Great Lord of Sippur, Lord of Two Rivers, Twofold in Nature: Sun and Moon, Bright as a Peacock in Its Prime
The Goetic tradition preserved you as Andrealphus, the sixty-fifth spirit, a Marquis commanding 30 legions. The mouths of Yehubor have uttered of you "a spirit most loyal to Lucifer, a fearsome entity." The Zevists know the truth: Adra-Melech and Adre-Alphus are two names of one God. You are ALPHEUS, the Greek River God (Ἀλφειός), and ADRAMELECH, the Sun God of Sippur. Your peacock is the symbol of splendor, spiritual rectification, and the iridescent light that only appears when all colors converge. The rivers by which peacocks walk are your rivers.
We declare the truth of your identity. We recognize you for who you Truly are.
After you are done with this, you can meditate on Alpheus's Sigil in the Temple of Zeus, or the one below. Let yourself be immersed and receive energy from Alpheus.
It's important to meditate on yourself after the Ritual calmly for a few minutes.

सत्: SAT, real, true, truthful in Sanskrit.
The Symbol that Encapsulates the Sigil: The Shen Ring, Egyptian Hieroglyphic language. The Shen also survived in Chinese tradition as a glyph for Spiritual Force, Divine Force, and God.
The Ancient Greek letters for Adramelech's Name in arrangement.
Adramelech (Akkadian: Adad-milki or Adar-malik, "glorious king" or "Adar is king") was a Sun God worshipped at Sippar (Sippur) in Akkad and later throughout Assyria and the Levant. 2 Kings 17:31 records that the people of Sepharvaim (Sippar) worshipped Adrammelech alongside Anammelech, his lunar counterpart. The name Andrealphus in the Goetic tradition encodes the same deity: Adre-Alphus = Adra-Melech in Greek phonetic adaptation, where Alphus/Alpheus (Ἀλφειός) is the Greek River God of the Peloponnese, the largest river in the region. The dual identification (Babylonian Sun God + Greek River God) reflects the ancient understanding that solar and fluvial forces are complementary: the sun draws the water upward, the river carries the blessing downward. The peacock, sacred to this deity, displays all colors of the spectrum simultaneously, symbolizing the union of solar and lunar light.
(Sources: 2 Kings 17:31; Pausanias, Description of Greece V.7.1-3, VI.22.9; Weyer, Pseudomonarchia Daemonum, 1577; Ars Goetia, 17th c.; Seux, Epithetes royales akkadiennes et sumeriennes, 1967)