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9/11 и Бин Ладен, странности, размышления, мысли
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A conjuring book attributed to him causes the gruesome death of any man foolish enough to examine it, until a fire destroys the book.

He is mentioned in the novel

It Happened in Boston?

by Russell H. Greenan.

The narrator is reading the life of Cagliostro when he has his first reverie.

He is mentioned in the novel

Kun Lun

by Kilburn Hall (2014)

where it is revealed that

Alessandro Cagliostro, Joseph and

Giuseppe Balsamo

are just a few of the names that

time traveler

Count St. Germain

has used throughout history.

He is mentioned in the book

The Red Lion-The Elixir of Eternal Life

by Maria Szepes

Friedrich Schiller

wrote an unfinished novel

Der Geisterseher (The Ghost-Seer)

between 1786 and 1789 about Cagliostro.

The Phantom comic book

featured Cagliostro as a character in the story

The Cagliostro Mystery

from 1988, written

by Norman Worker

and drawn

by Carlos Cruz.

The Kid Eternity comic book featured Cagliostro's risen spirit in issue 3 (1946).

In the DC Comics universe, Cagliostro is described as an immortal (JLA Annual 2), a descendant of Leonardo da Vinci as well as an ancestor of Zatara and Zatanna (Secret Origins 27).

Cagliostro is a character in

Robert Anton Wilson's

The Historical Illuminatus Chronicles.

Cagliostro is frequently alluded to in

Umberto Eco's novel

Foucault's Pendulum.

Mikhail Kuzmin

wrote a novella called

The Marvelous Life of Giuseppe Balsamo, Count Cagliostro (1916).

Cagliostro is a character in

Psychoshop,

a novel by Alfred Bester and Roger Zelazny.

Josephine Balsamo, a descendant of Joseph Balsamo who calls herself Countess Cagliostro, appears in

Maurice Leblanc's

Arsene Lupin novels.

Cagliostro makes several cameo appearances as a vampire in

Kim Newman's

Anno Dracula novels.

The manga

Rozen Maiden

reveals Count Cagliostro to be merely one of many different aliases adopted by the legendary dollmaker Rozen. He was shown to be in prison whittling wood.

There are numerous references to Cagliostro in

the detective novel

He Who Whispers

by John Dickson Carr

(aka Carter Dickson),

one of his Dr. Gideon Fell mysteries,

published by Hamish Hamilton (UK) & Harper (USA) in 1946.

In this book, a French professor, Georges Antoine Rigaud, has written a history: Life of Cagliostro. Also an attempted murder committed in He Who Whispers is similar in technique to part of an initiation ceremony undergone by Cagliostro into the lodge of a secret society.

There is a passing and utterly inconsequential reference to Cagliostro in

Hilary Mantel's

1992 novel

A Place of Greater Safety.

Cagliostro is a character in the 1997 novel,

'Superstition'

by David Ambrose;

Cagliostro is an acquaintance of the fictional character, Adam Wyatt.

Cagliostro is a Playable character in

the Japanese Mobile game

Granblue Fantasy.

Cogliostro is a character in

Todd McFarlanes's comic saga

Spawn,

introduced to the series

by Neil Gaiman

to give greater depth to the curse of spawn.

Cagliostro was once a spawn of Hell bound to his duty to the daemon Malebolgia, and manages to free himself of the curse through alchemy and sorcery, teaching Spawn to do the same throughout the series.

He is often mentioned in the book

Napoleon's Pyramids

by William Dietrich

in connection with Freemasons and ancient Egyptian artifacts.

In Glory Road, Star uses

"Balsamo"

as an alias, and refers to Giuseppe as her uncle.

Music

He appears as a principal character in the

1794

opera

Le congres des rois,

a collaborative work of 12 composers.

The French composer Victor Dourlen (1780-1864) composed the first act to Cagliostro, ou Les illumines which premiered on 27 November 1810.

The second and third act were composed by Anton Reicha (1770-1836).

The Irish composer William Michael Rooke (1794-1847) wrote an unperformed work Cagliostro.

Adolphe Adam

wrote the opera

comique Cagliostro

which premiered on 10 February 1844.

Albert Lortzing

wrote in 1850

the libretto for a comic opera in three acts,

Cagliostro,

but did not compose any music for it.

Johann Strauz (Sohn) wrote the operetta Cagliostro in Wien (Cagliostro in Vienna) in 1875.

The French composer Claude Terrasse (1867-1923) wrote Le Cagliostro which premiered in 1904.

The Polish composer Jan Maklakiewicz (1899-1954) wrote the ballet in three scenes Cagliostro w Warszawie which premiered in 1938.

The Romanian composer Iancu Dumitrescu (1944-) wrote the 1975 work Le miroir de Cagliostro for choir, flute and percussion.

The American composer John Zorn (1953-) composed Cagliostro for solo viola in 2015. The performer uses two bows in the right hand to play on all four strings at once throughout the work.

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