Ars Almadel – Generally considered to be a part of the Lesser Key of Solomon. Mentioned by Trithemius and Weyer, the latter of whom claimed an Arabic origin for the work. A 15th-century copy is attested to by Robert H.Turner, and Hebrew copies were discovered in the 20th century. The Ars Almadel instructs the magician on how to create a wax tablet with specific designs intended to contact angels via scrying.

The Arbatel De Magia Veterum (English: Arbatel: On the Magic of the Ancients) was a Latin grimoire of Renaissance ceremonial magic published in 1575 in Switzerland. This is where the Olympic Spirits are detailed and how to summon them.

The Grimoire of Armadel (original title: Liber Armadel seu totius cabalae perfectissima brevissima et infallabilis scientia tam speculativa quam practiqua) is a minor 17th-century French Christian grimoire kept in the Bibliothèque de l’Arsenal. It was translated into English by S.L. MacGregor Mathers, and first published in 1980 after his death. This manuscript seems to be a fusion of a lot of things, and includes the oldest known (to me) sigil for Uriel, although it is in the middle of an alchemical formula that I haven’t decoded. There are later signatures for Uriel now.