In Judaic Kabbalah The 72-fold name is highly important to
Sefer Raziel HaMalakh. It is derived from Exodus 14:19–21, read
boustrophedonically to produce 72 names of three letters. This method was explained by
Rashi, (b. Sukkah 45a), as well as in
Sefer HaBahir (c. 1150~1200). Kabbalist legends state that the 72-fold name was used by
Moses to cross the
Red Sea, and that it could grant later holy men the power to cast out demons, heal the sick, prevent natural disasters, and even kill enemies. According to G. Lloyd Jones,
Liber Semamphoras (aka Semamphoras, Semyforas) is the title of a Latin translation of an occult or magical text of Jewish provenance attributed to
Solomon. It was attested in 1260 by
Roger Bacon, who complained about the linguistic corruption that had occurred in translating
Liber Semamphoras into Latin from Hebrew. It is heavily indebted to
Sefer HaRazim through its Latin versions,
Liber Sepher Razielis idest Liber Secretorum seu Liber Salomonis, and seemingly replaced the more explicitly magical text
Liber magice in the
Razielis.
In Christian Kabbalah Johann Reuchlin (1455–1522) considered these 72 names, made pronounceable by the addition of suffixes such as 'El' or 'Yah', to be the names of angels, individuated products of God's will. Reuchlin refers to and lists the 72
Angels of the Shem Hamephorash in his 1517 book
De Arte Cabalistica. According to Bernd Roling, Reuchlin's cosmology in turn influenced
Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa (1486–1535) and
Athanasius Kircher (1602–1680). In 1686,
Andreas Luppius published
Semiphoras und Schemhamphoras, a German translation of the earlier Latin text,
Liber Semiphoras (see
previous section), which Luppius augmented heavily with passages from
Agrippa's
De Occulta Philosophia and other sources.
In Hermetic Qabalah and Goetia Blaise de Vigenère (1523–1596), following Reuchlin, featured the 72 angels in his writings. De Vigenère's material on the Shemhamphorash was later copied and expanded by
Thomas Rudd (1583?–1656), who proposed that it was a key (but often missing) component to the magical practices in the
Lesser Key of Solomon, as a balancing force against the evil spirits of the
Ars Goetia or in isolation. Skinner and Rankine explain that de Vigenère and Rudd adopted these triliteral words with '-el' or '-yah' (both Hebrew for "god") added to them as the names of the 72 angels that are able to bind the 72 evil spirits also described in
The Lesser Key of Solomon (c. mid-17th century). Blaise de Vigenère's manuscripts were also used by
Samuel Liddell MacGregor Mathers (1854–1918) in his works for the
Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. Mathers describes the descent of power from Tetragrammaton through 24 thrones of the
Elders of the Apocalypse, each with a crown of three rays:
Reuchlin's angels of the Shem HaMephorash ==In folklore and literature==