Chamber of Spirits
Not summoning — knowing. Angels, demons, deities, and mythological entities mapped in their full depth and interconnection. The most comprehensive occult entity database online.
Metatron
The supreme archangel in Kabbalistic tradition, often identified with Enoch who was translated to heaven without dying. Metatron sits beside the divine throne and is the scribe of all cosmic events — keeper of the Akashic Record. His cube contains the patterns of all creation.
Hecate
Triple goddess of the crossroads, witchcraft, and the liminal spaces between worlds. Hecate holds torches to illuminate the darkness, accompanied by black dogs and owls. She is invoked at crossroads at midnight and rules the transitions between life and death, between worlds.
Hermes / Mercury
The divine messenger, guide of souls, and trickster. Hermes moves between all worlds with effortless grace. As Mercury in alchemy, he represents the volatile, mercurial principle — the catalyst that enables transformation. As Thoth in Egypt, he is the inventor of writing and magic.
Lilith
Adam's first wife who refused to submit and was cast out of Eden — or so the later tradition claims. In Kabbalistic thought she rules the Qliphoth, the shadow side of the Tree of Life. In modern occultism she is reclaimed as a symbol of radical feminine autonomy, sexuality unconstrained by patriarchal law, and the dark feminine principle.
Thoth
The ibis-headed Egyptian god of writing, magic, science, and wisdom. Thoth invented hieroglyphics and recorded the judgment of souls in the Hall of Ma'at. He is credited with writing forty-two books of divine knowledge — the Hermetic tradition claims he was the original Hermes Trismegistus.
Kali
The terrifying and liberating black goddess. Kali stands on the supine body of Shiva, her tongue out, garland of skulls around her neck, severed head in hand. She is time devouring all things — and in that devouring, liberating them from the illusion of permanence. Her darkness is mercy for those brave enough to receive it.
Lucifer / The Light-Bearer
The most misrepresented figure in Western occultism. Lucifer (Latin: light-bearer) was originally the planet Venus as the morning star. In Gnostic thought, the Demiurge who created the material world was the tyrant — and Lucifer, by offering knowledge, was the liberator. Modern occultists reclaim him as the symbol of intellectual light, sovereignty of the individual, and sacred transgression.
Odin / Wotan
The Allfather who hung himself on the World Tree for nine days and nights to receive the runes. Odin gave one eye at Mimir's well for cosmic wisdom. He wanders incognito among mortals, collecting knowledge. His two ravens Huginn (thought) and Muninn (memory) fly across the nine worlds each day and return to report.