Caacrinolaas (Unk) Wierius'
demon of knowledge of liberal arts. Appears as a Griffon. A high
order demon, identified as the Grand President of Hell. He is
figured in the shape of a god with the wings of a griffon. He is
supposed to inspire knowledge of the liberal arts and to incite
homicide. This fiend is said to be able to render people invisible.
He commands thirty-six legions. He is also called Caasimolar or
Glasya or Glasyalabolas.
Cacodaemons Ancient deities of inferior rank, one of whom
it was believed was attached to each mortal from his birth as a
constant companion, capable of giving impulses and acting as a sort
of messenger between the gods and men. The cacodaemons were of a
hostile nature, as opposed to the agathodaemons who were friendly.
It is said that one of the cacodaemons who appeared to Cassius was
a man of large stature, and of a black hue.
The belief in these daemons is probably traditional, and it is
said that they were rebellious angels who were expelled from heaven
for their crimes. They tried in vain to obtain a settlement in
various parts of the universe and their final abode was believed to
be all the space between the earth and the stars. There they abide,
hated by all the elements, and finding their pleasure in revenge
and injury. Their king was called Hades by the Greeks, Typhon by
the Egyptians, and Ahrimanes by the Persians and Chaldeans. Early
astrologers named the twelfth house of the sun "Cacodaemon" as its
influence was regarded as evil.
Cacus Originally a pre-Roman god of fire, who gradually
became a fire-breathing demon. Cacus lived in a cave in the
Aventine Hill from where he terrorized the countryside. When
Heracles returned with the cattle of Geryon, he passed Cacus' cave
and lay down to sleep in the vicinity. At night Cacus dragged some
of the cattle to his cave backward by their tails, so that their
tracks would point in the opposite direction. However, the lowing
of the animals betrayed their presence in the cave to Heracles and
he retrieved them and slew Cacus. Other sources claim that Cacus'
sister told Heracles the location of his cave. On the place were
Heracles slew Cacus he erected an altar, where later the Forum
Boarium, the cattle market, was held.
Cambions (Unk) According to Bodin and De Lancre, the
offspring of incubus and succubus. Some of these demons are said to
be more kindly disposed to the human race than others. Luther said
of them in his Colloquies that they show no sign of life before
seven years of age. He stated that he saw one which cried when he
touched it.
In his Discours des Sorciers (Lyon, 1608), Henri Boguet quotes a
story that a Galician mendicant was in the habit of exciting public
pity by carrying about a Cambion. One day, a horseman observing him
to be much hampered by the seeming infant in crossing a river, took
the supposed child before him on his horse. But he was so heavy
that the animal sank under the weight. Sometime afterwards the
mendicant was taken and admitted that the child he habitually
carried was a little demon whom he had trained so carefully that no
one refused him alms whilst carrying it.
Carreau Demonic prince of the Powers, Mercilessness.
Cassiel, Caspiel (Unk) Ruler of Saturn.
Catabolignes Demons who bore men away, killed them, and had
the power to break and crush them. The sixteenth century theologian
L. Campester described how these demons treated their agents, the
magicians and sorcerers.
Caym (Unk) One of the 72 Spirits of Solomon. Grand Master of
Hell, commander of thirty legions. He is said to be the cleverest
sophist in Hell , and can, through astuteness of his arguments,
make the most skilled logician despair. He understands the songs of
birds, the bellowing of Oxen, the barking of dogs and the sound of
the waves. He knows the future and was once numbered among the
Order of Angels. He is depicted as an elegant man with the head and
wings of a blackbird.
Chagrin (or Cagrino). An evil spirit believed in by
European gypsies. It was said to have the form of a hedgehog,
yellow in colour, about a foot and a half in length and a span in
breadth. Heinrich von Wlislocki stated: "I am certain, that this
creature is none other than the equally demoniac being called
Harginn, still believed in by the inhabitants of Northwestern
India. Horses were the special prey of the Chagrin, who rode them
into a state of exhaustion, like the Guecubu of Chile."
The next day they appear sick and weary, with tangled manes and
bathed in sweat. When this is observed they are tethered to a stake
which has been rubbed with garlic juice, then a red thread is laid
on the ground in the form of a cross, or else some of the hair of
the animal is mixed with salt, meal and the blood of a bat and
cooked to bread, with which the hoof of the horse is smeared. The
empty vessel which contained the mixture is put in the trunk of a
high tree while these words are uttered:
"Tarry, pipkin, in this tree, Till such time as full ye be."