This paper examines the operative techniques documented in the Papyri Graecae Magicae (PGM), the primary corpus of magical texts from Roman Egypt (2nd–5th centuries CE). It argues that Graeco-Egyptian magic is not a degenerate form of religion but a complex, ritual technology born from the synthesis of Greek, Egyptian, Jewish, and Christian elements. Key techniques analyzed include voces mysticae (barbarous names), sympatheia (universal sympathy), amulet fabrication, divine invocation ( synousia ), and necromantic rites. The paper concludes that these techniques reveal a coherent metaphysical framework wherein the practitioner manipulates cosmic correspondences to compel divine and daimonic forces.
The term "Graeco-Egyptian magic" refers to the hybrid magical system that flourished in Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt. Our most important source is the Papyri Graecae Magicae – a collection of dozens of papyri written primarily in Greek, with Demotic and Coptic sections. Far from mere superstition, these texts present a structured "art" ( technē ) involving precise recipes, divine names, gestures, and material substrates. This paper outlines the principal techniques and their underlying logic. Techniques Of Graeco-egyptian Magic Pdf
Techniques of Graeco-Egyptian Magic: A Syncretic Analysis of Ritual Praxis in the Papyri Graecae Magicae This paper examines the operative techniques documented in