Essence
of
WitchCraft
Origins, beliefs,
and practices
©2012-
Lady Hekate)0(
Table of
Contents
1. Witchcraft and Wicca
2. Origins of Witchcraft
3. Archeology of Folk Magick
4. Types of Witches
5. Spells and Spellcrafting
( Work in Progress)
I.
Witchcraft
and Wicca
Witchcraft and Wicca, much
has already been written comparing the two, and debates if they are one and the
same. I am going to share my belief, and no
I do not claim it as gospel truth. However it is my truth. We must all
come to our own truths.
First, yes I have walked the
Wiccan path, and have elevated to third offline with an Elder is eclectic
Wicca. I have been in a Traditional circle-also eclectic with Gardnerian, and
Alexandrian influences. Today I am a eclectic Gray Witch, and Priestess of
Hekate. I serve as Advisor in a couple of circles today. I am convinced as I have read and studied,
and just in my own walk and life experience believe Wicca and Witchcraft are
not same.
·
Witchcraft is not
a religion
·
Wicca is a man-made
religion-birthed in 1957 by Gerald B Gardner.
·
Not all Witches
are religious, or Wiccan. Not all Wiccans are Witches.
(Even Cunningham acknowledges this in one of his books
on Wicca)
Traditional or original Wicca is a Mystery religion,
it is an initiatory system. To be part of Traditional Wicca, coven or circle-
Gardner, Alexandrian both the oldest, one must be initiated by a HPS and HP.
To be a Witch one is or is not, one does not have to
be initiated to be a Witch, if so then who initiated the first?????. Witchcraft
does not require all what goes into ritual, another words the hoopla. Now I
love ritual, do it, but as a Witch it is not a must for me to function as a
Witch. Witches may be spiritual, but not religious in practices, and some are atheistic,
meaning they work with no specific deity to call on, or work with. Yet honor
the Sacredness of life and Earth. Most Witches are
Pagans, but, not all Pagans are Witches. And, not all Witches are
Wiccans. In other words, a Witch who practices Witchcraft does not necessarily
mean that they practice the religion of Wicca.
I love what Lady Hecate says
“ A Wiccan involved in the religious practices of
Wicca does not necessary practice Witchcraft and which makes them not a
Witch. And some Wiccan Pagans feel that no magick should be practiced at
all, as Wicca is a religion and not magick. As Scott Cunningham wrote in one of
his books "Witchcraft: the craft of the Witch–magick, especially magick
utilizing personal power in conjunction with the energies within stones, herbs,
colors and other natural objects. While this may have spiritual
overtones, Witchcraft, using this definition, isn’t a religion. It is just that
some followers of Wicca use this word to denote their religion." So,
according to Scott Cunningham simply being a Wiccan does not necessarily mean
that you are a Witch” www.hecatescauldron.org
Wicca the religion has great reverence for nature, and
honors the Goddess and God, and walks for a balance and harmony of life. Wiccans
honor the Rede- council of the Wise, and uphold the threefold law. Witches do
not, I will say- not all Witches acknowledge a God or even Goddess, yet they are still a
Witch.
II.
Origins,
and history of Witchcraft
The
witchcraft of the early Christian period was essentially common sorcery or
folk-magic developed over the centuries from its roots in the Ancient Period,
not involving demons or devils. Anglo-Saxon magic involved spells and simple
mechanical remedies, sometimes even mixed with Christian religious elements
(such as saying the Lord's Prayer while brewing apotion). Early Christian
methodology, involving saints and divine relics, was just a short step from the
old pagan techniques of amulets, and was designed to attract potential
Christians who were comfortable with the use of magic as part of their daily
lives and who expected the Christian clergy to work magic of a form superior to
the old pagan way.
In the 5th Century AD, the influential Christian
theologian St. Augustine of Hippo claimed that all pagan magic and religion
(whether their effects were illusory or real) were invented by the Devil to
lure humanity away from Christian truth. However, he also argued that neither
Satan nor witches could have any real supernatural powers or could be capable
of effectively invoking magic of any sort, and it was merely the "error of
the pagans" to believe in "some other divine power than the one
God". Thus, if witches were indeed powerless, the Church had no need to
concern itself with their spells or other attempts at mischief, or to bother
itself with tracking down witches or investigating allegations of witchcraft, a
view which was accepted by the early medieval Church for several centuries.
In 820, the influential Bishop of Lyon and others
repudiated the belief that witches could make bad weather, fly in the night and
change their shape. St. Boniface declared in the 8th Century that belief in the
existence of witches was un-Christian. Charlemagne, the 8th and 9th Century
king of the Franks, decreed that the burning of supposed witches was a pagan
custom that should itself be punishable by death.
Nevertheless, in the 7th to 9th Centuries, the Church
began to influence civil law to create anti-witchcraft laws, and the Latin word
“maleficium”, which originally meant wrong-doing, soon came to mean malevolent
magic, presumed to be associated with the Devil. Not only was magic now a crime
against society, but a heresy and a crime against God. The Council of Leptinnes
of 744 drew up a "List of Superstitions" which prohibited sacrifices
to saints, and required the renunciation of the works of demons (specifically
naming the old Norse gods Thor and Odin) as part of the Christian baptism
ceremony.
In medieval lore, the Tempestariiwere magi,
specifically weather-makers, dwelling amongst the common people, who p
ossessed the power to raise or prevent storms at will.
For this reason, anyone reputed as a weather-maker was the subject of respect,
fear and hatred in rural areas. Church authorities gave credence to the belief
by stating that God permitted the Devil and witches to perform these acts as
punishment for the wickedness of the world. However, the Church prohibited
superstitious remedies against witchcraft such as storm-raising because the
remedies themselves were of pagan origin, and it prescribed prayer, sacraments
and the invocation of the name of God instead (although some traditional
remedies likecharms were also sanctioned).
Prior to the 13 or 14th Century, then, witchcraft had
come to mean a collection of beliefs and practices including healing through
spells, ointments and concoctions, dabbling in the supernatural, and
forecasting the future through divining andclairvoyance. In England, the
provision of curative magic was the job of a “witch doctor” (a term used in
England long before it came to be associated with Africa), also known as a
“cunning man”, “white witch” or “wiseman”. “Toad doctors” were also credited
with the ability to undo evil witchcraft. Although they did not refer to
themselves as witches, these cunning-folk were generally considered valuable
members of the community (however, some were also hired to curse enemies).
By the 13th Century, some groups holding to other
beliefs and rituals (notably Christianity, the dominant religion in medieval
Europe) began to brand witchcraft as "demon-worship". In 1208, Pope
Innocent III opened an attack on a group of heretics known as the Cathars, who
believed in a world in which God and Satan, both having supernatural powers,
were at war. The Church attempted to
discredit the Cathar beliefs by spreading stories that the heretics actually
worshipped their evil deity in person, and by embroidering on their
devil-worshipping rituals. Many Cathars, Albigensians and Waldensians migrated
into Germany and the Savoy, fleeing the papal inquisition against their alleged
heresies. Also in the 13th Century, the leading Christian theologian St. Thomas
Aquinas (much of whose work became adopted as the orthodoxy of the Church),
argued that the world was full of evil and dangerous demons that try to lead
people into temptation, and thus began the long Christian association between
sex and witchcraft.
The Inquisition, an effort by the Catholic Church to
seek out and punish heretics and force them to change their beliefs, can be
said to have begun as early as about 1230. Around this time, Pope Gregory IX
assigned the duty of carrying out inquisitions to trained individuals from the
Dominican Order, and Inquisitors acted in the name of the Pope and with his
full authority, using inquisitorial procedures. Pope Innocent IV authorized the
use of torture in 1252. Eventually, the secular (non-religious) courts, as well
as all Christian churches, were involved in the persecution of witches. The
Inquisition as a whole can be thought of as having four main phases or
manifestations: the Papal Inquisition (from the 1230s), the Spanish Inquisition
(1478 - 1834), the Portuguese Inquisition (1536 - 1821) and the Roman
Inquisition (1542 - 1860).-Various resources
III.
Archeology of
Folk Magic
The Archaeology of Folk Magic
By Brian Hoggard
Originally published at Beltane 1999
In this article I hope to draw to the readers'
attention to a little known field of study known as the archaeology of folk
magic. This is intimately related to what most people call witchcraft and
involves the physical remains related to practices undertaken by the 'white'
witch to protect people's property from 'black' witches and also practices
which lay-folk undertook by themselves for the same reason. There is a bias of
material in my collection to the 16th and 17th centuries, this is because this
is the focus of my PhD and also because it is when there was the most fear
about witchcraft - hence more archaeology relating to protection. Where
material is not dated assume that it comes from these two centuries. Before
beginning with a description of the finds and theories about them, it is
important that I set the context for the topic.
Historians are getting better at writing about
witchcraft. About thirty years ago there was still a tendency amongst them to
use exclamation marks when talking about the horrors of torture and to dismiss
the belief in witchcraft as primitive heretical superstition or as
over-enthusiastic religious faith. A classic and highly respectable work
entitled The Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology written by Robbins in
1959 has some of these hallmarks.1 While they were correct by our modern
standards to be horrified by the tortures that occurred they did not attempt to
compare the 'witch-craze' to Stalin's purges or the holocaust or other
comparable situations. Now we have books like Religion and the Decline of Magic
by Keith Thomas2 which details the practices of the village cunning-men and
wise-women (the 'white' witches who were really slightly grey) and Early Modern
European Witchcraft - Centres and Peripheries edited by Ankarloo and
Henningsen3 which collects together major articles which deal, among other
things, with spirit flight and Icelandic witchcraft. There is no doubt that
historians are getting closer to understanding the role that witchcraft served
in the village community better now than they ever have before. Tanya Luhrman
did an historical and anthropological study of modern witchcraft called
Persuasions of the Witch's Craft 4 which involved becoming initiated into
several covens and writing about her findings in an historical-comparative
style. Diane Purkiss in The Witch in History 5 has clearly shown the problems
that are encountered when dealing with the historical claims of Wicca, some of
which are clearly slightly suspect. For example there was no such thing as 'the
burning times' in England because all witches here were hung by the neck. She
does, however, acknowledge the validity of it as a religion alternative to
mainstream Christianity other religions. Other authors such as Norman Cohn in
Europe's Inner Demons 6 have demonstrated that many of the fears generated in
the period of witch-persecution were created by the ruling elite. For example
it was during the period of mass executions that the belief in witches riding
broomsticks evolved and also when notions of a witches sabbath which parodied
Christian church ritual came in to being. Eamon Duffy in The Stripping of the
Altars 7 has demonstrated how Christian beliefs, which in many cases were very
basic and superficial, were combined with folk beliefs very easily in
pre-Reformation parishes. Here supernatural belief and a kind of polytheism
through worship of the saints existed hand in hand with mainstream
Christianity. This is the type of situation which Anton Wessels in Europe - Was
it Ever Really Christian? 8 describes as broadly 'pagan-animist' in nature, not
Christian at all. Books worth having whatever your preferred theories about the
witch in history are those which reprint court records and other documents
relating to witchcraft. The best and most widely available one of these is
Barbera Rosen's Witchcraft in England 1558-1618 9 which, as a prelude, has
probably the best and most concise introduction to the study of witchcraft in
existence. Another similar work, though sadly out of print, is Peter Haining's
The Witchcraft Papers - Contemporary Records of the Witchcraft Hysteria in
Essex 1560-1700.10 There are many excellent books that contribute sometimes a
little, sometimes a lot, to the witchcraft debate and these are but a few of
the more important ones - many of which can be ordered at your local bookshop.
These books all indicate the steps forward that have been made by historians in
recent years to clarify the nature of witchcraft as it really happened in
England - instead of the 'Winnie the Witch' cartoons, fairytales and Hollywood
images of the witch that most of us have inherited from our childhood, not to
mention all the other images and expectations of the witch generated by the
apparently vast numbers of third degree witches who you can meet down the local
pub. READ-up on the history before you join-up if you possibly can!
An area of witchcraft which hasn't been looked at very
much at all is the archaeology of witchcraft. It is this which is the focus of
this article. There has been work by some authors on this topic but they have
tended to attempt to make the evidence fit their theories rather than let the
evidence create new theories. The only person to have written a serious book on
this is Ralph Merrifield whose Archaeology of Ritual and Magic 11 covers
periods from the Neolithic to the nineteenth century - therefore he spends only
a chapter, albeit a very good one, on the archaeology relating specifically to
witchcraft. Many people have written interesting academic articles on the
archaeology of folk magic which you will find listed in the references but
Merrifield's is the only book worth getting hold of. The type of finds that
most often occur tell us more about what people did to protect themselves
against black witchcraft than what witches actually did. But the way in which
people protected themselves against witchcraft seems to suggest the survival of
much older belief system or practice which does (I think) tell us quite a lot
about the nature of witchcraft and its origins. The finds covered by Merrifield
in his book range from mummified cats (dried) to witch-bottles and all of them
seem to have something to do with preventing the evil witch or demon from
entering the home and causing harm. I shall detail the practices with examples
and describe the way in which each was supposed to work.
Concealed Shoes
The most common folk magic find by far relating to the
protection of the home is that of concealing shoes in buildings. The Concealed
Shoes Index at Northampton Museum receives an average of one find a month but
curators there believe that hundreds of finds every year are simply thrown out
by builders.12 By February 1998 the index recorded over 1100 examples primarily
from Britain, but with some from as far away as Canada. The date range for
these finds is interesting and appears to be proportionally related to
surviving buildings from the periods concerned, until the twentieth century
when the practice appears to have gone into serious decline. For instance, pre
1600's there are around fifty examples, 1600-1699 around 200, 1700-1799
approximately 270, 1800-1899 around 500 and 1900+ (when the records appear to
decline) around fifty13 - but this latter may be because people either keep
their concealed shoes secret or they have not had a reason to examine their
chimneys yet. These shoes are usually found concealed in chimneys, either on a
ledge a little way up the chimney or in purpose built cavities behind the
hearth into which items can be deposited from above. These have been termed 'spiritual
middens'.14 Other places have included in walls, under floorboards, in window
frames and in staircases. Nearly all of the shoes discovered in this context
are well worn, half of those found belonged to children and only very rarely
are pairs found. Shoes were expensive items and were repaired again and again
until they could not be worn any longer. As a result of this the shoe was a
unique item, perfectly fitting only the wearer at the end of use. Various
theories have been put forward to explain why shoes were concealed in chimneys.
One suggestion is that they were a fertility symbol.
For example, Roy Palmer in his book The Folklore of Hereford and Worcester
cites a very recent case from Broadwas-on-Teme where in 1960 a midwife refused
to allow a young woman to remove her shoes until her child was born.15
Merrifield, discussing shoes, noted the old rhyme, 'there was an old woman who
lived in a shoe. . .' as being further evidence of the connection between shoes
and fertility. He also quotes a case from Lancashire where it was apparently
not unusual for women wishing to conceive to wear the shoes of those who had
just given birth in the hope of 'catching' something of the wearer. Another
slightly more bizarre account is a method once used by young ladies to invoke
dreams of their future partners. They were said to pin their garters to a wall
and arrange their shoes in the form of a 'T' and sing a short rhyme.17 Just how
successful this was I don't know but it reaffirms the link between shoes and
fertility yet again.
When shoes are found beneath bedroom floors the above
appears to be a likely explanation, but in other locations the following
explanation seems more likely. Denise Dixon-Smith, who was Assistant Keeper of
the Boot and Shoe Collection 1986-1990 states that, "One reason for hiding
shoes in chimneys and around doors may have been because they were 'openings'
where evil spirits could enter the home, and the shoe - as a good luck symbol -
should warn them off."18 She was not the first person to suggest this
however. Merrifield in his book suggests that an unofficial Saint named John
Schorn was partly responsible for the custom. Schorn was alleged to have
performed the remarkable feat of casting the devil into a boot which Merrifield
says may have led to shoes being seen as some kind of spirit-trap - this would
explain the locations in which they are found.19 Supporting evidence of the
protective associations of shoes comes from Reginald Scot who mentioned that
spitting on shoes was a way to protect against witchcraft.20 A few shoes found
have been vigorously slashed suggesting black witchcraft, not a spirit trap at
all.
The lack of writings from contemporary accounts about
this apparently very common practice has baffled many people, but it is probable
that secrecy was an important part of the folk magic protection. After all, you
wouldn't want to risk letting a witch know how to avoid or switch off your
spiritual burglar alarm would you? It is probable that the shoes were a kind of
bait which 'contained' enough of the human to lure the witch into a dead-end in
the chimney and have her trapped forever - witches were reputed to be unable to
travel backwards. It is fortunate that June Swann began the Concealed Shoe
Index at Northampton21 for it has reaffirmed the importance of many of the
other finds which are found in associated contexts and has generated a
substantial revival of interest in this type of find.
Witch-bottles
Another concealed object often found, although nowhere
near as often as concealed shoes, is that of witch-bottles. In some literature
these are known as 'bellarmines' because the first kind of bottles used for
this purpose were stoneware bottles with a face stuck on to them which people
believed was a portrait of a man named Cardinal Bellarmine who persecuted
Protestants. This theory has now been shown by M R Holmes to be untrue as some
bottles pre-date the Cardinal by some time.22 The basic facts about
witch-bottles are quite amazing. The effort that went into placing them was quite
substantial compared to that of shoes, which were merely thrown down a hole or
perched on an existing ledge. Many of the earliest bottles have been found
inverted beneath doorsteps and hearths. They are not exclusively inverted but
this seems to have been an important part of the practice in some areas. The
most common components of the contents of a witch-bottle are pins and urine.
Joseph Blagrave's Astrological Practice of Physick published in 1671 describes
putting urine into a bottle with pins to 'stop the urine' of the witch.23
Although this clearly describes the placing of urine into the bottles,
examinations of the bottles are not always conclusive. Most of those tested
have reacted positively for phosphates and carbonate,24 an indicator of the presence
of urine, but further examination has sometimes proved that these substances
occurred in the bottle through the presence of other matter.25 Some examples
have a felt heart shaped piece of material within them which has been stuck
with pins.26 A common feature is that many of the pins have been bent before
being placed into the bottle.
The aim of these bottles seems to have been, once
again, to serve as a spirit trap. The placing of the bottles at doorways and
chimneys seems to affirm this.27 Other interesting facts are that the bending
of the pins ritually 'kills' them which means they exist in the 'otherworld'
where the witch travels - which is why you can't see them. The urine is a way
of making the bottle 'contain' the person again in a similar way as worn shoes
contain the person. Sticking pins into a heart soaked with your urine would
seem to be a way of fooling the witch into thinking that your heart is in the
bottle, so when the witch detects you they plunge into the bottle to grab your
heart and get stuck inside it and impaled on the prickly pins. One bottle has
been found on a parish boundary, suggesting perhaps the fear in one village of
a witch in the next.
An unusual example of a witch-bottle was found in
Wales. It was a pot which was found with the name 'Nanny Roberts' written on
the bottom suggesting either black witchcraft against a particular person or
the name of the witch-owner - the pot had the bones of a frog and its dried
skin which was pierced by some forty pins.28 Some bottles have been found with
certain plant and insect remains and various body hairs. All suggestive of a
spell or concoction of some kind. The use of 'bellarmines' as witch-bottles
gradually degraded into using ordinary glass bottles,29 many of which are now
coming to light.30
Mummified Cats
A not so common find-type is that of mummified cats,
although the correct term is 'dried cats'.31 These are often found concealed in
walls but sometimes roofs as well. In some cases the cats have been positioned,
indicating that they were already dead at the time of concealment.32 One sad
case is of a kitten which had been pinned down and had its belly cut. There is
also a case where a mummified puppy has been found.33 Sometimes mummified rats
are found with the cats, suggesting a symbolic placing of the creatures,
possibly to indicate the cat's function on a spiritual plane. Some writers have
commented that the likelihood is that cats are placed in such situations to act
as vermin scaring devices.34 This, however, is unlikely because the locations
are often in impractical places such as the roof. When cats are found beneath
floorboards there is always the possibility that they crawled there to die, but
this does not rule out some kind of foundation sacrifice, which is another of
the main suggestions.35
This idea of foundation sacrifice seems relatively
sensible but you still have to ask why? Is it in the honour of some god or
goddess for which there is no obvious evidence? A preferable and more
reasonable explanation is that it was hoped that some of the qualities
attributed to the cat in life would continue in the afterlife. Cats are reputed
to be able to see ghosts and spirits easier than humans can36 and it is
possible that it was their job to catch vermin of a more spiritual kind,
perhaps the witch's familiar. George Gifford, writing in 1593, complained of
witch's familiars running around outside.37 If he'd had a cat concealed in his
walls, a witch-bottle beneath his doorstep and some shoes up his chimney he'd
have had less to worry about.
Concealed Horse Skulls
These unusual additions to a house aren't very common
in England although there are some examples. They are more numerous in Wales
and Ireland. In a small church at Elsdon in Northumberland National Park three
horse skulls were found in the small belfry.38 This indicates that they were
placed there to serve a similar function to that of the bells, ie, to ward off
evil spirits. As Ecgbert's (Archbishop of York) Pontifical from the eighth
century has it, "Wherever this bell sounds, let the power of enemies
retire, so also the shadow of phantoms .... .and every spirit of the storm
winds".39 Another horse skull has been discovered during excavation at the
deserted medieval village of Yatesbury in Wiltshire.40 In a pub called the
Portway in Herefordshire over forty horse skulls were discovered screwed to the
underside of the floor.41 The explanation given for this was that it improved
the sound of the fiddle when it was played. This explanation seems to have been
a later folklore, rather than the true explanation of the practice as many
locations in which horse skulls have been found do not improve the acoustics at
all.42 Horses, like cats, have been credited with the ability to see ghosts and
other evil spirits43 and as they serve humans in life, perhaps it was expected
that they would serve humans in death too.
Other House Protections
Other ways that the house could be protected were by
written charms and curses. The Museum of Welsh Life at St. Fagan's, Cardiff has
a good collection of these but the National Library of Wales at Aberystwyth has
probably the best collection. Charms have been found in England too. A famous
one from Dymock in Gloucestershire was found with the name Sarah Ellis scrawled
backwards on it.44 A charm has been found in a roof in Ludlow.45 These were
drawn-up by local cunning-men and wise-women (white witches) to protect the
house or barn from evil in a similar way to the other measures mentioned above.
It is probable that the more difficult the method of house protection, the more
effective was deemed the method. Therefore written curses and charms are
probably at the top of the effectiveness list. They are usually a mixture of
Latin phrases taken from pre-Reformation services and astrological symbols.46
All the charms are similar in terms of this mix of biblical and astrological
literature indicating the way that differing philosophies were harnessed
towards one common goal in an era of poor literacy and confusion about
religion47 - this is the period that Wessels described as 'pagan-animist'. The
Christian God was one of many influences the cunning-man or wise-woman could
draw upon to make a charm work. Saints Peter and Paul were the favourites for
divination for instance.48
Various symbols have been engraved on to wooden beams
and sometimes drawn into plaster work on ceilings. The most common of these is
the 'daisywheel'.49 It is a compass-drawn circle with petals within it and it
appears on buildings and on furniture within buildings throughout Britain. It
appears to have been a general protection against ill-fortune or was deemed a
good luck symbol.
There are many different forms of house protection
that were used, these are just the most important ones. During the course of my
PhD I have come across many regional variations and many rather intricate and
bizarre methods of warding off the evil of the 'black' witch. In all of them
there is the implicit belief that the witch can travel through the air and that
they can be easily confused by dead-ends or complex patterns. The belief that
witches could fly seems to have been shared by all sectors of the population at
different times judging by the high status houses which have yielded
'protections' such as these. This could be evidence of a very old cultural
belief in the out-of-body experience similar to that which the Friulian
benandanti of Northern Italy believed.50 More research is ongoing to discover
more about the many ways that people protected their homes against the 'evil'
witch.
References
1. Robbins, Rossell Hope, The Encyclopedia of
Witchcraft and Demonology, 1959, The Hamlyn Publishing Group Ltd, London.
2. Thomas, Keith, Religion and the Decline of Magic,
1971, Penguin, London.
3. Ankarloo and Henningsen, Early Modern European
Witchcraft - Centres and Peripheries, 1998 reprint (1st ed 1990), Clarendon
Press, Oxford.
4. Lurhman, Tanya, Persuasions of the Witch's Craft -
Ritual Magic and Witchcraft in Present-Day England, 1989, Basil Blackwell Ltd,
Oxford.
5. Purkiss, Diane, The Witch in History - Early Modern
and Twentieth Century Representations, 1996, Routledge, London.
6. Cohn, Norman, Europe's Inner Demons - The
Demonization of Christians in Medieval Christendom, 1993 revised edition,
Pimlico, London.
7. Duffy, Eamon, The Stripping of the Altars -
Traditional Religion in England 1400-1580, 1992, Yale University Press, New
Haven and London.
8. Wessels, Anton, Europe - Was it Ever Really
Christian?, 1994, SCM Press LTD, London.
9. Rosen, Barbera (ed), Witchcraft in England
1558-1618, 1991 paperback edition (1st ed 1969), The University of
Massachusetts Press, Amhurst.
10.
Haining, Peter (ed), The Witchcraft Papers - Contemporary Records of the
Witchcraft Hysteria in Essex 1560-1700, 1st ed 1974, Robert Hale and Co, London
. End
Witches of Old were healers, medicine women, wise, but also used
hexes and curses. I believe even SilverRavenWolf says in one of her books “,a
Witch who cannot curse, cannot heal.” Witches of old were also primarily women,
although there were men who practiced magic as well.-
I.
Types
of Witches
There many types of
Witches, and practices in the old Craft
There are Atheist
Witches, Trad Witches-or Hereditary Witches
Wiccan-Witches,Gray
Witches,Dark Witches,White-or (healers) ..Also=
Kitchen Witch: (aka –
cottage witch & hearth witch)
Of the Hearth &
Home, mainly dealing with practical sides of the Wiccan / Pagan religion,
magick, gemstones, the elements and the earth. A Kitchen Witch is usually
recognized as practicing Celtic Wicca: Goes by the elements, the Ancient Ones
and nature. They are usually healers or respect them highly. They work with
plants, stones, flowers, trees, the elemental people, the gnomes and the
fairies. But most of all a Kitchen Witch performs her magick in the Kitchen and
has Goddess given talents for food crafting.
Green Witch:
Is the practice of
nature-based and earth oriented witchcraft, drawing on the folklore, folk
religion and folk magic of ancient cultures as they connected to the forest;
such as the tree worship of Druids, the kitchen craft of Italian witches or the
keeping of sacred groves as presented in Gallic paganism. Green witches usually
practice a traditional form of witchcraft in which the earth, trees, herbs,
plants and flowers are consulted for their medicinal and magical value. They
will grow their own herbs or Wildcraft them, and are very good at making herbal
remedies. Belief in deities depends on the individual witch, though many Green
witches acknowledge and earth mother or series of nature spirits as their
deity. Usually, the spirits of nature, the dead (that of humans and animals) or
the Fey have a large part in Green traditions. A form of green witchcraft which
is better classified as Green Wicca was popularized by Ann Moura.
Hedge Witch:
Hedge craft is a path
that is somewhat shamanic in nature, (sometimes referred to as wise man &
wise woman) as they are practitioners of an Earth-based spirituality. These are
the ones who engage in spirit flight and journey into the Other world. They
can, in this capacity, be very powerful midwives and healers. A bird of one
kind or another is usually associated with the Hedge Witch, most commonly the
raven and the goose. The term “hedge” signified the boundary of the village and
represents the boundary that exists between this world and the spiritual realm.
(they are said to be Night travelers or walkers on the wind) Their main
function is mediator between the spirits and people. They may also work as a
herbal healer or midwife. Some claim it to be the continuation of the practices
of the cunning folk and wise-women, while others say that it is a modern
tradition.
Eclectic Witch
An individual approach
in which the witch picks and chooses from many different traditions and creates
a personalized form of witchcraft that meets their individual needs and
abilities. They do not follow a particular religion or tradition, but study and
learn from many different systems and use what works best for them.
The point here there
are many ways to be a Witch, and practice the Craft.
II.
Spellcrafting
In the old times
Witches were careful in sharing if at all their spells, and magickal work. Many
of the Witches who base their craft on the Old ways pass things down generationally,
by lineage.
One of the beliefs of
the Old ways is also if someone can have
some kind of personal item, such as an image of you ,someone else can do harm on you. It is one
reason some Witches will never reveal their real face online, and yes some come
across not as friendly. It is not that they are not friendly, but are guarded.
Spells you create for
yourself will be the most effective spells of all. A spell is simply using our
energies= pushing forth to create our future. Only you know what it is that you
really need. If you use spells that are created by others, the intentions may
not be as clear or precise as when you write them yourself.
These are just
suggestions, and keep it simple to the point. Spell work does not have to be
complicated, and was never meant to be.
The first thing you
need to do when writing your own spell is ask yourself the following questions:
1/ Whats is you spell
for?
2/ Do you really need
too cast a spell for it?
3/ Are you
right,justified? Is your own plate clean
4/ Does it mean taking anyone’s
free will away from them?
(Manipulating free will
of another is Sorcery and another topic.)
5/ How quick do you
want the result?
6/ And what exactly do
you want the outcome of the spell to be?
Be very specific, and
detailed,
Now you have answered
all the above questions you need to find out the following:
1/ Which day of the
week is best to cast the spell
2/ Which moon phase
will work best to cast under
3/ Which colors are
associated with your spell
4/ Which herbs,
crystals and oils are associated with the need of the spell
5/ And which Gods or
Goddesses you are going to work with.(If you work with Deity- Not all do, and
you do not have to to cast a spell)
Note if there is a
spell you need on the “wrong day or moon phase” You still can work you spell.
Our ancestors did not have days of the
week, specific Moon phases, nor worried about VOC Moon. The above helps, but do
not make this gospel law.Do not worry about , oh crap I do not have right
candle color. Use white, universal color, use what you have.
In Wicca- Always ask
permission before doing healing or any kind of spell work. As one does not know
lessons that need to be learned at this time in a person’s life. Wiccans also believe
in no way are they do work to cause harm to another, and in their work you will
see, and harm none so mote it be.Each Witch has their own ethics, and keep in
mind blessings come from blessings sent.
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