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Veneficium
Veneficium β Magic, Witchcraft and the Poison Path
Second and Revised Edition
by Daniel A. Schulke
First published in late Summer 2012, Schulke's book on esoteric toxicology Veneficium was an instant success, selling out in six months. Its principal concern is the intersection of magic and poison, originating in remotest antiquity and reaching into the occult traditions of present day. Beyond their functions as agents of bodily harm, poisons have also served as gateways of religious ecstasy, occult knowledge, and sensorial aberration, as well as the basis of cures. Allied with Samael, the Edenic serpent of first transgression whose name in some interpretations is βVenom of Godβ, this facet of magic wends through the rites of ancient Sumer and Egypt, through European Necromancy, Alchemy, the arcane the rites of the Witchesβ Sabbath, and modern-day folk magic.
The second edition of Veneficium is now properly contextualized within a trilogy of forthcoming books entitled Triangulum Lamiarum (βTriangle of the Witchesβ), each of which concerns a specific ontological aspect of witchcraft. Veneficium, of course, treats the occult parameters of poison, toxins, and venom, and their presence in witchcraft and allied magical arts.
Newly released, the second edition of Veneficium contains the first edition in its entirety, but there are some notable expansions and evolutions:
βa new typographic design for the entire book, to be used for the whole of the trilogy
βslight expansions of certain chapters
βone additional chapter
βadditional images
βa new title page illustration by artist Benjamin A. Vierling, as well as two new ornaments by the same
βcorrection of typographic errors from the first edition, as well as footnote enumerations
βan index
βan acknowledgments section.
Veneficium β Magic, Witchcraft and the Poison Path
Second and Revised Edition
by Daniel A. Schulke
First published in late Summer 2012, Schulke's book on esoteric toxicology Veneficium was an instant success, selling out in six months. Its principal concern is the intersection of magic and poison, originating in remotest antiquity and reaching into the occult traditions of present day. Beyond their functions as agents of bodily harm, poisons have also served as gateways of religious ecstasy, occult knowledge, and sensorial aberration, as well as the basis of cures. Allied with Samael, the Edenic serpent of first transgression whose name in some interpretations is βVenom of Godβ, this facet of magic wends through the rites of ancient Sumer and Egypt, through European Necromancy, Alchemy, the arcane the rites of the Witchesβ Sabbath, and modern-day folk magic.
The second edition of Veneficium is now properly contextualized within a trilogy of forthcoming books entitled Triangulum Lamiarum (βTriangle of the Witchesβ), each of which concerns a specific ontological aspect of witchcraft. Veneficium, of course, treats the occult parameters of poison, toxins, and venom, and their presence in witchcraft and allied magical arts.
Newly released, the second edition of Veneficium contains the first edition in its entirety, but there are some notable expansions and evolutions:
βa new typographic design for the entire book, to be used for the whole of the trilogy
βslight expansions of certain chapters
βone additional chapter
βadditional images
βa new title page illustration by artist Benjamin A. Vierling, as well as two new ornaments by the same
βcorrection of typographic errors from the first edition, as well as footnote enumerations
βan index
βan acknowledgments section.
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Three Hands Press
Second and Revised Edition
192 pages with 4 page color insert, limited to 2200 copies.

