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In Latin language, the phrase 'clavicula noctis' literally translates into 'key of night'.
The song "Clavicula Nox" was featured as a full orchestral version in the first half.
"Clavicula Nox"
Jochen Bauer - solo bass vocals on "Clavicula Nox"
Mappae Clavicula (in Latin)
Jörg Braüker - solo tenor, vocals on "Clavicula Nox"
The Second Pentacle of Jupiter, from the Key of Solomon (Clavicula Salomonis).
Translations of certain of these recipes are found in mediaeval Latin collections of technological recipes, notably the Mappae clavicula.
Sarah Jezebel Deva - vocals on "Seawinds" and ending vocal line on "Clavicula Nox"
The Lesser Key of Solomon or Lemegeton Clavicula Salomonis is an anonymous 17th century grimoire, and one of the most popular books of demonology.
Books like The Lesser Key of Solomon (also known as Lemegeton Clavicula Salomonis) give a detailed list of these signs, known as diabolical signatures.
The Mappae clavicula is a medieval Latin text, a compilation containing recipes for a number of crafts including metalwork, dyeing and mosaic, as well as several recipes relevant to painting.
C. Raub: How to coat objects with gold - Pliny, Leyden Papyrus X, Mappae Clavicula and Theophilus seen with a modern chemist's eyes.
In a 12th-century text titled Mappae clavicula there are instructions on how to perform the weighings in the water in order to calculate the percentage of silver used, and thus solve the problem.
'The Goetia: The Lesser Key of Solomon the King (Clavicula Salomonis Regis)' is a 1904 translation of the text by Samuel Mathers and Aleister Crowley.
The specific epithet is derived from Latin clavicula (meaning a tendril of a vine) and refers to the tapering digitate process originating from the base of the valva of the genitalia, which terminates with a single seta.
It is possible that the Key of Solomon inspired later works, particularly the 17th-century grimoire also known as Clavicula Salomonis Regis, The Lesser Key of Solomon or Lemegeton, although there are many differences between the books.
Sir Thomas Phillipps, "A transcript of a manuscript treatise on the preparation of pigments, and on various processes of the decorative arts practised during the Middle Ages, written in the twelfth century, and entitled Mappae Clavicula."
Early medieval writer Theophilus Presbyter, believed to be the Benedictine monk and metalworker Roger of Helmarshausen, wrote a treatise in the early-to-mid-12th century that includes original work and copied information from other sources, such as the Mappae Clavicula and Eraclius, De dolorous et artibus Romanorum.