enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of occult symbols - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_occult_symbols

    Septenary Sigil: Order of Nine Angles: The main symbol of the Order of Nine Angles, a neo-Nazi Satanic and Left-hand occult group based in the United Kingdom. Sigil: Renaissance magic: Images created for magical purposes, sometimes attributed as signatures of demons, angels, and other beings. Sigil of Lucifer: Grimorium Verum

  3. Sigil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sigil

    The logo or brand, like any sigil, is a condensation, a compressed, symbolic summoning up of the world of desire which the corporation intends to represent... Walt Disney died long ago but his sigil, that familiar, cartoonish signature, persists, carrying its own vast weight of meanings, associations, nostalgia and significance. [7]

  4. List of sigils of demons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sigils_of_demons

    In demonology, sigils are pictorial signatures attributed to demons, angels, or other beings. In the ceremonial magic of the Middle Ages, sigils were used in the summoning of these beings and were the pictorial equivalent to their true name.

  5. Enjoining good and forbidding wrong - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enjoining_good_and...

    According to historian Michael Cook (whose book Commanding Right and Forbidding Wrong in Islamic Thought is the major English language source on the issue), [23] [24] a slightly different phrase is used in a similar hadith -- 'righting wrong' (taghyir al-munkar) instead of 'forbidding wrong' (an-nahy ʿani-l-munkar) -- but "scholars take it for ...

  6. Segula (Kabbalah) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Segula_(Kabbalah)

    Wearing a red string. Wearing a red string cut from a longer length that has been wound around Rachel's Tomb is an ancient tradition that protects the wearer from danger [15] [16] The only classic source which does mention the red thread expressly forbids its use, saying that tying a red thread on one’s fingers is an idolatrous practice (darkei emori).

  7. Islam and magic - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_and_magic

    Emilie Savage-Smith gives a very broad definition including "anything wondrous, including elegant and subtle poetry, ... sleight-of-hand tricks, ... the healing properties of plants, ... invocations to God for assistance, ... invocations to jinn or demons or the spirits of the planets, and on occasion even to the divinatory art of astrology."

  8. Nsibidi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nsibidi

    Symbols including lovers, metal rods, trees, feathers, hands in friendship war and work, masks, moons, and stars are dyed onto ukara cloths. The cloth is dyed by post-menopausal women in secret, and young males in public. Ukara was a symbol of wealth and power only handled by titled men and post-menopausal women. [20]

  9. Jinn - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jinn

    Jinn is an Arabic collective noun deriving from the Semitic root JNN (Arabic: جَنّ / جُنّ, jann), whose primary meaning is 'to hide' or 'to adapt'. Some authors interpret the word to mean, literally, 'beings that are concealed from the senses'. [ 7 ]