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  2. Tyromancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyromancy

    The first recorded mention of tyromancy is believed to be in Oneirocritica, a 2nd-century AD treatise on dream interpretation by Greek diviner Artemidorus of Daldis. [1] [2] He claimed it to be one of the most unreliable forms of divination, writing that "the truth is spoken by sacrificers and bird-diviners and astrologers and observers of wonders and dream diviners and liver-examiners alone".

  3. Artes prohibitae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artes_prohibitae

    The art of geomancy was one of the more popular forms of divination practiced during the Renaissance. It is a form of divination in which any question may be answered by casting sand, stone, or dirt on the ground and reading the shapes, using tables of geomantic figures for interpretation. [3]

  4. Macharomancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macharomancy

    Macharomancy (Greek makhaira, a short sword or a dagger, and manteia, prophecy; alternative spellings are machæromancy, machairomancy) is a form of divination by interpreting knives, daggers, or swords, one of many methods of divination based on the use of weapons (cf belomancy – by arrows, axinomancy – by axes, and others).

  5. Belomancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Belomancy

    Belomancy, also bolomancy, is the ancient art of divination by use of arrows. The word is built upon Ancient Greek: βέλος, romanized: belos, lit. 'arrow, dart', and μαντεία, manteia, 'divination'. Belomancy was anciently practiced at least by Babylonians, Greeks, Arabs and Scythians.

  6. Methods of divination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Methods_of_divination

    biorhythmic divination: by biorhythms; bletonism/bletonomancy / ˈ b l ɛ t ən ɪ z əm /: by water current (named for Monsieur Bleton, a French bletonist) bolomancy / ˈ b ɒ l oʊ m æ n s i / → see belomancy (Greek bolē, ' arrow ' + manteía, ' prophecy ') bone-throwing: the tossing of pieces of bone or wood practiced by various cultures ...

  7. Magical Treatise of Solomon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magical_Treatise_of_Solomon

    The Magical Treatise provides instructions on how to create planetary, daily, and hourly talismans, [21] a magic sword, vessels for divination and conjuration, wax figures, scrolls (written in the blood of a bat), a ring, special clothing, and a garland, all intended to control summoned spirits. [22]

  8. Scapulimancy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scapulimancy

    Divination would only be used where there was a shortage of food or a crisis. [3] The process involved holding the cleaned shoulder blade over hot coals, heating and scorching the bone. The wide plane of the blade corresponded to the hunting grounds used at the time, and the cracks and scorch spots which resulted from the process were used to ...

  9. Nggàm - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nggàm

    A man practicing Nggam with a crab A crab in a divination pot. Nggam ([ŋgam]) is a type of divination found among many groups in western Cameroon.Among the best documented is its practice by the Mambila people of Cameroon and Nigeria, in which the actions of spiders or crabs are interpreted by the diviner.