found: Almandal : trattato ermetico di magia salomonica, 2018:p. 35, etc. (The Almandal, attributed to King Soloman, is a practical manual of magic that describes a ritual for invoking angels and spirits. Texts of the Almandal circulated in medieval and Renaissance Europe in different versions and languages. Almandal is also a generic term--probably deriving from the Sanskrit word "mandala"--which designates the small quadrangular tablet or table used in the ceremony)
found: The metamorphosis of magic from late antiquity to the early modern period, 2002:p. 189, etc. (Holy Almandal; Almandal: a medieval magical text that may have roots extending back into Persia and the Far East, but its medieval versions were thoroughly christianized. The text is ascribed to King Solomon and contains the ritual prescriptions for invoking and conversing with angels)
found: The fourth book of occult philosophy, 2009, via Google books, viewed May 25, 2019:page 60 (there were two different books of magic going under very similar names: the Almandel, said to be a book of natural magic dealing with divinition and the Almandal, a book of theurgy in the Solomonic cycle. The spelling of the two names was not always distinguished--the Solomonic work is titled Almandel of Solomon in Sloane 2731)