The Picatrix is one of the most mysterious and influential grimoires in the history of Western magic.
Known in Arabic as the Ghayat al Hakim, or The Goal of the Wise, this extraordinary medieval text gathered astrology, Hermetic philosophy, talismanic magic, planetary spirits, lunar mansions, ancient cosmology, and ritual theory into one of the most ambitious books of magical knowledge ever compiled.
This study explores the Picatrix as a historical, philosophical, and esoteric masterpiece. It traces the book's origins in al Andalus, its Arabic foundations, its translation under Alfonso X of Castile, its passage into Latin Europe, and its later influence on Renaissance thinkers, astrologers, magicians, and occult philosophers.
Inside this book, readers will discover:
The hidden history of the Ghayat al Hakim
The world of al Andalus and the scholars who preserved ancient celestial wisdom
The role of astrology, planets, stars, and lunar mansions in medieval magic
The theory of talismans, planetary images, spirits, fumigations, and ritual timing
The Hermetic, Neoplatonic, Sabian, Greek, Arabic, and Renaissance traditions behind the text
The influence of the Picatrix on Marsilio Ficino, Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa, Giordano Bruno, and later occult thought
The ethical problems, dangerous operations, and darker reputation of the grimoire
The survival of the Picatrix as one of the great books of astrological magic
Written as a serious work of historical and literary scholarship, this book does not present the Picatrix as a simple spellbook. It reveals it as a vast intellectual monument, a window into a universe where stars were living powers, images could receive celestial force, and magic was understood as a hidden science of nature.
For readers of occult history, Hermetic philosophy, astrology, medieval magic, grimoires, Renaissance esotericism, and forbidden books, The Picatrix offers a deep and atmospheric journey into the greatest grimoire of astrological magic.