Asmodeus The Demon
Amadeus
Asmodeus
Asmodeus (Greek: Ασμοδαίος) or Ashmedai
(Hebrew:אַשְמְדּאָי) is a king of demons mostly known from the
deutero-canonical Book of Tobit, in which he is the primary antagonist. The
demon is also mentioned in some Talmudic legends, for instance, in the story of
the construction of the Temple of Solomon. He was supposed by some Renaissance
Christians to be the King of the Nine Hells. Asmodeus also is referred to as one
of the seven princes of Hell. In Binsfeld’s classification of demons, each one
of these princes represents one of the seven deadly sins (Lust, Gluttony, Greed,
Sloth, Wrath, Envy, and Pride). Asmodeus is the demon of lust and is therefore
responsible for twisting people’s sexual desires.
It is said in Asmodeus; Or, The Devil on Two Sticks that
people who fall to Asmodeus’ ways will be sentenced to an eternity in the second
level of hell.
Etymology
The name Asmodai is believed to derive from Avestan
language *aēšma-daēva, where aēšma means “wrath”, and daēva
signifies “demon” or “divine being”. While the daēva Aēšma is thus
Zoroastrianism’s demon of wrath and is also well attested as such, the compound
aēšma-daēva is not attested in scripture. It is nonetheless likely that
such a form did exist, and that the Book of Tobit’s “Asmodaios” (Ἀσμοδαῖος) and
the Talmud’s “Ashmedai” (אשמדאי) reflect it.
The spellings Asmodai, Asmodee, Osmodeus,
and Osmodai have also been used. The name is alternatively spelled in the
other forms based on the basic vowels אשמדאי, ʾŠMDʾY. Hashmedai (also
Hashmodai, Hasmodai, Chashmodai, Chasmodai), Hammadai (also
Chammadai), Shamdon, andSidonai.
The Book of Tobit.
Asmodeus first appears in the Book of Tobit. According to Tobit
iii. 8, vi. 14, the evil spirit Asmodeus—”king of the demons,” in the Hebrew and
Chaldaic versions, is a later addition—fell in love with Sarah, the daughter of
Raguel, and for that reason prevented her from having a husband. After killing
seven men successively on the nights of their marriage to her, he was rendered
harmless when Tobias married her, following the instructions given him by the
angel Raphael. Asmodeus “fled into the utmost parts of Egypt and the angel
[Raphael] bound him” (ib. iii. 8, vi. 14 et seq. viii. 2-4).
Testament of Solomon.
Akin to this representation in Tobit is the description of
Asmodeus in the Testament of Solomon, a pseudepigraphic work, the original
portions of which date from the first century. Asmodeus answered King Solomon’s
question concerning his name and functions as follows:
Test. of Solomon, transl. in “Jewish Quarterly Review,”xi. 20.
“I am called Asmodeus among mortals, and my business is to plot
against the newly wedded, so that they may not know one another. And I sever
them utterly by many calamities; and I waste away the beauty of virgins and
estrange their hearts. . . . I transport men into fits of madness and desire
when they have wives of their own, so that they leave them and go off by night
and day to others that belong to other men; with the result that they commit sin
and fall into murderous deeds.”
Solomon obtained the further information that it was the
archangel Raphael who could render Asmodeus innocuous, and that the latter could
be put to flight by smoke from a certain fish’s gall (compare Tobit viii. 2).
The king availed himself of this knowledge, and by means of the smoke from the
liver and gall he frustrated the “unbearable malice” of this demon. Asmodeus
then was compelled to help in the building of the Temple; and, fettered in
chains, he worked clay with his reet, and drewwater. Solomon would not give him
his liberty “because that fierce demon Asmodeus knew even the future”
(ib. p. 21).
Haggadic Legend.
Thus, in the Testament of Solomon, Asmodeus is connected on the
one hand with the Asmodeus of Tobit, and possesses on the other many points of
contact with the Ashmedai of rabbinical literature, especially in his relation
to Solomon and the building of the Temple. The Haggadah relates that Solomon,
when erecting the Temple, did not know how to get the blocks of marble into
shape, since, according to the law (Ex. xx. 26), they might not be worked by an
iron tool. The wise men advised him to obtain the “shamir” (), a worm whose mere touch could cleave rocks. But to obtain it was no
slight task; for not even the demons, who knew so many secrets, knew where the
shamir was to be found. They surmised, however, that Ashmedai, king of the
demons, was in possession of the secret, and they told Solomon the name of the
mountain on which Ashmedai dwelt and described his manner of life. On this
mountain there was a well-head from which the arch-demon obtained his
drinking-water. He closed it up daily with a large rock, and secured it in other
ways before going to heaven, whither he went every day in order to take part in
the discussions in the celestial house of study (“Metibta”). Thence he would
presently descend again to the earth in order to be present—invisibly—at the
debates in the earthly houses of learning. Then, after investigating the
fastenings of the well, to ascertain if they had been tampered with, he drank of
the water.
Benaiah Captures Ashmedai.
Solomon sent his chief man Benaiah ben Jehoiadah to capture
Ashmedai. For this purpose he provided him with a chain, a ring on which the
Tetragrammaton was engraved, a bundle of wool, and a skin of wine. Benaiah drew
off the water from the well through a hole that he bored, and, stopping up the
source with the wool, filled the well with wine. When Ashmedai descended from
heaven, to his astonishment he found wine instead of water in the well, although
everything seemed untouched. At first he would not drink of it, and cited the
Bible verses against wine (Prov. xx. 1, and Hosea iv. 11), in order to inspire
himself with moral courage. At length Ashmedai succumbed to his consuming
thirst, and drank until his senses were overpowered and he fell into a deep
sleep. Benaiah then threw the chain about the demon’s neck. Ashmedai on awaking
tried to free himself, but Benaiah called to him: “The Name of thy Lord is upon
thee.”
Ashmedai’s Journey to Solomon.
Though Ashmedai now permitted himself to be led off
unresistingly, he acted most peculiarly on the way to Solomon. He brushed
against a palm-tree and uprooted it; he knocked against a house and overturned
it; and when, at the request of a poor woman, he was turning aside from her hut,
he broke a bone, and asked with grim humor: “Is it not written, ‘A soft tongue
[the woman’s entreaty] breaketh the bone’?” (Prov. xxv. 15). A blind man going
astray he set in the right path, and a similar kindness he did for a drunkard.
He wept when a wedding company passed them, and laughed at one who asked his
shoemaker to make him shoes to last for seven years, and at a magician who was
publicly showing his skill. Having finally arrived at the end of the journey,
Ashmedai, after several days of waiting, was led before Solomon, who told him
that he wanted nothing of him but the shamir. Ashmedai thereupon informed the
king where it could be obtained.
Solomon then questioned him about his strange conduct on the
journey. Ashmedai answered that he judged persons and things according to their
real character and not according to their appearance in the eyes of human
beings. He cried when he saw the wedding company, because he knew the bridegroom
had not a month to live; and he laughed at him who wanted shoes to last seven
years, because the man would not own them for seven days; also at the magician
who pretended to disclose secrets, because he did not know that under his very
feet lay a buried treasure.
Ashmedai remained with Solomon until the Temple was completed.
One day the king told him that he did not understand wherein the greatness of
the demons lay, if their king could be kept in bonds by a mortal. Ashmedai
replied that if Solomon would remove his chains and lend him the magic ring, he
(Ashmedai) would prove his own greatness. Solomon agreed. The demon then stood
before him with one wing touching heaven, and the other reaching to the earth.
Snatching up Solomon, who had parted with his protecting ring, he flung him four
hundred parasangs away from Jerusalem, and then palmed himself off as the king.
After long wanderings Solomon returned to reclaim his throne. At
first the people thought him mad; but then the wise men decided it would be well
to regard Ashmedai more closely. It appeared on inquiry that not even Benaiah,
the first in the service of the king, had ever been admitted to his presence,
and that Ashmedai in his marital relations had not observed the Jewish precepts.
Moreover, the declaration of the king’s women that he always wore slippers,
strengthened suspicion; for demons proverbially had cocks’ feet. Solomon,
provided with another magic ring, at length suddenly appeared before Ashmedai,
who thereupon took flight (Giṭ. 68; parallel passages, Midr. Teh. on Ps.
lxxviii. 45; Yalḳ. ii. 182; compare Num. R. xi. 3; Targ. on Eccl. i. 12, and the
extract from a manuscript Midrash in “Z. D. M. G.” xxi. 220, 221).
Elements of the Ashmedai-Solomon Legend.
Although the number of incidents concerning Ashmedai related by
this Haggadah is fairly large, the fact must not be disregarded that many
details grouped about him are of later origin and do not pertain to Ashmedai at
all. Ashmedai, as the false Solomon, is a Babylonian elaboration of the
Palestinian Haggadah concerning Solomon’s punishment for his sins, which
punishment consisted in the assumption of the throne by an angel; Solomon
meanwhile having to wander about as a beggar (Yer. Sanh. ii. 6; Pesiḳ., ed.
Buber, 169a; Tan., ed. Buber, iii. 55; Eccl. R. ii. 2; Simon b. YoḦai of
the middle of the second century is quoted as the authority).
Similarly, Ashmedai’s service in the construction of the Temple
is probably an echo of the elaborate legend in the Testament of Solomon,
according to which the demons were the chief laborers at the building of the
Temple. This cycle of legends in the Testament of Solomon is the source also of
the myth concerning the wonderful ring whose inscription tames the demons, as
well as of the incident that by virtue of the ring the demons were forced to
assist in erecting the Temple. (Test. Solomon v.; compare vi.: “Throw this ring
at the chest of the demon and say to him, ‘In the name of God, King Solomon
calls thee hither.'”)
Furthermore, it is improbable that the shamir legend was
originally an element of the Ashmedai legend. The Testament of Solomon (ix.)
narrates how a demon, forced by Solomon to hew stones for the Temple, was afraid
of the iron instruments; and, as Conybeare rightly observes (“Jew. Quart. Rev.”
xi. 18), the fear of iron on the part of evil spirits is a feature common to
both old and recent folk-lore. In the Talmud this fear is given a Jewish setting
by connecting it with the legal precept against the use of iron tools, and by
causing the demons to render the blocks of stone fit for use in the Temple
structure without the use of iron.
A comparison of the Ashmedai legend with the Testament of
Solomon reveals also that many other points in the representation of demons by
the former are general characteristics of demons. Thus Ashmedai’s wings
correspond to the wings of Ornias in the Testament (x.). Ornias likewise daily
visited heaven; and just as Ashmedai learned the fate of human beings in heaven,
so, according to the Testament (cxiii.), did all the demons. Consequently,
Ornias could laugh at the king who was on the point of condemning a youth to
death who was destined to die at the end of three days (cxi.), just as Ashmedai
laughed at the man who ordered shoes to last seven years, when he had not seven
days to live.
Hence it follows that the passage in the Talmud provides little
information concerning the more particular characteristics of Ashmedai. That he
overturned a house and uprooted a tree indicates nothing; for with any demon,
however insignificant, such things are trifles. Ashmedai is not represented as
doing these things from a mere desire to destroy, but apparently through
carelessness. The common opinion that in the Talmud, Ashmedai is depicted as
particularly lustful and sensual, has no sufficient basis. The Talmud simply
states that Ashmedai, while playing the part of Solomon, did not observe the
Jewish precepts pertaining to the separation of women (), and that he attacked Bath-sheba, Solomon’s mother. These facts, in
reality, were to prove only that Ashmedai was not Solomon.
The question now arises whether Asmodeus and Ashmedai may be
considered as closely allied with each other, and identical with the Persian
archdemon, Æshma or Æshma-dæva, as was first suggested by Benfey, and developed
by Windischmann and Kohut.
In regard to Æshma, very frequently mentioned in the Zend-Avesta
and the Pahlavi texts, Darmesteter says:
Asmodeus, Ashmedai, and Æshma.
“Originally a mere epithet of the storm fiend, Æshma was
afterward converted into an abstraction, the demon of rage and anger, and became
an expression for all wickedness, a mere name of Ahriman [“Introduction to
Vendidad,” iv. 22]. This description of Æshma, as he appears in the Zend-Avesta,
tallies with the dominant conception in Pahlavi writings. Thus in Dabistan, i.,
Dink, xxxvii. 164: ‘The impetuous assailant, Wrath (Æshm), when he does not
succeed in causing strife among the righteous, flings discord and strife amid
the wicked; and when he does not succeed as to the strife even of the wicked, he
makes the demons and the fiends fight together.'”
In “Shayast ha-Shayast” (xviii.) Æshm is described, quite unlike
Ahriman, as the “chief agent of the evil spirit [Ahriman] in his machinations
against mankind, rushing into his master’s presence in hell to complain of the
difficulties he encounters.”
A consideration of the linguistic arguments does not support the
hypothesis of an identification of Ashmedai with Æshma-dæva, as “dai” in
Ashmedai hardly corresponds with the Persian “dæva,” in view of the Syriac form
“dawya” (demon) with the consonant “w”; nor is there any instance of the linking
of “Æshma” and “dæva” in Persian texts. The Asmodeus of the Apocrypha, and
Æshma, however, seem to be related. In the Testament of Solomon Asmodeus appears
as seducing man to unchaste deeds, murder, and enmity, and thus reveals many
points in common with Æshma. The “Bundehish” (xxviii. 15-18) furnishes the most
striking resemblance: “There, wherever Æshm lays a foundation, many creatures
perish.”
Ashmedai and Shamdon.
Ashmedai of the Solomonic legend, on the other hand, is not at
all a harmful and destructive spirit. Like the devil in medieval Christian
folk-lore, he is a “king of demons” (Pes. 110a), degraded and no longer
the dreaded arch-fiend, but the object of popular humor and irony. The name
“Ashmedai” was probably taken as signifying “the cursed,” (compare Nöldeke, in Euting’s “Nabatäische Inschriften,” pp. 31, 32),
just as “la’in” (the cursed), is the Arabic name of Satan. Thus the name
“Shamdon” (), is found in Palestinian Midrashim.
It is related of Shamdon that at the planting of the first vine
by Noah he helped with the work, but said to Noah: “I want to join you in your
labor and share with you; but have heed that you take not of my portion lest I
do you harm” (Gen. R. xxxvi. 3); in the legend in Midrash Abkir, and cited in
Yalḳ. i. 61, Satan figures as the chief personality. The second thing told of
this Shamdon is that in the Golden Age he had an encounter with a new-born child
wherein he was worsted (Lev. R. v. 1, according to the reading of the ‘Aruk,
s.v. ).
Ashmedai in Later Sources.
In later sources, Shamdon is held to be the father of Ashmedai,
whose mother they say was Naamah, sister of Tubal Cain (NaḦmanides on Gen. iv.
22; from this comes the same statement in BaḦya b. Asher, Zioni, and Recanati in
their commentaries, ad loc.). This legend of Ashmedai’s birth tallies
with the assertion of Asmodeus in the Testament of Solomon: “I was born of
angel’s seed by a daughter of man” (xxi.). In the Zohar, Ashmedai is represented
as the teacher of Solomon, towhom he gave a book of magic and medicine (Zohar
Lev. pp. 19a, 43a; ib. Num. 199b, ed. Wilna). In a
more recent Midrash Ashmedai is identified with Shamdon (Midr. Shir ha-Shirim,
ed. Grünhut, 29b; a story similar to the one here given of Solomon’s ring
and the fish is found in “Emeḳ ha-Melek,” 14a-15a, and in the
Judæo-German “Maasebuch”; the story is reprinted in Jellinek, “B. H.” ii. 86). A
recent source gives the following legend cited by the Tosafists in Men.
37a from an anonymous Midrash, which has probably been lost:
(This legend is given at length in Jellinek, “B. H.”iv. 151,
152.)
“Ashmedai brought forth from the earth a two-headed man, who
married and produced both normal and two-headed children. When the man died a
quarrel arose among the children concerning their inheritance, the two-headed
ones demanding a double portion.”
Later cabalists held the theory that Ashmedai was king of the
demons for only a limited time, and that on his death—demons are mortal (Ḥag.
16a)—he was succeeded by Bildad, who in turn left his dominion to Hind
(see Jos. Sossnitz, “Ha-Maor,” p. 84). Benjamin of Tudela (ed. Margolin, 63, 65)
mentions a certain local legend about Baalbek, whose temple was erected by
Ashmedai, on Solomon’s bidding, for the king’s favorite, the daughter of
Pharaoh.
In the Malleus Maleficarum
In the Malleus Maleficarum (1486), Asmodeus was
considered the demon of lust. Sebastien Michaelis said that his adversary is St.
John. Some demonologists of the 16th century assigned a month to a demon and
considered November to be the month in which Asmodai’s power was strongest.
Other demonologists asserted that his zodiacal sign was Aquarius but only
between the dates of January 30 and February 8.
He has 72 legions of demons under his command. He is one of the
Kings of Hell under Lucifer the emperor. He incites gambling, and is the
overseer of all the gambling houses in the court of Hell. Some Catholic
theologians compared him with Abaddon. Yet other authors considered Asmodeus a
prince of revenge.
In the Dictionnaire Infernal
In the Dictionnaire Infernal by Collin de Plancy,
Asmodeus is depicted with the breast of a man, a cock leg, serpent tail, three
heads (one of a man spitting fire, one of a sheep, and one of a bull), riding a
lion with dragon wings and neck, all of these animals being associated with
either lascivity, lust or revenge. The Archbishop of Paris approved his
portrait.
In the Lesser Key of Solomon
Asmodai appears as the king ‘Asmoday’ in the Ars Goetia, where
he is said to have a seal in gold and is listed as number thirty-two according
to respective rank.
He “is strong, powerful and appears with three heads; the first
is like a bull, the second like a man, and the third like a ram; the tail of a
serpent, and from his mouth issue flames of fire.” Also, he sits upon an
infernal dragon, holds a lance with a banner and, amongst the Legions of
Amaymon, Asmoday governs seventy two legions of inferior spirits.
In The Magus
Asmodeus is referred to in Book Two, Chapter Eight of The Magus
(1801) by Francis Barrett.
Sources:
– Wikipedia
– Jewish Encyclopedia
(2019-asmodeus)
“I am called Asmodeus among mortals, and my business is to plot
against the newly wedded, so that they may not know one another. And I sever
them utterly by many calamities; and I waste away the beauty of virgins and
estrange their hearts. . . . I transport men into fits of madness and desire
when they have wives of their own, so that they leave them and go off by night
and day to others that belong to other men; with the result that they commit sin
and fall into murderous deeds.”
Asmodeus, Ashmedai, and Æshma.
“Originally a mere epithet of the storm fiend, Æshma was
afterward converted into an abstraction, the demon of rage and anger, and became
an expression for all wickedness, a mere name of Ahriman [“Introduction to
Vendidad,” iv. 22]. This description of Æshma, as he appears in the Zend-Avesta,
tallies with the dominant conception in Pahlavi writings. Thus in Dabistan, i.,
Dink, xxxvii. 164: ‘The impetuous assailant, Wrath (Æshm), when he does not
succeed in causing strife among the righteous, flings discord and strife amid
the wicked; and when he does not succeed as to the strife even of the wicked, he
makes the demons and the fiends fight together.'”
“Ashmedai brought forth from the earth a two-headed man, who
married and produced both normal and two-headed children. When the man died a
quarrel arose among the children concerning their inheritance, the two-headed
ones demanding a double portion.”
– Wikipedia
– Jewish Encyclopedia (2019-asmodeus)
Comments
Post a Comment