Peter Howard Gilmore

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Peter H. Gilmore (2007)

Peter Howard Gilmore (born May 24, 1958 ) is an American author , musician and high priest of the Church of Satan since 2001 .

Life

Gilmore stayed in New York City in his teens and moved to Hell's Kitchen in 1980 . At the age of 13 he read the Satanic Bible by the founder of the Church of Satan, Anton Szandor LaVey , and described the Church of Satan as "the motivating philosophical movement of his life".

From 1989 he published together with his wife Peggy Nadramia until 2005 sporadically the satanic journal The Black Flame ("The Black Flame"). In addition, Gilmore wrote a new introduction to LaVey's Satanic Bible, and his Satanic essay was published in the Encyclopedia of Religion and Nature .

He was named High Priest of the Church by Blanche Barton in 2001 . Inside the church, he has been Magus Peter H. Gilmore, High Priest of the Church of Satan ( Magus Peter H. Gilmore, High Priest of the Church of Satan known).

As a representative of the Church of Satan, Gilmore has been interviewed on numerous TV and radio programs on Satanism, including The History Channel , BBC , Sci-Fi-channel , Point of Inquiry and Bob Larson .

Gilmore is also a musician and composer. As such, he contributed intros to several releases by the band Acheron , which is close to the Church of Satan.

Literary works

  • 2007: The Satanic Scriptures (2009 in German translation as Die satanischen Schriften )

Filmography

  • 1992: Death Scenes 2
  • 1993: Death Scenes 3
  • 1995: Speak of the Devil
  • 2000: Satan in the Suburbs

Discography

As Peter H. Gilmore

  • 1997: Vlad Tepes on Souvenirs From Hell , Cthulhu Records
  • 2002: What Is Good? on Lords of Chaos - The History of Occult Music , Prophecy Productions
  • 2003: Threnody for Humanity

With Acheron

  • 1992: Rites of the Black Mass
  • 1994: Messe Noir
  • 1994: Lex Talionis
  • 1995: Hail Victory
  • 1996: Anti-god, anti-christ
  • 1998: Those Who Have Risen

With satori

  • 2008: Contemptus Mundi

Web links

supporting documents

  1. M. Boss: A Church for Satan - Anton LaVey for the eightieth . April 14, 2010. Retrieved April 10, 2012.