Digital Library

A growing digital library of transcribed grimoires, Enochian materials, historical esoteric texts, and related study resources.

The Temple of Solomon Preservation Association Digital Library is being developed to help preserve, organize, and responsibly share rare and difficult-to-access source materials connected to ancient esoteric and sacred traditions.

Many important texts remain scattered across private collections, fragile archives, out-of-print editions, or image-only scans that are difficult to search and study. This library exists to help protect those materials and make serious research more possible over time.

Why this library exists

Preservation is about more than saving files.

A library becomes truly useful when materials can be found, read, searched, compared, and studied in an organized way. Our goal is to build a digital resource that supports both long-term preservation and meaningful access.

We are creating this library to help ensure that valuable historical materials are not lost through neglect, inaccessibility, or lack of proper organization.

What the library includes

As the collection grows, the Digital Library may include:

Our focus is on building a collection that is useful, organized, and aligned with our wider preservation mission.

Why this work matters

Many rare and historically significant texts remain difficult to access.

Some are held in private collections. Some exist only as scans that are hard to search. Some have never been transcribed into usable text. Others survive in scattered editions that are difficult to compare and study.

Without careful preservation and organization, important materials may remain technically available but practically inaccessible. This project helps address that problem by supporting access, discoverability, and long-term stewardship.

Responsible access and protection

The Digital Library information page is public so visitors can learn about the project, its purpose, and its development.

Access to the main library collection requires login approval. This helps protect rare files from scraping, bulk downloading, unauthorized redistribution, and resale, while still supporting responsible access for genuine researchers, students, supporters, and volunteers.

This approach allows us to balance preservation, usability, and stewardship as the archive continues to grow.

Our development plan

We are building the Digital Library in phases so it can grow in a sustainable and useful way.

Phase 1: Digitization and collection building

We are currently organizing and digitizing source materials, including Enochian pages from private and creative commons collections, and preparing them for long-term storage and study.

Phase 2: Search and usability improvements

The next stage includes searchable OCR tools and improved text access so users can more easily locate passages, compare sources, and work with texts in a practical way.

Phase 3: Volunteer-supported transcription

A major long-term goal is to expand transcription through volunteer-supported preservation work so that more grimoires and historical texts become readable, searchable, and useful for serious study.

Access options

We are developing different levels of access as the archive grows.

Some materials and project information may remain publicly viewable, while access to the main library collection is login-protected. Different access levels help us support public education, protect rare files, and sustain the practical work of preservation over time.

Main Library Access

Access to the primary Digital Library collection is available through approved login access. This helps protect the archive while supporting responsible study and research use.

Main Library Login Link

Supporter Access

Supporter contributions help fund preservation, digitization, archive development, and educational resources. Supporter access may include expanded materials as the project grows.

Supporter Access Link

Volunteer Access

Volunteer access is available for approved volunteers helping with transcription, organization, indexing, or preservation-related projects.

Volunteer Access Link

Supporting the Digital Library

This project is still in development, and support directly helps us continue building it.

Donations help fund archival storage, digitization, transcription, software tools, file organization, educational resources, and long-term infrastructure for responsible preservation.

By supporting this work, you help create a resource intended to serve not only present readers, but future generations of researchers, learners, and preservation-minded communities.

Support the work

Help preserve rare knowledge and expand responsible access to historical materials.
Donate Now

Access note

Access to the main Digital Library collection requires login approval. This helps protect rare materials from scraping, unauthorized redistribution, and resale while supporting responsible use for study and preservation.

The public page remains available so visitors can learn about the project and its goals.


Support the Work