The complete ancient account of King Solomon, his demon-binding ring, and the spirits who built the Temple — with the full 1898 translation and eighteen chapters of original commentary. Near the end of his life, King Solomon set down a secret: how a ring given to him by the archangel Michael allowed him to summon, question, and command the demons of the ancient world — and how the wisest king who ever lived still lost everything in the end. Written in Solomon’s own voice, the Testament of Solomon is one of the strangest and most influential texts to survive from antiquity. It is the earliest full account of the Seal of Solomon, the original source behind the later grimoire tradition of the Key of Solomon and the Ars Goetia, and a firsthand parade of named demons — Ornias, Beelzeboul, Asmodeus, Onoskelis, Obyzouth, and the thirty-six spirits of the zodiac — each interrogated, catalogued, and bound. Most editions on the market are little more than a bare reprint of Frederick Conybeare’s 1898 translation, handed to the reader with no context at all. This edition is different. What makes this edition definitive: ● The complete, unabridged 1898 Conybeare translation — the same landmark text nearly every edition reprints, reproduced here in full. ● Eighteen chapters of original commentary that explain what you are reading, episode by episode, in plain modern language. ● The full story of the manuscripts — from Fleck’s 1837 Greek edition through McCown’s fourteen-manuscript critical edition to modern scholarship. ● Every demon decoded — a complete catalog of names, forms, powers, star-signs, thwarting angels, and methods of exorcism. ● The real history of the Seal of Solomon — how the five-pointed pentalpha became the six-pointed hexagram and the Star of David. ● The roots of Western magic — how the Testament shaped the medieval Key of Solomon and the seventeenth-century Lesser Key of Solomon, the Goetia. ● The wider ancient world — every episode set beside the Hebrew Bible, the New Testament, Josephus, the Talmud, the Dead Sea Scrolls, and the Greek Magical Papyri. Here you will meet Asmodeus, the demon of the Book of Tobit who destroys marriages; Obyzouth, the strangler of newborns known elsewhere as Lilith; the headless demon; the Wingdragon; and Enepsigos, who foretells the fall of Solomon’s own kingdom. And you will follow the tragic ending the whole book builds toward — the master of every spirit brought down not by any demon, but by desire. Written for three kinds of reader: the newcomer curious about ancient demonology and biblical apocrypha; the student of the occult and the Western esoteric tradition tracing the Goetia back to its source; and the serious reader who wants honest scholarship that shows where the evidence is clear and where it is genuinely disputed — never dumbed down, never sensationalized. The Testament of Solomon has waited more than a century for an edition that finally makes it readable. This is that edition. Scroll up and click “Buy Now” to open the ancient book of Solomon’s demons.