Belphegor

One of the seven princes of Hell in demonology From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Belphegor (or Baal Peor, Biblical Hebrew: בַּעַל-פְּעוֹר, romanized: baʿal-pəʿōr, lit.'Lord of the Gap') is, in Christianity, a demon associated with one of the seven deadly sins. According to religious tradition, he helps people make discoveries. He seduces people by proposing incredible inventions that will make them rich. According to some demonologists from the 17th century, his powers are strongest in April. Peter Binsfeld (ca. 1540–ca.1600), the auxiliary bishop of Trier and a witch hunter, wrote that Belphegor tempts through laziness. According to Binsfeld's Classification of Demons, Belphegor is the main demon of sloth in the Christian tradition. The anonymous author of the Lollard work, The Lanterne of Light, however, believed Belphegor to embody gluttony rather than sloth.[1]

Depiction of the demon Belphégor, from J.A.S. Collin de Plancy, Dictionnaire Infernal, 1863

Belphegor derives from Baal-Peor, a Baal worshipped at a high place in the Heresy at Peor, to whom the Israelites were associated in Shittim (Numbers 25:3) and who was associated with intemperance and orgies. He was worshiped in the form of a phallus. As a demon, he is described in Kabbalistic writings as "the one who quarrels", an enemy of the sixth sefira, Tiferet "Beauty". In stories where he is invoked, he bestows wealth, power to make discoveries, and the ability to create fantastic inventions. His role as a demon was to sow dispute between people, and to lead them to evil through the distribution of wealth.

Belphegor by Jean Jacques Flipart

The palindromic prime number 1000000000000066600000000000001 is known as Belphegor's prime, due to the superstitious significance of the numbers it contains. Belphegor's prime number consists of the number 666, surrounded on both sides by thirteen zeros and finally one one.

According to De Plancy's Dictionnaire Infernal, Belphegor was Hell's ambassador to France. As a result, his enemy is Mary Magdalene, one of the patron saints of France.

Literature

The novella Belfagor arcidiavolo by Italian diplomat Niccolò Machiavelli was first published in 1549, and regales how the demon comes to earth to find a mate.

Belphegor figures in Paradise Lost by John Milton.[2]

Belphegor features in three narrative poems by Jean de la Fontaine, published in his 17th-century anthology Contes et nouvelles en vers (English: Tales and Novellas in Verse). Drawing from Machiavelli's Belfagor arcidiavolo, this satirical poetic cycle includes the eponymously-titled Belphegor, followed by La Clochette, and Le Glouton.

According to the 1818 Dictionnaire Infernal by Collin de Plancy, Belphegor was Hell's ambassador to France.[3] The same claim was repeated by Victor Hugo in Toilers of the Sea.[4]

In the grimoire Key of Solomon, Belphegor is listed near the end of the book as a Syrian idol that is now destroyed.[5]

The novella by Machiavelli became the basis for the opera Belfagor by Ottorino Respighi, which premiered at La Scala in Milan in 1923.

References

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