==

Within ], the ''term'' "shemhamforash" is used during rituals as outlined in '']''.<ref>{{cite book|last1=LaVey|first1=Anton|title=The Satanic Bible|date=1969|publisher=Avon Publishing|location=New York, NY|isbn=0-380-01539-0|pages=|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/satanicbible00lave/page/130}}</ref> The term is essentially an equivalent of "]" in the sense that it is taken to mean "]" when used in this context, to corroborate with LaVeyan Satanism's objective of satirizing traditional religious practice.<ref></ref>
== 22-letter name ==
] amulets (Oxford e.107:10, T-S K 1.127) contain the name א◌ׄנ◌ׄק◌ׄת◌ׄם◌ׄ פסתם פספסים ודיונסים.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Schäfer |first1=Peter |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=q6S1zwEACAAJ |title=Magische Texte aus der Kairoer Geniza |last2=Shaked |first2=Shaul |date=1994 |publisher=Mohr Siebeck |isbn=978-3-16-146272-6 |language=de}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last1=Naveh |first1=Joseph |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Atj7EAAAQBAJ |title=Amulets and Magic Bowls: Aramaic Incantations of Late Antiquity |last2=Shaked |first2=Shaul |date=2023-08-28 |publisher=BRILL |isbn=978-90-04-67214-7 |language=en}}</ref> A similar amulet is included in the back of '']'',{{sfnp|Trachtenberg|1939|pp=90-98, 288ff}}{{sfnp|Savedow|2000|p=18}} containing {{lang|he|אנקתם פסתם פספסים דיונסים}},{{sfnp|Trachtenberg|1939|p=93}} which the commentary describes as "the 22-letter name." Its origins are unknown, with no connection to Hebrew or Aramaic being found, and no agreement on any particular Greek or Zoroastrian origin.{{sfnp|Trachtenberg|1939|pp=90-98, 288ff}} ] was responsible for introducing it into popular ] liturgy, and also composed poems on the model of Ana b'Koach using the 22-letter name as his acrostic.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Berliner |first1=Abraham |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DlEOAQAAIAAJ |title=‏כתבים נבחרים / |last2=אברהם ‏ברלינר |date=1969 |publisher=מוסד הרב קוק |language=he}}</ref>

== 72-letter name ==
===In Judaic Kabbalah===
{{main|Kabbalah#History of Jewish mysticism}}
The 72-fold name is highly important to '']''.{{sfnp|Trachtenberg|1939|pp=90–98, 288ff}}{{sfnp|Savedow|2000|p=18}} It is derived from Exodus 14:19–21,{{sfnp|Asprem|2012|p=33}}{{sfnp|Melton|2001|p=1399}}{{sfnp|Trachtenberg|1939|pp=90–98, 288ff}}{{sfnp|Burton|Grandy|2004|p=69}} read ]ically{{sfnp|Cavendish|1967|p=119}}{{sfnp|Rudd|2007|pp=14, 39–44, 67–73}} to produce 72 names of three letters. This method was explained by ],{{sfnp|McLaughlin|Eisenstein|n.d.}} (b. Sukkah 45a),{{sfnp|Guggenheimer|1998|p=300}} as well as in '']'' (c. 1150~1200).{{sfnp|Kaplan|1989|p=42}} Kabbalist legends state that the 72-fold name was used by ] to cross the ], and that it could grant later holy men the power to cast out demons, heal the sick, prevent natural disasters, and even kill enemies.{{sfnp|Burton|Grandy|2004|p=69}}

According to G. Lloyd Jones,
{{quote|To overcome the problems posed by the doctrine of God's transcendence, the early Jewish mystics developed an ] in which the alphabet played an important part. They taught that the universe was divided into ten angelic spheres each one governed by an intermediary or emanation of the divine. There were seventy-two inferior angels through whom the intermediaries could be approached. Contact with this celestial world was achieved by manipulating the letters of the Hebrew alphabet. This invocatory technique may be traced through the works of ] to the famous thirteenth-century Kabbalist ].{{sfnp|Jones|1993|p=21}}}}

'']'' (aka Semamphoras, Semyforas) is the title of a Latin translation of an occult or magical text of Jewish provenance attributed to ].{{sfnp|Butler|1998|p=158}} It was attested in 1260 by ],{{sfnp|Boudet|2002|p=864}} who complained about the linguistic corruption that had occurred in translating ''Liber Semamphoras'' into Latin from Hebrew.{{sfnp|Véronèse|2012|pp=60–61}} It is heavily indebted to '']'' through its Latin versions, ''Liber Sepher Razielis idest Liber Secretorum seu Liber Salomonis'', and seemingly replaced the more explicitly magical text ''Liber magice'' in the ''Razielis''.{{sfnp|Page|2012|p=82}}

===In Christian Kabbalah===
] (1455–1522) considered these 72 names, made pronounceable by the addition of suffixes such as 'El' or 'Yah', to be the names of angels, individuated products of God's will.{{sfnp|Roling|2002|p=261}} Reuchlin refers to and lists the 72 ] in his 1517 book '']''.{{sfnp|Izmirlieva|2008|p=195, n. 57}}{{sfnp|Reuchlin|Goodman|1993|p=273}} According to Bernd Roling,

{{quote|After deriving a Shem ha-mephorasch of the 72 angelic names from the biblical verses of Exodus 14,19ff., Reuchlin makes a statement concerning the metaphysical significance of the names. The names of the angels are products of the will of God. They are substantially based on the tetragrammaton, and through this connection they illumine and enhance man's spiritual return to God. With the insertion of divine names such as 'El' or 'Yah', angelic names become pronouncable, and God himself (being nature) is the basis of angelic individuation.{{sfnp|Roling|2002|p=261}} }}

Reuchlin's cosmology in turn influenced ]{{sfnp|Cavendish|1967|p=119}} (1486–1535) and ]{{sfnp|Hanegraaf|2006|p=625}} (1602–1680).

In 1686, ] published '']'', a German translation of the earlier Latin text, ''Liber Semiphoras'' (see ]), which Luppius augmented heavily with passages from ]'s '']'' and other sources.{{sfnp|Butler|1998|p=158}}

===In Hermetic Qabalah and Goetia===
] (1523–1596), following Reuchlin,{{sfnp|Ballard|2007|p=137}} featured the 72 angels in his writings.{{sfnp|Skinner|Rankine|2010|pp=39-40}} De Vigenère's material on the Shemhamphorash was later copied and expanded by ] (1583?–1656),{{sfnp|Skinner|Rankine|2010|pp=39-40}}{{sfnp|Asprem|2012|p=33}} who proposed that it was a key (but often missing) component to the magical practices in the '']'',{{sfnp|Rudd|2007|pp=14, 39–44, 67–73}} as a balancing force against the evil spirits of the '']''{{sfnp|Rudd|2007|pp=14, 39-44, 67-73}} or in isolation.{{sfnp|Rudd|2006|pp=43-50}} Skinner and Rankine explain that de Vigenère and Rudd adopted these triliteral words with '-el' or '-yah' (both Hebrew for "god") added to them as the names of the 72 angels that are able to bind the 72 evil spirits also described in ''The Lesser Key of Solomon'' (c. mid-17th century).{{efn|Skinner and Rankine's explanation (in {{harvnb|Rudd|2007|pp=71–73}}) of how the triliterals are produced corresponds with the explanation given in {{harvnb|McLaughlin|Eisenstein|n.d.}}, and the Hebrew names they give in their tables (pp. 366–376, cf. pp. 405–407) also correspond with the triliterals in the table given by McLaughlin & Eisenstein.}}

Blaise de Vigenère's manuscripts were also used by ] (1854–1918) in his works for the ].{{sfnp|Rudd|2007|pp=14, 39-44, 67-73}} Mathers describes the descent of power from Tetragrammaton through 24 thrones of the ], each with a crown of three rays:

{{quote|Four is the number of the letters of the Tetragrammaton. Four is also the number of the letters of the name ADNI which is its representative and key. The latter name is bound with the former and united thereto, thus IAHDVNHY forming a name of 8 letters. 8 X 3, the number of the Supernal Triad, yields the 24 thrones of the Elders of the Apocalypse, each of whom wears on his head a golden crown of three rays, each ray of which is a name, each name an Absolute Idea and Ruling Power of the great name YHVH Tetragrammaton.

The number 24 of the thrones multiplied by the 3 rays of the crown which equals 72, the name of God of 72 letters, which is thus mystically shown in the name YHVH, as under: (Or as the book of Revelation says: "When the living creatures (the four Kerubim the Letters of the Name) give glory to Him, etc. the four and twenty elders fall down before Him and cast their crowns before the Throne, etc." (that is the Crowns, which each bear 3 of the 72 Names, and these 72 names are written on the leaves of the Tree of Life which were for the healing of the nations.)

These are also the 72 names of the ladder of Jacob on which the Angels of God ascended and descended. The 72 Names of the Deity are thus obtained. The 19th, 20th, and 21st verses of the XIV Chapter of the Book of Exodus each consist of 72 letters...{{sfnp|Mathers|2021}} }}

=== Reuchlin's angels of the ''Shem HaMephorash'' ===
{| class="wikitable"
|-style=vertical-align:top
! Angel<br />{{sfnp|Reuchlin|Goodman|1993|p=273}}<br />{{nobold|(per ])}}
! Biblical verse<br />{{sfnp|Rudd|2007|pp=408-412}}{{sfnp|Skinner|2006|pp=41-48}}<br />{{no bold|(per Rudd)}}
! Demon ruled<br />{{sfnp|Rudd|2007|pp=366-376}}<br />{{nobold|(per Rudd)}}
|-
| 1. Vehuiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|3:3}}
| ]
|-
| 2. Ielial
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|22:19}}
| ]
|-
| 3. Sitael
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|91:2}}
| ]
|-
| 4. Elemiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|6:4}}
| ]
|-
| 5. Mahasiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|34:4}}
| ]
|-
| 6. Iehahel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|9:11}}
| ]
|-
| 7. Achaiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|103:8}}
| ]
|-
| 8. Cahethel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|95:6}}
| ]
|-
| 9. Haziel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|25:6}}
| ]
|-
| 10. Aladiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|33:22}}
| ]
|-
| 11. Laviah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|18:46}}
| ]
|-
| 12. Hahaiah
| {{Bibleverse|Matthew|22:44}}
| ]
|-
| 13. Iezalel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|98:4}}
| ]
|-
| 14. Mebahel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|9:9}}
| ]
|-
| 15. Hariel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|94:22}}
| ]
|-
| 16. Hakamiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|88:1}}
| ]
|-
| 17. Loviah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|8:9}}
| ]
|-
| 18. Caliel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|35:24}}
| ]
|-
| 19. Levuiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|40:1}}
| ]
|-
| 20. ]
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|120:1-2}}
| ]
|-
| 21. ]
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|31:14}}
| ]
|-
| 22. Ieiaiel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|121:5}}
| ]
|-
| 23. Melahel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|121:8}}
| ]
|-
| 24. Haiviah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|33:18}}
| ]
|-
| 25. Nithhaiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|9:1}}
| ]
|-
| 26. Haaiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|119:145}}
| ]
|-
| 27. Ierathel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|140:1}}
| ]
|-
| 28. Saeehiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|71:12}}
| ]
|-
| 29. Reiaiel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|54:4}}
| ]
|-
| 30. Omael
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|71:5}}
| ]
|-
| 31. Lecabel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|71:16}}
| ]
|-
| 32. Vasariah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|33:4}}
| ]
|-
| 33. Iehuiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|94:11}}
| ]
|-
| 34. Lehahiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|131:3}}
| ]
|-
| 35. Chavakiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|116:1}}
| ]
|-
| 36. Manadel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|26:8}}
| ]
|-
| 37. ]
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|80:3}}
| ]
|-
| 38. Haamiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|91:9}}
| ]
|-
| 39. Rehael
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|30:10}}
| ]
|-
| 40. Ieiazel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|88:14}}
| ]
|-
| 41. Hahahel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|120:2}}
| ]
|-
| 42. ]
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|121:7}}
| ]
|-
| 43. Veualiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|88:13}}
| ]
|-
| 44. Ielahiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|119:108}}
| ]
|-
| 45. Sealiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|94:18}}
| ]
|-
| 46. ]
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|145:9}}
| ]
|-
| 47. Asaliah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|92:5}}
| ]
|-
| 48. Mihael
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|98:2}}
| ]
|-
| 49. Vehuel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|145:3}}
| ]
|-
| 50. ]
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|145:8}}
| ]
|-
| 51. Hahasiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|104:31}}
| ]
|-
| 52. Imamiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|7:17}}
| ]
|-
| 53. Nanael
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|119:75}}
| ]
|-
| 54. Nithael
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|103:19}}
| ]
|-
| 55. Mebahaiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|102:12}}
| ]
|-
| 56. Poiel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|145:14}}
| ]
|-
| 57. Nemamiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|115:11}}
| ]
|-
| 58. Ieialel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|6:3}}
| ]
|-
| 59. Harahel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|113:3}}
| ]
|-
| 60. Mizrael
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|145:17}}
| ]
|-
| 61. Vmabel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|113:2}}
| ]
|-
| 62. Iahhael
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|119:159}}
| ]
|-
| 63. Anavel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|100:2}}
| ]
|-
| 64. Mehiel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|33:18}}
| ]
|-
| 65. Damabiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|90:13}}
| ]
|-
| 66. Mavakel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|38:21}}
| ]
|-
| 67. Eiael
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|37:4}}
| ]
|-
| 68. Habuiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|106:1}}
| ]
|-
| 69. Roehel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|16:5}}
| ]
|-
| 70. Yabamiah
| {{Bibleverse|Genesis|1:1}}
| ]
|-
| 71. Haiaiel
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|109:30}}
| ]
|-
| 72. Mumiah
| {{Bibleverse|Psalms|116:7}}
| ]
|}

==In folklore and literature==
Shem HaMephorash figures in the legend of the '']'', an animated ] being in ] that was created entirely from inanimate matter (usually clay). The earthen figure was then animated by placing a piece of parchment with the name of God in its mouth.{{sfnp|Scholem|1974|pp=200-201}} ] refers to this legend in his poem ''The Golem'' and in his essay ''The Golem''. The Shem haMephorash also appears in Borges's stories ''Three versions of Judas'' and ''The Circular Ruins''.{{sfnp|Boldy|2013|p=89}}{{sfnp|Alazraki|1988|p=22}}

A contemporary book on Hermetic Qabalah which discuss the subject is ]'s ''The Chicken Qabalah of Rabbi Ben Clifford.{{sfnp|DuQuette|2001}}

==See also==
*]

==Notes==
{{notelist}}


== References == == References ==
===Citations===
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist|25em}}

===Works cited===
{{refbegin|30em}}
*{{Cite book |last=Alazraki |first=Jaime |title=Borges and the Kabbalah: And Other Essays on His Fiction and Poetry |date=1988 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-0-521-30684-3}}
*{{cite book |title=Arguing with Angels: Enochian Magic and Modern Occulture |first=Egil |last=Asprem |location=Albany |publisher=State University of New York Press |year=2012 |isbn=978-1-4384-4192-4}}
<!-- B -->
*{{cite encyclopedia |first=Wilhelm |last=Bacher |url=https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/13542-shem-ha-meforash |encyclopedia=Jewish Encyclopedia |title=Shem Ha-Meforash |publisher=The Koppelman Foundation |date=n.d. |access-date=2013-07-22}}
*{{cite book |last=Ballard |first=M. |year=2007 |title=De Cicéron à Benjamin: Traducteurs, traductions, réflexions |location=France |publisher=Presses Universitaires du Septentrion |isbn=978-2-85939-985-6 |lang=fr}}
*{{cite book |last=Boldy |first=Steven |year=2013 |title=A Companion to Jorge Luis Borges. |location=United Kingdom |publisher=Tamesis |isbn=978-1-85566-266-7}}
*{{cite journal |last=Boudet |first=Jean-Patrice |title=Magie théurgique, angélologie et vision béatifique dans le Liber sacratussive juratus attribué à Honorius de Thèbes |journal=Mélanges de l'école française de Rome |year=2002 |volume=114 |number=2 |pages=851–890 |doi=10.3406/mefr.2002.9254 |lang=fr}}
*{{cite book |title=Magic, Mystery, and Science: The Occult in Western Civilization |first1=Dan |last1=Burton |first2=David |last2=Grandy |publisher=Indiana University Press |year=2004 |isbn= 978-0-253-21656-4}}
*{{cite book |last=Butler |first=Eliza Marian |title=Ritual Magic |orig-date=1949 |year=1998 |publisher=Pennsylvania State University Press |isbn=978-0-271-01846-1}}
<!-- C -->
*{{cite book |title=The Black Arts |first=Richard |last=Cavendish |publisher=Penguin Group |year=1967 |isbn=978-0-399-50035-0}}
*{{cite book |last=DuQuette |first=Lon Milo |title=The Chicken Qabalah of Rabbi Ben Clifford |publisher=Weiser Books |year=2001 |isbn=978-1-57863-215-2}}
*{{cite book |last=Ginsburg |first=Christian David |title=The Kabbalah: Its Doctrines, Development, and Literature: An Essay |date=1925 |publisher=Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, & Green}}
<!-- H -->
*{{cite book |title=The Scholar's Haggadah: Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Oriental Versions |first=Heinrich |last=Guggenheimer |publisher=Jason Aronson |year=1998 |isbn=978-1-4617-1012-7}}
*{{cite book |title=Dictionary of Gnosis & Western Esotericism |editor-first=Wouter J. |editor-last=Hanegraaf |editor-link=Wouter J. Hanegraaff |location=Leiden |publisher=Brill |year=2006 |isbn=978-90-04-15231-1}}
*{{cite book |last=Izmirlieva |first=Valentina |year=2008 |title=All the Names of the Lord: Lists, Mysticism, and Magic |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0-226-38872-4}}
*{{cite book |last=Jones |first=G. Lloyd |chapter=Introduction |year=1993 |title=On the Art of the Kabbalah (De Arte Cabalistica) |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-0-8032-8946-8}}
*{{cite book |last=Kaplan |first=Aryeh |year=1989 |title=The Bahir: Illumination |location=United States |publisher=Red Wheel Weiser |isbn=978-0-87728-618-9}}
<!-- M -->
*{{cite book |last=Maimonides |first=Moses |year=1904 |title=The Guide for the Perplexed |translator=M. Friedländer |edition=2nd |place=London |publisher=Routledge & Kegan Paul |url=https://sacred-texts.com/jud/gfp/ |via=Sacred-texts.com}}
*{{cite web |last=Mathers |first=Samuel Liddell MacGregor |author-link=Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers |title=Golden Dawn Lectures: Shem HaMephorash ''and'' The Seals of the Shem HaMephorash |url=https://www.tarrdaniel.com/documents/Thelemagick/gd/publication/english/Schemhamphorash.html |via=G∴D∴ Library |year=2021}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |first1=J. F. |last1=McLaughlin |first2=Judah David |last2=Eisenstein |url=https://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/articles/6727-god-names-of#anchor12 |encyclopedia=Jewish Encyclopedia |title=Names of God |publisher=The Koppelman Foundation |date=n.d. |access-date=2021-07-04}}
*{{cite encyclopedia |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology |volume=M-Z |edition=5th |title=Shemhamphorash |editor-first=J. Gordon |editor-last=Melton |publisher=Gale Group |year=2001 |isbn=978-0-8103-9489-6 |page=1399}}
*{{cite book |last=Page |first=Sophie |year=2012 |chapter=Uplifting Souls: The Liber de essentia spirituum and the Liber Razielis |editor1-first=Claire |editor1-last=Fanger |title=Invoking Angels: Theurgic Ideas and Practices, Thirteenth to Sixteenth Centuries |location=University Park |publisher=Pennsylvania State University Press |pages=79ff |isbn=978-0-271-05143-7}}
*{{cite book |last1=Reuchlin |first1=Johannes |author1-link=Johannes Reuchlin |last2=Goodman |first2=Martin |year=1993 |title=On the Art of the Kabbalah (De Arte Cabalistica) |publisher=University of Nebraska Press |isbn=978-0-8032-8946-8}}
*{{cite book |last=Roling |first=Bernd |chapter=The Complete Nature of Christ: Sources and Structures of a Christological Theurgy in the Works of Johannes Reuchlin |title=The Metamorphosis of Magic from Late Antiquity to the Early Modern Period |editor1-first=Jan N. |editor1-last=Bremmer |editor2-first=Jan R. |editor2-last=Veenstra |location=Leuven |publisher=Peeters |year=2002 |isbn=978-90-429-1227-4 |pages=231–66 |chapter-url=https://pure.rug.nl/ws/portalfiles/portal/8320555/c12.pdf |via=University of Groningen}}
*{{cite book |title=A Treatise on Angel Magick |first=Thomas |last=Rudd |editor-first=Adam |editor-last=McLean |publisher=Weiser Books |year=2006 |isbn=978-1-57863-375-3}}
*{{cite book |title=The Goetia of Dr Rudd |first=Thomas |last=Rudd |editor1-first=Stephen |editor1-last=Skinner |editor2-first=David |editor2-last=Rankine |year=2007 |publisher=Golden Hoard Press |isbn=978-0-9547639-2-3}}
*{{cite book |editor-last=Savedow |editor-first=Steve |title=Sepher Rezial Hemelach: The Book of the Angel Rezial |translator=Steve Savedow |publisher=Weiser Books |year=2000 |isbn=978-1-60925-318-9}}
*{{cite book |last=Scholem |first=Gershom |year=1974 |title=Kabbalah |location=Israel |publisher=Quadrangle/New York Times Book Company |isbn=978-0-8129-0352-2}}
*{{cite book |title=The Complete Magician's Tables |first=Stephen |last=Skinner |publisher=Golden Hoard Press |year=2006 |isbn=978-0-9547639-7-8}}
*{{cite book |last1=Skinner |first1=Stephen |last2=Rankine |first2=David |year=2010 |title=The Goetia of Dr Rudd: The Angels & Demons of Liber Malorum Spirituum Seu Goetia Lemegeton Clavicula Salomonis: with a Study of the Techniques of Evocation in the Context of the Angel Magic Tradition of the Seventeenth Century |publisher=Llewellyn Publications |isbn=978-0-7387-2355-6}}
*{{cite book |first=Joshua |last=Trachtenberg |title= Jewish Magic and Superstition |publisher=Behrman's Jewish Book House |year=1939 |via=The Internet Sacred Text Archive |url=http://sacred-texts.com/jud/jms/index.htm}}
*{{cite book |last1=Véronèse |first1=Julien |year=2012 |chapter=Magic, Theurgy, and Spirituality in the Medieval Ritual of the ''Ars notoria'' |translator= Claire Fanger|editor1-first=Claire |editor1-last=Fanger |title=Invoking Angels: Theurgic Ideas and Practices, Thirteenth to Sixteenth Centuries |location=University Park |publisher=Pennsylvania State University Press |pages=37–78 |isbn=978-0-271-05143-7}}
{{refend}}


== Further reading == == Further reading ==
{{refbegin|30em}}
* Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa's ], features the seventy two angels of the "''Schemhamphorae''." This was later copied by ] in his book ], in .
* {{cite book |first=Heinrich Cornelius |last=Agrippa |author-link=Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa |title=]}} features the seventy two angels of the "''Schemhamphorae''." This was later copied by ] in his book ], in .
* The (]l) ] feature an appendix titled
* {{cite book |author=Anon |title=] |year=1880}} This ]l work features an appendix titled .
* ]'s , where he attempts to connect the Shemhamphorash to the ]
* {{cite book |last=Avery |first= Maximus Tyrannus |title=Book of the Hidden Name: Magick of the Shem HaMephorash Angels |publisher=Empyrus Publishing |year=2020 |isbn=978-0-578-76540-2}}
* ]'s , a commentary on the Tarot, Shemhamphorash, and Goetia.
* {{cite book |first=Aleister |last=Crowley |url=https://www.sacred-texts.com/oto/lib78.htm |title=Liber 78: A description of the cards of the Tarot}} A commentary on the Tarot, Shemhamphorash, and Goetia.
* Lenain Lazare's refers to and expands upon Kircher's treatment of the 72-fold name (tying each angel to a different language's word for ]), particularly in
*{{cite book |year=2012 |editor1-first=Claire |editor1-last=Fanger |title=Invoking Angels: Theurgic Ideas and Practices, Thirteenth to Sixteenth Centuries |location=University Park |publisher=Pennsylvania State University Press |isbn=978-0-271-05143-7}}
* ]'s ''La Kabbale Pratique'' features a section detailing the angels, their attributes (including astrological connections), and rituals for calling upon them.
* {{cite book |first=Lazare |last=Lenain |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ZqgpxTZ43HkC |title=La Science Cabalistique |year=1823}} Refers to and expands upon Kircher's treatment of the 72-fold name (tying each angel to a different language's word for ]), particularly in .
* {{cite journal |first=William |last=Meegan |url=http://www.rosecroixjournal.org/issues/2006/New%20Folder/vol3_45_128_meegan.pdf |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060716051045/http://www.rosecroixjournal.org/issues/2006/New%20Folder/vol3_45_128_meegan.pdf |archive-date=2006-07-16 |title=The Sistine Chapel: A Study in Celestial Cartography |journal=The Rose Croix Journal |volume=3 |pages=45–128 |year=2006}} Discusses a possible relationship between ]'s fresco in the ] and the Shemhamphorash.
* {{cite book |last=Wilkinson |first=R. J. |year=2015 |title=Tetragrammaton: Western Christians and the Hebrew Name of God: From the Beginnings to the Seventeenth Century |location=Netherlands |publisher=Brill |isbn=978-90-04-28817-1}}
{{refend}}


== External links == == External links ==
{{wiktionary}} {{wiktionary inline}}
* William Meegan's in The Rose Croix Journal discusses a possible relationship between ]'s fresco in the ] and the Shemhamphorash.
* Jim Cornwell's discusses the material from an ] perspective.
* Aaron Leitch's discusses the role the Shemhamephoresh played in the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn.


] ]

Latest revision as of 02:04, 8 January 2025

Hidden name of God in Judaism and occultism

This article contains special characters. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols.

Shem HaMephorash (Hebrew: שֵׁם הַמְּפֹרָשׁ Šēm hamMəfōrāš, also Shem ha-Mephorash), meaning "the explicit name", was originally a Tannaitic term for the Tetragrammaton. In Kabbalah, it may refer to a name of God composed of either 4, 12, 22, 42, or 72 letters (or triads of letters), the latter version being the most common.

Early sources, from the Mishnah to the Geonim, only use "Shem haMephorash" to refer to the four-letter Tetragrammaton.

12- and 42-letter names

In addition to the Shem haMephorash, b. Qiddushin 72a describes a 12-letter name and a 42-letter name. The medievals debate whether the 12-letter name is a mundane euphemism, unknown, YHVH-EHYH-ADNY (אהיה יהוה אדני), or YHVH-YHVH-YHVH (יהוה יהוה יהוה). Wilhelm Bacher and Adolphe Franck suggest that the 12-letter name was Chokmah-Tevunah-Da'at (חכמה תבונה דעת), but the doctrine of the Sefirot originated in the 13th century, roughly a thousand years after the 12-letter name was first described. A. Haffer suggests that it is אל יהוה אלהינו (El YHVH Elohenu) from Deut. 6:4.

Wilhelm Bacher and Adolphe Franck suggest that the 42-letter name was the full 10 Sefirot, but the Sefirot did not yet exist in Talmudic times. J. Goldberger argues that the 42-letter name was derived by gematriya, representing either אהיה אהיה or אלוה. Ignatz Stern wrote that it represents the names listed by Sifra d'Tziuta Ch. 4, winning the support of Ginsburg, but this passage is not even as old as the Zohar. Robert Eisler derives it from Ex. 34:6. A. Haffer suggests that it is יהוה אחד ברוך שם כבוד מלכותו לעולם ועד.

According to Maimonides and Rashi, the 42-letter name is unknown, but Hayy ben Sherira says it is the acronym of the medieval piyyut Ana b'Koach, and Joshua Trachtenberg argues that Hayy's tradition may legitimately represent the Talmudic intent. By the start of the Rishonic period, the term "Shem haMephorash" could also be used for the 42-letter name and this interpretation was retrojected into the Mishnah, although even Hayy did not claim to know its pronunciation. According to Hayy,

Though the letters of the 42-letter name are known, the pronunciation has not been transmitted. Some say that it begins אַבְגִיתַץ ʾabgîtaṣ while others say that it begins אַבַגְיְתַץ ʾabagyǝtaṣ, and some say that it concludes שְׁקוּצִית šǝqûṣît while other say that it concludes שַׁקְוַצִית šaqwaṣît, and there are many more disputes besides which none can resolve.

Solomon ibn Adret (1235-1310) records that:

Different places have different pronunciations . Some pronounce it as fourteen words composed of three letters each, while others pronounce it as seven words composed of six letters each. The scholars of this land follow the latter method, and such is the tradition received from Hayy, but I heard that the scholars of Ashkenaz pronounce it as fourteen three-letter words. There are also differences between the letters of our version and those of Ashkenaz as to what you say, that each three-letter word is pronounced shewa-patah, there is one word pronounced shewa-shuruq, which is the thirteenth: the shin with a shewa and the waw with a shuruq.

Piyyutim which used this 42-letter name as their acrostic were popular among the Hasidei Ashkenaz, and many different poems were composed based on different versions of the name. The only one of these to survive in Jewish liturgy is Ana b'Koach.

22-letter name

Cairo Geniza amulets (Oxford e.107:10, T-S K 1.127) contain the name א◌ׄנ◌ׄק◌ׄת◌ׄם◌ׄ פסתם פספסים ודיונסים. A similar amulet is included in the back of Sefer Raziel HaMalakh, containing אנקתם פסתם פספסים דיונסים, which the commentary describes as "the 22-letter name." Its origins are unknown, with no connection to Hebrew or Aramaic being found, and no agreement on any particular Greek or Zoroastrian origin. Nathan Hannover was responsible for introducing it into popular Priestly Blessing liturgy, and also composed poems on the model of Ana b'Koach using the 22-letter name as his acrostic.

72-letter name

In Judaic Kabbalah

Main article: Kabbalah § History of Jewish mysticism

The 72-fold name is highly important to Sefer Raziel HaMalakh. It is derived from Exodus 14:19–21, read boustrophedonically to produce 72 names of three letters. This method was explained by Rashi, (b. Sukkah 45a), as well as in Sefer HaBahir (c. 1150~1200). Kabbalist legends state that the 72-fold name was used by Moses to cross the Red Sea, and that it could grant later holy men the power to cast out demons, heal the sick, prevent natural disasters, and even kill enemies.

According to G. Lloyd Jones,

To overcome the problems posed by the doctrine of God's transcendence, the early Jewish mystics developed an emanation theory in which the alphabet played an important part. They taught that the universe was divided into ten angelic spheres each one governed by an intermediary or emanation of the divine. There were seventy-two inferior angels through whom the intermediaries could be approached. Contact with this celestial world was achieved by manipulating the letters of the Hebrew alphabet. This invocatory technique may be traced through the works of Joseph Gikatilla to the famous thirteenth-century Kabbalist Abraham Abulafia.

Liber Semamphoras (aka Semamphoras, Semyforas) is the title of a Latin translation of an occult or magical text of Jewish provenance attributed to Solomon. It was attested in 1260 by Roger Bacon, who complained about the linguistic corruption that had occurred in translating Liber Semamphoras into Latin from Hebrew. It is heavily indebted to Sefer HaRazim through its Latin versions, Liber Sepher Razielis idest Liber Secretorum seu Liber Salomonis, and seemingly replaced the more explicitly magical text Liber magice in the Razielis.

In Christian Kabbalah

Johann Reuchlin (1455–1522) considered these 72 names, made pronounceable by the addition of suffixes such as 'El' or 'Yah', to be the names of angels, individuated products of God's will. Reuchlin refers to and lists the 72 Angels of the Shem Hamephorash in his 1517 book De Arte Cabalistica. According to Bernd Roling,

After deriving a Shem ha-mephorasch of the 72 angelic names from the biblical verses of Exodus 14,19ff., Reuchlin makes a statement concerning the metaphysical significance of the names. The names of the angels are products of the will of God. They are substantially based on the tetragrammaton, and through this connection they illumine and enhance man's spiritual return to God. With the insertion of divine names such as 'El' or 'Yah', angelic names become pronouncable, and God himself (being nature) is the basis of angelic individuation.

Reuchlin's cosmology in turn influenced Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa (1486–1535) and Athanasius Kircher (1602–1680).

In 1686, Andreas Luppius published Semiphoras und Schemhamphoras, a German translation of the earlier Latin text, Liber Semiphoras (see previous section), which Luppius augmented heavily with passages from Agrippa's De Occulta Philosophia and other sources.

In Hermetic Qabalah and Goetia

Blaise de Vigenère (1523–1596), following Reuchlin, featured the 72 angels in his writings. De Vigenère's material on the Shemhamphorash was later copied and expanded by Thomas Rudd (1583?–1656), who proposed that it was a key (but often missing) component to the magical practices in the Lesser Key of Solomon, as a balancing force against the evil spirits of the Ars Goetia or in isolation. Skinner and Rankine explain that de Vigenère and Rudd adopted these triliteral words with '-el' or '-yah' (both Hebrew for "god") added to them as the names of the 72 angels that are able to bind the 72 evil spirits also described in The Lesser Key of Solomon (c. mid-17th century).

Blaise de Vigenère's manuscripts were also used by Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers (1854–1918) in his works for the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Mathers describes the descent of power from Tetragrammaton through 24 thrones of the Elders of the Apocalypse, each with a crown of three rays:

Four is the number of the letters of the Tetragrammaton. Four is also the number of the letters of the name ADNI which is its representative and key. The latter name is bound with the former and united thereto, thus IAHDVNHY forming a name of 8 letters. 8 X 3, the number of the Supernal Triad, yields the 24 thrones of the Elders of the Apocalypse, each of whom wears on his head a golden crown of three rays, each ray of which is a name, each name an Absolute Idea and Ruling Power of the great name YHVH Tetragrammaton.

The number 24 of the thrones multiplied by the 3 rays of the crown which equals 72, the name of God of 72 letters, which is thus mystically shown in the name YHVH, as under: (Or as the book of Revelation says: "When the living creatures (the four Kerubim the Letters of the Name) give glory to Him, etc. the four and twenty elders fall down before Him and cast their crowns before the Throne, etc." (that is the Crowns, which each bear 3 of the 72 Names, and these 72 names are written on the leaves of the Tree of Life which were for the healing of the nations.)

These are also the 72 names of the ladder of Jacob on which the Angels of God ascended and descended. The 72 Names of the Deity are thus obtained. The 19th, 20th, and 21st verses of the XIV Chapter of the Book of Exodus each consist of 72 letters...

Reuchlin's angels of the Shem HaMephorash

Angel

(per Reuchlin)
Biblical verse

(per Rudd)
Demon ruled

(per Rudd)
1. Vehuiah Psalms 3:3 Bael
2. Ielial Psalms 22:19 Agares
3. Sitael Psalms 91:2 Vassago
4. Elemiah Psalms 6:4 Gamigin
5. Mahasiah Psalms 34:4 Marbas
6. Iehahel Psalms 9:11 Valefar
7. Achaiah Psalms 103:8 Aamon
8. Cahethel Psalms 95:6 Barbatos
9. Haziel Psalms 25:6 Paimon
10. Aladiah Psalms 33:22 Buer
11. Laviah Psalms 18:46 Gusion
12. Hahaiah Matthew 22:44 Sitri
13. Iezalel Psalms 98:4 Beleth
14. Mebahel Psalms 9:9 Leraje
15. Hariel Psalms 94:22 Eligor
16. Hakamiah Psalms 88:1 Zepar
17. Loviah Psalms 8:9 Botis
18. Caliel Psalms 35:24 Bathin
19. Levuiah Psalms 40:1 Saleos
20. Pahaliah Psalms 120:1–2 Purson
21. Nelchael Psalms 31:14 Morax
22. Ieiaiel Psalms 121:5 Ipos
23. Melahel Psalms 121:8 Aim
24. Haiviah Psalms 33:18 Naberus
25. Nithhaiah Psalms 9:1 Glasya-Labolas
26. Haaiah Psalms 119:145 Bune
27. Ierathel Psalms 140:1 Ronove
28. Saeehiah Psalms 71:12 Berith
29. Reiaiel Psalms 54:4 Astaroth
30. Omael Psalms 71:5 Forneus
31. Lecabel Psalms 71:16 Foras
32. Vasariah Psalms 33:4 Asmodeus
33. Iehuiah Psalms 94:11 Gaap
34. Lehahiah Psalms 131:3 Furfur
35. Chavakiah Psalms 116:1 Marchosias
36. Manadel Psalms 26:8 Stolas
37. Aniel Psalms 80:3 Phenex
38. Haamiah Psalms 91:9 Halphas
39. Rehael Psalms 30:10 Malphas
40. Ieiazel Psalms 88:14 Raum
41. Hahahel Psalms 120:2 Focalor
42. Michael Psalms 121:7 Vepar
43. Veualiah Psalms 88:13 Sabnock
44. Ielahiah Psalms 119:108 Shax
45. Sealiah Psalms 94:18 Vine
46. Ariel Psalms 145:9 Bifrons
47. Asaliah Psalms 92:5 Vual
48. Mihael Psalms 98:2 Haagenti
49. Vehuel Psalms 145:3 Crocell
50. Daniel Psalms 145:8 Furcas
51. Hahasiah Psalms 104:31 Balam
52. Imamiah Psalms 7:17 Allocer
53. Nanael Psalms 119:75 Caim
54. Nithael Psalms 103:19 Murmur
55. Mebahaiah Psalms 102:12 Orobas
56. Poiel Psalms 145:14 Gremory
57. Nemamiah Psalms 115:11 Ose
58. Ieialel Psalms 6:3 Auns
59. Harahel Psalms 113:3 Orias
60. Mizrael Psalms 145:17 Vapula
61. Vmabel Psalms 113:2 Zagan
62. Iahhael Psalms 119:159 Valac
63. Anavel Psalms 100:2 Andras
64. Mehiel Psalms 33:18 Flauros
65. Damabiah Psalms 90:13 Andrealphus
66. Mavakel Psalms 38:21 Cimeries
67. Eiael Psalms 37:4 Amduscias
68. Habuiah Psalms 106:1 Belial
69. Roehel Psalms 16:5 Decarabia
70. Yabamiah Genesis 1:1 Seere
71. Haiaiel Psalms 109:30 Dantalion
72. Mumiah Psalms 116:7 Andromalius

In folklore and literature

Shem HaMephorash figures in the legend of the golem, an animated anthropomorphic being in Jewish folklore that was created entirely from inanimate matter (usually clay). The earthen figure was then animated by placing a piece of parchment with the name of God in its mouth. Jorge Luis Borges refers to this legend in his poem The Golem and in his essay The Golem. The Shem haMephorash also appears in Borges's stories Three versions of Judas and The Circular Ruins.

A contemporary book on Hermetic Qabalah which discuss the subject is Lon Milo DuQuette's The Chicken Qabalah of Rabbi Ben Clifford.

See also

Notes

  1. Stern lists these as "אהיה אשר אהיה יה יהויה אל אלהים יהוה צבאות אל חי אדני" to make 42 letters. In the text only "אהיה יה יהו אל אלהים צבאות שדי אדני".
  2. יהוה יהוה אל רחום וחנון ארך אפים ורב חסד ואמת נוצר חסד
  3. Each manuscript of Hayy's responsum contains different proposed pronunciations. This follows MS Oxford heb. d.2.
  4. This is compatible with options mentioned in Hayy, if read to represent אֲבַגְ/יְתַץ and שְׁקוּ/צִית.
  5. Skinner and Rankine's explanation (in Rudd 2007, pp. 71–73) of how the triliterals are produced corresponds with the explanation given in McLaughlin & Eisenstein n.d., and the Hebrew names they give in their tables (pp. 366–376, cf. pp. 405–407) also correspond with the triliterals in the table given by McLaughlin & Eisenstein.

References

Citations

  1. Bacher (n.d.).
  2. ^ Trachtenberg (1939), pp. 90–98, 288ff.
  3. Bacher (n.d.); Ginsburg (1925), p. 182.
  4. Maimonides (1904), Part 1 62:2.
  5. "Rashi on Kiddushin 71a:12:4". www.sefaria.org. Retrieved 2024-08-07.
  6. "Ben Yehoyada on Kiddushin 71a:2". www.sefaria.org. Retrieved 2022-05-17.
  7. "Sefer HaBahir 10". www.sefaria.org. Retrieved 2022-05-17.
  8. ^ Bacher, Wilhelm (1878). Die Agada der babylonischen Amoräer: ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der Agada und zur Einleitung in den babylonischen Talmud (in German). K. J. Trübner. p. 18.
  9. ^ Franck, Adolphe (1926). The Kabbalah: Or, The Religious Philosophy of the Hebrews. Kabbalah Publishing Company. p. 71.
  10. ^ Ginsburg (1925), p. 182.
  11. ^ ha-Tsofeh mi-erets ha-Gar (in Hebrew). L. Blau. 1912.
  12. Ben Chananja: Monatsschrift für jüdische Theologie und für jüdisches Leben in Gemeinde, Synagoge und Schule (in German). Burger. 1867.
  13. Ben-Chananja (in German). S. Burger. 1860. p. 261.
  14. Webmaster. "Hilufim Terumah SdT 2 176b - 179a". www.sup.org. Retrieved 2024-08-08.
  15. Eisler, Robert (1926). "Le mystère du Schem Hammephorasch". Revue des études juives. 82 (163): 157–159. doi:10.3406/rjuiv.1926.5506.
  16. Maimonides (1904), Part 1 62:3.
  17. "Rashi on Kiddushin 71a:12:4". www.sefaria.org. Retrieved 2024-08-07.
  18. Hayy ben Sherira, "תשובה אל יוסף בן ברכיה ותלמידי יעקב בן נסים בעניין שמות והשבעות, קונטרס 'הדר עם הנכרי בחצר'", p. 2 This responsum is #1110 on T. Groner's list of verified Hayy compositions. See notes of B. M. Lewin, Otzar haGeonim vol. IV:2, p. 23.
  19. Rashi, Ibn Ezra, etc. See Hayy's responsum of previous note and cf. Eshkol vol. II p. 97 and Albeck's notes, and the parallels noted there and in Ibn Ghayyat's Shaarei Simcha vol. I p. 62.
  20. שו"ת הרשב"א חלק א סימן רכ
  21. חלמיש, משה; Hallamish, Moshe (2015). "Anna Be-Kho'ah / על הפיוט אנא בכח". Daat: A Journal of Jewish Philosophy & Kabbalah / דעת: כתב-עת לפילוסופיה יהודית וקבלה (78): 55–75. ISSN 0334-2336. JSTOR 24235662.
  22. Schäfer, Peter; Shaked, Shaul (1994). Magische Texte aus der Kairoer Geniza (in German). Mohr Siebeck. ISBN 978-3-16-146272-6.
  23. Naveh, Joseph; Shaked, Shaul (2023-08-28). Amulets and Magic Bowls: Aramaic Incantations of Late Antiquity. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-67214-7.
  24. ^ Savedow (2000), p. 18.
  25. Trachtenberg (1939), p. 93.
  26. Berliner, Abraham; אברהם ‏ברלינר (1969). ‏כתבים נבחרים / (in Hebrew). מוסד הרב קוק.
  27. ^ Asprem (2012), p. 33.
  28. Melton (2001), p. 1399.
  29. ^ Burton & Grandy (2004), p. 69.
  30. ^ Cavendish (1967), p. 119.
  31. ^ Rudd (2007), pp. 14, 39–44, 67–73.
  32. McLaughlin & Eisenstein (n.d.).
  33. Guggenheimer (1998), p. 300.
  34. Kaplan (1989), p. 42.
  35. Jones (1993), p. 21.
  36. ^ Butler (1998), p. 158.
  37. Boudet (2002), p. 864.
  38. Véronèse (2012), pp. 60–61.
  39. Page (2012), p. 82.
  40. ^ Roling (2002), p. 261.
  41. Izmirlieva (2008), p. 195, n. 57.
  42. ^ Reuchlin & Goodman (1993), p. 273.
  43. Hanegraaf (2006), p. 625.
  44. Ballard (2007), p. 137.
  45. ^ Skinner & Rankine (2010), pp. 39–40.
  46. Rudd (2006), pp. 43–50.
  47. Mathers (2021).
  48. Rudd (2007), pp. 408–412.
  49. Skinner (2006), pp. 41–48.
  50. Rudd (2007), pp. 366–376.
  51. Scholem (1974), pp. 200–201.
  52. Boldy (2013), p. 89.
  53. Alazraki (1988), p. 22.
  54. DuQuette (2001).

Works cited

  • Alazraki, Jaime (1988). Borges and the Kabbalah: And Other Essays on His Fiction and Poetry. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-30684-3.
  • Asprem, Egil (2012). Arguing with Angels: Enochian Magic and Modern Occulture. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 978-1-4384-4192-4.
  • Bacher, Wilhelm (n.d.). "Shem Ha-Meforash". Jewish Encyclopedia. The Koppelman Foundation. Retrieved 2013-07-22.
  • Ballard, M. (2007). De Cicéron à Benjamin: Traducteurs, traductions, réflexions (in French). France: Presses Universitaires du Septentrion. ISBN 978-2-85939-985-6.
  • Boldy, Steven (2013). A Companion to Jorge Luis Borges. United Kingdom: Tamesis. ISBN 978-1-85566-266-7.
  • Boudet, Jean-Patrice (2002). "Magie théurgique, angélologie et vision béatifique dans le Liber sacratussive juratus attribué à Honorius de Thèbes". Mélanges de l'école française de Rome (in French). 114 (2): 851–890. doi:10.3406/mefr.2002.9254.
  • Burton, Dan; Grandy, David (2004). Magic, Mystery, and Science: The Occult in Western Civilization. Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-21656-4.
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  • DuQuette, Lon Milo (2001). The Chicken Qabalah of Rabbi Ben Clifford. Weiser Books. ISBN 978-1-57863-215-2.
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  • Guggenheimer, Heinrich (1998). The Scholar's Haggadah: Ashkenazic, Sephardic, and Oriental Versions. Jason Aronson. ISBN 978-1-4617-1012-7.
  • Hanegraaf, Wouter J., ed. (2006). Dictionary of Gnosis & Western Esotericism. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-15231-1.
  • Izmirlieva, Valentina (2008). All the Names of the Lord: Lists, Mysticism, and Magic. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-38872-4.
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  • Mathers, Samuel Liddell MacGregor (2021). "Golden Dawn Lectures: Shem HaMephorash and The Seals of the Shem HaMephorash" – via G∴D∴ Library.
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Further reading

External links

The dictionary definition of shem hamephorash at Wiktionary

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