Resources

For those looking to expand on the information cataloged through the Occult Library, a list of primary & secondary-source materials from the fields of lay scholarship and academic research can be found here. Please select a given resource, where information and links can offer you a pathway to expanding your knowledge of the occult community and its materia.

  • Cornell University Witchcraft Archives


    Part of Cornell University Library’s Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections, Cornell’s Witchcraft Collection contains over 3,000 titles documenting the history of the Inquisition and the persecution of witchcraft, primarily in Europe.

  • CUNY Digital Occult Library


    Here you will find information on occult studies organized so that academics, practitioners, and a general audience can learn and foster knowledge. While each group has specific interests and needs, all can benefit from the others’ perspectives.

  • Damon Collection of Occult and Visionary Literature

    The collection deals primarily with alchemy, the interpretation of dreams, mysticism, black magic and the Kabbalah plus visionary testaments and manifestations of all kinds. Includes rare editions of early occult books and numerous chronicles of demonology, secret societies, theosophical orders, and ancient mystery religions.

  • Internet Sacred Text Archive


    Welcome to the largest freely available archive of online books about religion, mythology, folklore and the esoteric on the Internet. The site is dedicated to religious tolerance and scholarship, and has the largest readership of any similar site on the web.

  • Paralibrum


    Paralibrum offers a virtual space filled with bright, critical minds, who are experts in their craft and tell us about their experience with the books they love. Paralibrum is not affiliated with any publishing house, but fully self-funded and free of commercial interest.

  • Twilit Grotto: Archives of Western Esoterica


    The tremendous archival project of Joseph Peterson, a one stop resource for all things grimoire related.

  • Valdosta State University New Age Movements, Occultism, and Spiritualism Research Library (NAMOSRL)


    The origins of the New Age Movements, Occultism, and Spiritualism Research Library (NAMOSRL) can be traced back to 2004 when Guy Frost and Cliff Landis began discussing the preservation of hard to find and at risk Pagan periodicals.

Let us know about a resource!

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