I am unusually hesitant in posting this
essay, for I have some ten thousand pages or so of notes, xeroxes,
earlier essays, etc. on this topic, only a fraction of which
I've been able to scan in and merge over the last few weeks.
But the sudden upsurge of visitors to my website last Halloween
made it clear that I need to have something, however incomplete,
here for people to read. So consider this a "beta version,"
if you will, and forgive me for not making it as "perfect"
as my obsessive-compulsive habits usually dictate. This essay
will be updated continuously over the next few years. Please
note that many of the books referenced in this essay are out
of print and hard to find, though Amazon.com will search for
them for you and many such books are available in online auctions
or from your local bookseller.
What Does the Word "Witch" Mean?
This is one of those seemingly easy questions
that requires a very complex answer, for hardly anyone seems
to be able to agree with anyone else on a proper definition.
Even those people who call themselves "witches" today,
or who point to others as being such, differ widely as to their
interpretations of the term.
Is a "witch" anyone who does magic,
or who reads fortunes? Is a "witch" someone who worships
the Christian Devil? Is a "Witch" (capital letter this
time) a member of a specific Pagan faith called "Wicca?"
Is a "witch" someone who practices Voodoo, or Macumba,
or Candomble? Are the anthropologists correct, when they define
a "witch" as anyone outside of an approved social structure
who is suspected of doing evil magic and/or of being a monster
who can curse people with the "evil eye?"
All these definitions have been claimed as
accurate in the past and are used to this day by both friends
and foes of (whatever they consider) witchcraft. Most people
discussing the topic seem to have their own pet definition and
are outraged at those with differing concepts.
Is there a way out of this quagmire? Is it
actually possible to distinguish between "real" and
"fake" witches? Much of the evidence that would enable
us to give positive answers to the relevant questions has been
deliberately suppressed or destroyed, centuries ago, by those
with religious, economic and/or political axes to grind. However
some aspects of the problem can be cleared up with the help of
a little linguistic and historical investigation.
I know that many people are bugged by etymology,
but sometimes the best clues to understanding old folk beliefs
and customs are to be found in the pages of etymological dictionaries.
Those clues must be treated very cautiously,
since words are slippery, slithery things. Many times the same
word will be used for different concepts (not always closely
connected), and of course most languages have concepts that are
referred to by several different words. depending upon the emphasis
desired. Even within a single tongue, the meanings of words change
drastically with time. New words are invented and old ones forqotten;
war and trade bring in "slang" and "loan words"
which frequently replace venerable and respected terms. Whenever
possible, of course, one must consider the social and cultural
environment in which a given word was used -- a difficult task
when most of the relevant data has been lost.
Tiptoeing through the Dictionaries
With those warnings firmly in mind, let's
make a start at clearing up the linguistic chaos. As some people
may already know, the word "witch" in Modern English
comes, via the Middle English wycche, from the Old English
wicce (feminine) and wicca (masculine). The plural
form was wiccan (now used as an adjective for followers
of Neopagan Witchcraft, see below). All these terms referred
to agents or performers of wiccian, defined in most etymological
dictionaries as meaning "to practice sorcery or magic."
Old English, Old Norse, Old Irish, Old Dutch,
Latin and a few other tongues, are all members of the Western
branch of the Indo-European languages. These in turn are all
outgrowths of an original mother tongue, called by linguists,
"Proto-Indo-European" (or "PIE" for short).
By comparing variations of a word not just within a given language,
but among and between its sister tonques as well, it is often
possible to trace back its linguistic development from an original
PIE root.
It appears that the absolute, rock bottom
root of "witch" in early PIE was *wy-, "to
bend, twist" (an asterisk is used by linguists to indicate
reconstructed words or word fragments). Within PIE, this root
developed in at least two directions having to do with trees:
*wyg-, meaning "elm" and *wyt, meaning
"willow." In both cases the words seem to have referred
not only to the culturally and economically important trees themselves,
but to the withies and shoots of the trees, artifacts woven or
twisted out of them (cords, ropes, mats, thatched roofs, etc.),
and the very concepts of weaving, twisting, binding and bending.
As the centuries rolled by and the original
PIE speaking community split up and began migrating, these simple
roots began to grow and mutate. Their pronunciations were changed
several times, the denotations (items pointed to) of elm
and willow were switched back and forth (and occasionally blended),
but the connotations (ideas pointed to) of bending and
weaving, etc., were maintained and elaborated.
The development of primary interest for the
origin of "witch" was that of the Anglo-Saxon wic-,
meaning "to turn, twist or bend." This root also later
grew into "weak," "wicker" and "wicked,"
all based on the idea of something bendable or twisted. In Old
English wicca/wicce this concept was extended in a specifically
magical direction. (I am indebted to Paul Friedrich's Proto-Indo-European
Trees for most of this botanical/linguistic data.)
The sort of magic involved may be surmised
from a comparison with simultaneous developments in the sister
tongues. In Old Norse, the root vik- became the Icelandic/Norwegian
vikja, meaning "to turn aside, conjure away, exorcise."
Proto-Germanic wik- became the Low German wikken,
"to foretell," and the Middle Dutch wicker,
"a soothsayer." Various other words referring to sorcery,
divination, special knowledge, and so forth, developed out of
the PIE *wyg- and *wyt-, via the roots wic-,
wik-, wig-, wit-, etc.
The fact that several of the words referred
to knowledge led some to claim a link between all of these roots
and the PIE *wys-, meaning "wise." They then
declared that original meaning of wicce/wicce was therefore
"wise one."
This argument will not hold water for two
major reasons. Firstly, Old English had a very well known word
for the phrase "wise one," wysard, or what became
in Middle and Modern English, "wizard." Although the
word "wizard" was used as a masculine synonym for the
usually feminine "witch" during the late Middle Ages,
there is no evidence at all to indicate that centuries earlier
the term wysard was used to refer to a wicca or
a wicce, except an an occasional term of respect.
Secondly, although PIE *wys- does seem
to be the source of the Modern German wissen, "to
know," and this is used as a synonym to the above mentioned
wikken, (as in the phrase "I know I'm going to get
into trouble with such opinions"), there is no proof that
these words were used as synonyms 1,200 years ago, and so one
cannot make the equation that "*wic- = *wys-"
and therefore that "wicca = wysard = wise one."
One interesting sideline that needs to be
persued, however, involves the connections (pointed out by Osborn
& Longland in Rune Games) between Old High
German/Anglo Saxon/Old Norse Wurt/Wurd/Wyrd ("Destiny,
what has been chosen or willed"), Old English weorthan
("to become, to turn into"), and the Modern English/German
word/Wurt and will/Will. All these terms apparently
trace back to PIE *war-, with three meanings: "to
choose or to will," "to speak," and "to wind
or torn." That last meaning, of course, may tie *war-
in with *wy-.
This could be a direct tie, or an indirect
one via some of the other PIE roots for elms and willows, such
as *Vlmo-, *sVlik, or *wrb-. In any event, there
appears to be clear etymological evidence that the Indo-European
cultures associated words, intention and the performance of magic,
and at least some of the time expressed these ideas in terms
of bending, twisting and weaving. Those are extremely common
concepts worldwide for of magic and divination (see Real Magic) The references to
weaving also tie in with hints from other sources that the Western
Indo-Europeans may have had their own version of what later developed
into the Hindu and Buddhist magical traditions known as tantra
(based on Sanscrit tan-, "to weave").
Now then, by a very conservative etymological
extension of wic- to wicce(a), I feel we can safely
state that the original meaning of the word that later became
witch (via the Middle English wycche) was one who bent
things to his or her will, one who could turn aside evil or good;
concepts often used to refer to people performing magic and divination.
At this point, I'd like to look at the words
that were routinely used to translate wicce, wicca, and
wiccacraeft ("witchcraft") into other European
languages.
The Ancient Greeks used the term pharmakos
based on the word pharmakon, meaning "drug, poison,
spell" (this is the source of that infamous Billy Graham
quote that "the word witchcraft comes from the same word
as drug and I think that proves something." It certainly
would, if the Ancient AngloSaxons had spoken Greek). Later the
Greeks used the term magissa, the feminine of mago
("magician," from the Persian priesthood called the
Magi). The Latin language used saga, from sagire,
"to perceive keenly," praesagire, "to presage,
or fortell," as well as striga, "a vampiric
nightowl," maga, "a female magician," and
venefica, "a female poisoner or magician," etc.
The Italians used strega, and the Roumanians used striga,
both obvious derivations from the Latin. The Italians also used
maliarda, "an evil charmer" and fattuchiera,
from the Latin fatum or "fate." The French used
magicienne/magicien for "a female/male magician"
and sorciere/sorcier for "a female/male sorcerer."
The latter comes from Latin sortilegus meaning one who
does divination or magic by casting of lots (see also Gaelic
crannehur, "stick placing"). The German, Danish
and other languages use words that translate literally as "magician,"
"wonderworker" "spell singer," "diviner,"
or "knowledgeble one," all usually female.
What can be tentatively concluded from all
this? It would appear that a strong tradition of folk magic,
divination and, herbalism survived among the European peoples
well into the Middle Ages, that the practitioners of these arts
were generally mistrusted by at least the literati (all of whom
were Church trained), and that as time went by, the terms used
became regularly feminine and almost exclusively negative (as
distinct from their earlier neutral-to-negative meanings before).
Another possible conclusion (though it is a long shot) is that
"women's magic" was the central concept shared by all
these diverse cultures, thus lending credence to the Universal
Goddess Cult theories (though that does not plausibly explain
how a wicca -- a male witch -- could be performing that
magic).
One piece of research that still needs to
be done would be to investigate every scrap of written materials
from the early and middle Middle Ages that mentions the subject,
to see which specific terms were used in what times and places,
the literal meanings and origins of those terms, and how the
word usage changed with time.
We do know that, even at the height of the
witch-hunting hysteria in the late Middle Ages and Renaissance,
the terms used to refer to the victims (such as bacularia,
fascinatrix, herbaria, Hexen, Wettermacherinnen, etc.) all
meant people (usually women) with real or seeming herbal, weather,
magical and prophetic knowledge or powers, who could control
people, raise storms, and kill or cure humans and animals.
Notice that there is little or nothing in
the etymology of witchcraft and related terms to indicate any
sort of religious role for witches except as unchristian scapegoats
during the witch hunts. This basic lack of a religious flavor
to the word "witchcraft" is in complete contrast to
the almost exclusively religious flavor of the word "priestcraft."
We know a bit about the Pagan
priests and priestesses in pre-Christian Europe, but their
exact relation to local witches is quite fuzzy. A certain hint
can be gleaned from the fact that the Celtic priests called "Druids"
were called that because of the root dru-, which refers to "oak
tree," "firm," "strong." There is no
doubt that the Druids were involved in tree worship (which was
indeed common throughout Europe) and that oaks were the favorite
trees in northern climes for this worship; it could be that the
Druids were called such because they represented the "firm"
and "strong" principles of their faith (they were in
fact the highest religious authorities among the Celts). The
willow-like "bending" and "chaos" of wiccecraeft
and the oak-like "firmness" and "order" of
druidecht ("druidry") may point to an ancient
distinction between the social functions played by each. I suspect
that "witches" were usually considered part of the
"Outsiders" class in Indo-European Paleopagan Europe.
Now almost all tribes have full or part time
healers, who use both herbs and magic. Frequently they will also
have seers and weather predicters/controllers. Midwives, almost
always female, are also common, and there is frequently a priest
and or priestess working at least part time. What causes confusion,
especially when dealing with extinct cultures, is that many tribes
combine these various offices into different people. Sometimes
the healers will be the midwives, sometimes the healers won't
be midwives but will be seers, etc.
Classic Witches and Wizards
What tribal functions did the people I call
"Classic Witches" originally perform? We know
their later functions, after the Christian conquest, to have
included healing (with drugs made from herbs and magic), midwifing,
producing abortions, providing love potions and poisons, predicting
and/or controlling the weather, blessing and cursing, etc. These
all seem to break down into herbology, divination and simple
magic. But what did they do when there were still Pagan priests
and priestesses around? Remembering that almost everyone in a
Paleopagan culture will do simple folk magic for him- or herself,
did they exist sidebyside with the priests, handling simple matters
while the clergy handled complicated ones? Did the witches merge
with the Pagan clergy after the Christian conquest, or replace
them entirely? Did the witches only begin to exist after the
clergy had been overthrown, because the witches were the remnants
of that clergy and their descendants? Nobody really knows, though
lots of people have theories.
There do seem to have been religious communities
of both genders in Celtic territories, patterned perhaps in a
similar way to the ones in India formed by retired householders
from many castes. The ones for women have been described as being
situated on islands surrounded by willow trees. There were also
individual mystics living solitary lives in the woods, perhaps
similar to the arhats ("saints") of India. Priestesses
of Freya, for example, lived as solitary mystics in Scandinavia,
minding small temples and riding from villiage to village with
statues of Freya for rituals at various times of the year. Could
the witches have been descended from such communities or individuals
?
And where do the "wizards" fit in?
The term of "wise one" could have been a mere compliment,
applied to anyone showing extraordinary wisdom about any topic.
Contrary to the fond beliefs of many occultists and theologians,
such a category is not now and never has been limited strictly
to people involved in magic and religion. The major folkloric
figure of the wizard is as late a development as is our knowledge
of witchcraft in the early Middle Ages, yet it too may point
to an earlier truth. The Classic Wizard, such as Merlin or Gandalf,
is usually described as a loner, a stranger who wanders about
performing wonderous deeds with little equipment save a staff
or a sword. In fact, the description is very similar to that
of Odinn as He walks about the earth, testing humans. Odinn is
a magical/religious figure, greatly associated with magicians
and priests. Could it be that the term "wizard" became
attached to various Pagan priests who had gone into hiding, and
who traveled from village to village, providing some of the old
priestly services to people now no longer able to get them? We
shall probably never know.
What we do know is the functions served by
the Classic Witches for many centuries after the Christian conquest
of Europe (which was, remember, a gradual process, taking almost
a thousand years to complete). So, for our purposes here, we
shall define a Classic Witch as follows: a person (usually an
older female) who is adept in the uses of herbs, roots, barks,
etc. for the purposes of both healing and hurting (including
midwifing, poisoning, producing aphrodisiacs, producing hallucinogens,
etc.) and who is familiar with the basic principles of both passive
and active magical talents, and can therefore use them for good
or ill, as she chooses. A typical Classic Witch, being an old
peasant, would probably also be a font of country wisdom and
old superstitions, as well as a shrewd judge of character. Such
a person would be of great value to local peasants, but would
also be somewhat frightening and resented.
Classic Witchcraft itself was not a crime
during the first ten centuries of the Christian era. Only if
a witch caused actual physical damages could he or she be prosecuted,
and then for causing harm, not for practicing witchcraft. Indeed,
it was official Church policy that all the magic produced by
non-Christians was illusionary or demonic, and that belief in
the ability of anyone to fly through the air, cast spells, etc.,
was a Pagan, and "therefore" heretical belief. The
official Church document on this was the Canon Episcopi,
purporting to be from the fourth century, but actually forged
around 906 c.e., which read in part:
"It is also not to be admitted that certain
abandoned women perverted by Satan, seduced by illusions and
phantasms of demons, believe and openly profess that, in the
dead of night, they ride upon certain beasts with the pagan goddess
Diana, with a countless horde of women, and in the silence of
the dead of night fly over vast tracts of country, and obey her
commands as their mistress, while they are summoned to her service
on other nights.
"But it were well if they alone perished
in their infidelity and did not draw so many others along with
them into the pit of their faithlessness. For an innumerable
multitude, deceived by this false opinion, believe this to be
true and, so believing, wander from the right faith and that
relapse into pagan errors when they think that there be any divinity
or power except the one God.
"...It is therefore to be publicly proclaimed
to all, that whoever believes such things or similar things loses
the faith..."
This typical Churchly arrogance was the official
party line for several centuries and caused no end of theological
trouble later when the Inquisition wanted to persecute people
for actually doing what Church doctrine had earlier said was
impossible. This evidence, coming as late as 906 c.e., that the
Church was aware of Pagan survivals in its heartland of Italy
(assuming that they meant the ancient Roman Diana, and not another
goddess of similar nature) has been taken as proof by some of
the Margaret Murray theory of witchcraft, although it would seem
to prove nothing except that there were at least a few Pagan
survivals connected with women's religion in Christendom -- something
we know from a lot of other sources as well.
At the very same time as this dogma was being
stated, there were still undomesticated Pagans in northern and
eastern Europe building temples, carving statues of their gods,
giving sacrifices to trees and streams, etc. There may well have
been similar survivals throughout Western Europe, for an AngloSaxon
law of about the same time condemns "witches" who are
worshipping wells, trees, stones, etc. This would seem to indicate
that for several centuries after the Christian conquest witches
remained Pagans, or were only mildly Christianized. Again there
is no evidence of an organized cult of witches in this law, nor
are the worship activities mentioned part of the usual theories
of how a postulated cult of witches worshipped.
Gothic Witches or Satanists
By the 11th century, however, these holdovers
had pretty much died out or gone very far underground. Most of
the Pagan cultures of Western and Central Europe had been destroyed
and pacification programs had been instituted against any who
objected. Having slain all the competition they could find outside
of the Church, the Christians proceeded to slay each other. The
Inquisition was founded and "Crusades" mounted against
heretics (these were much more successful than the Crusades mounted
against the Moslems, who kept winning). Heretic roasting became
a lucrative source of wealth, power and sexual satisfaction for
the Inquisitors and their civilian helpers. By the middle of
the 14th century, though, they began to run out of heretics to
kill. This was disastrous, since many Inquisitors and nobles
had built their entire fortunes on confiscated property taken
from convicted heretics. A few hopeful sadists had been suggesting
to the Popes for quite some time that sorcery and witchcraft
should be declared heretical. This was slowly done over a period
of two centuries and in 1484 Pope Innocent VIII officially sanctioned
the arrest and trial (that is to say, the torture, conviction
and execution) of all persons accused of witchcraft.
The theological excuses were extremely easy
to manufacture and are being defended in official Church literature
to this very day (see The Inquisition, by Fernand
Hayward, published by the Society of St. Paul and with a full
Imprimatur and Nihil Obstat -- official Church
approval -- in 1965). Since there was only "one God, one
Faith and one Church," anyone disagreeing with the Roman
Catholic Church (or the later Protestant Churches) was automatically
a heretic. Similarly, by monotheistic reasoning (actually dualistic,
as far as Christianity is concerned) anyone using a system of
magic or religion in competition to Christianity was obviously
of another religion -- to wit, worshipping the Christian Devil,
who was the only other god allowed to exist in Christianity.
The early heresies (hundreds of them) had
threatened to disrupt the theological and political power of
the Bishop of Rome. The Popes were especially sensitive on this
matter, since the Pope himself was considered a heretic by all
non-Roman Bishops in early Christianity, a heretic who had unlawfully
usurped the powers of the Council of Bishops. Having crushed
all opposition and declared their opponents to be the heretics,
the Bishops of Rome built an empire of their own out of the ashes
of the Roman Empire. Wherever the Roman Catholic Church went,
it would first wipe out the native Pagan culture, then wait a
few centuries and start executing heretics. There was a vital
psychological and theological need to keep the attention of Christendom
focused against real or imagined enemies, in exactly the same
way that Christian leaders of many denominations focused the
attention of American Christians on the "communist peril"
in the 1950's.
So through a series of astonishing theological
gymnastics, the leaders of the Inquisition managed to declare
that the Canon Episcopi was in essence, irrelevant (they
couldn't say "wrong" because it was Church Law) or
referred to another cult of the same description. Now it became
heresy not to believe in witches who flew through the air, and
had powerful magical powers given by the false deity they worshipped
-- only now that deity was said to be Satan rather than Diana.
This shift of belief was accomplished by the old quote that "all
heathen gods are the Devil in disguise." And so the Church
created, out of whole cloth, a brandnew kind of "witchcraft,"
never before seen on earth, which I term "Gothic Witchcraft"
(note that I coined this term twenty years ago, before the rise
of the Goth subculture of vampire fans).
Gothic Witchcraft was essentially the same
thing as "Satanism," or "devil worship."
Accusations of this sort had been made against Pagans, Gypsies,
Jews and heretics for many centuries. Now the accusations were
dressed up and made detailed, following the "Big Lie"
technique used by Adolph Hitler, many centuries later. The details
of Gothic Witchcraft were easy to invent. Since Roman Catholicism
was "the only true religion," and since Satan was "the
opposite of God," therefore Satanism was the exact reverse
of Roman Catholicism (other Christian sects accused the Gothic
Witches of reversing their particular One True Right and Only
Way of worship). This is where the whole concept of the "Witches'
Sabat," "Black Masses," and the like came from.
The Ancient
Roman urban legend about the Christians (that they profaned
sacred things, ate little babies, held wild orgies, etc) having
been used against the Jews for centuries, were dusted off and
laid at the feet of Gothic Witches. All of these lies kept being
repeated, over and over again, and "evidence" was manufactured
to support them. Nonetheless, it took several decades before
the average peasant took them seriously enough to support the
activities of the witchhunters.
The First Burning Times
I really should not go into the details of
the persecutions against suspected (and therefore "guilty")
Gothic Witches, since most readers may not have strong stomachs.
Somewhere between 50,000 and a quartermillion women, children,
and men were hideously killed in ways that make the atrocities
of Nazi stormtroopers and death squads look like childs play.
Human beings were torn limb from limb by wild horses, flayed
alive, covered with boiling pitch (the equivalent of napalm),
had redhot irons locked around their bodies, had toenails and
fingernails ripped off, toes, fingers and testicles crushed;
women had their hair burnt off and nipples torn off and jagged
irons shoved up their genitals, or if they were girl children,
were raped to death by teams of Inquisitors and/or horses.
This, mind you, was what was done during questioning,
before "guilt" had even been "proven" and
sentence passed. The actual executions were swift and merciful
by contrast; hanging, burning alive, drowning, etc.
The whole psuedolegal point of the torture
was to ask the accused people long involved questions, and to
force them to answer "yes or no." The torture continued
until the accused "confessed" all he or she was told
to. Then they would take the person out of the torture room and
ask the same questions, threatening to return them for further
torture if they did not reaffirm their confessions. Then the
Inquisitors could state in the records that "the accused
confessed without torture," and send the victim (usually
a woman or girl) back into the torture room for the men to do
with as they chose.
The depravity and evil of these "men
of God" is impossible to believe for anyone who did not
go through World War II in a Nazi concentration camp. There is
no pervert more dangerous and twisted than a selfrighteous one,
doing what he thinks is good and holy, no matter how many people
he torments and kills to do it.
After a few decades, many of the Inquisitors
themselves began to believe the Big Lie. They put more and more
pressure on the civil authorities to torture and execute witches
and other heretics, threatening to have them executed as heretics
if they did not comply. Thus, in direct opposition to Christian
defenses to this very day, it was the Inquisitors who egged the
civil courts on, not the other way around. But, once the civilians
realized that they too could share in the political, economic
and sexual benefits of witch-hunting, they too became zealous.
The new Protestant leaders all agreed that "thou shalt not
suffer a witch to live" was true for Protestant and Catholic
alike, and proceeded to roast witches, heretics, Catholics and
each other.
What, beside the greed and sexual depravity
of the Christian clergy, turned the witch-hunts into a socially
accepted activity? Part of the answer lies in the general scariness
of psychic phenomena to ignorant people. Thus, even the Classic
Witches had always inspired fear as well as respect. With ten
centuries of propaganda drumming it into their heads that all
magic came from either Jesus Christ or Satan, more fear of magic
workers developed. The Black Plague wiped out a third of Europe's
population almost overnight, and demagogues were quick to suggest
that this was punishment from the Christian God for laxity in
Christendom. Jews, Gypsies, strangers and anyone unusual were
turned into scapegoats on a massive scale never before reached.
This soon included itinerant magical workers such as the Classic
Witches.
Another major factor was the innate paranoia
of Christian mythology. There was said to be a gigantic fight
going on between Good and Evil, one that could go either way.
Anyone, therefore, who was not a good Christian was committing,
spiritual treason by helping the enemies of Christendom. This
was a far worse crime than mere political treason (which was
more of a past-time than a crime in those days). The power of
Satan was gradually increased in Christian mythology, until it
was declared that he had an entire "anti-church" of
his own. The congregation of this anti-church consisted of heretics
in general, and Gothic Witches in particular. For more details
on this whole, sick mess, Consult Rossell Hope Robbins' book,
The Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology.
Even though he is a total cynic on the subject of magic, his
book is one of the standards on the subject of Gothic Witchcraft
and the Inquisition. Jeffrey B. Russell's A
History of Witchcraft : Sorcerers, Heretics, and Pagans
is also useful here.
Witches as Pagan "Cultists"
Was there any actual underground movement
to act as a peg upon which the Pope could hang his branding irons?
Could the Classic Witches have actually been the leaders of a
European-wide Pagan revival (as Margaret Murray and others later
claimed), one that the Church merely distorted into a Satanic
cult?
Since the Classic Witches would usually be
among the eldest members of any village social structure (it
takes a long time to become adept at healing, herbology and divination)
they could have been at the forefront of the sporadic efforts
to preserve Pagan traditions. They may have helped to organize
the dances, parades and other folk customs with which tiny remnents
of the old religions were kept alive. This, however, is a far
cry from the theories of a well organized cult spanning the entire
continent.
Murray took the "confessions" extorted
under torture during the "Burning Time" (a Neopagan
term for the persecutions from 1450-1750) and compared their
artificially constructed similarities (caused by the Inquisitors'
use of torture manuals such as the Mallus
Maleficarum) with collections of folk beliefs and
customs from England, Brittany and Italy. The major conclusions
she came to in her book The Witch-Cult in Western Europe,
were somewhat astonishing (the kindest comments made by her academic
colleagues were that she was "speculative and unscholarly."
Most just said she was a crank). She argued that perhaps there
had been a gigantic, anti-Christian cult in medieval Europe,
only it had been Pagan instead of Satanic. Furthermore, the leaders
of this cult might have been been the witches, as the descendants
of the priestesses of "The Old Religion." This religion,
she speculated, was a belief system based on the worship of Diana,
and was so well organized that every witch in Europe had essentially
the same theology, ethics, cosmology and rituals, so that a witch
could travel from Denmark to Italy, from England to Poland and
be accepted into the local services. This, she said was why the
persecutions happened -- there really was a gigantic threat to
Christianity, run by witches.
This is an important theory that needs to
be discussed, for many "Neopagan Witches" and "Feminist
Witches" (see below for definitions) accept it as proven
and it has been published as absolute truth in many books. To
begin with, I'll refer the reader to the discussions elsewhere
on this site on pre-Christian European religions. As you will
recall, the evidence in favor of a universal cult of any sort
is scanty, while contrary evidence is plentiful. However, for
the sake of the argument, let us assume that there really was
a unified cult throughout Europe, concerning "the"
Goddess and her Consort "the" Horned God, which survived
intact into the Christian era. Could the traditions and beliefs
of such a cult survive 500 to 1500 years of oppression?
There are certain well known laws concerning
the requirements for the safe transmittal of a tradition from
generation to generation. It must either be written down, and
thereby altered by the requirements of the literary form (rewritten
to fit a poetic rhyme-forms for example) or else it must become
part of an oral literature supported by public approval of the
bards, minstrels, storytellers, etc. Are either of these two
requirements met?
Unfortunately, there are no equivalents that
have been discovered yet to the Eddas or the Mabinogion
(collected tales of Norse and Welsh mythology, respectively)
which present the entire mythology of the "Universal Witch-Cult"
as practiced by our hypothetical ancestors. Granted, a large
number of people have claimed that the above mentioned texts
are just chock full of references to "The Old Religion"
and are "really" about the Witch-Cult. The fact remains,
however, that the sacred scriptures of the postulated Witch-Cult's
beliefs and traditions (with the exception of quotes from old
poems and folk songs) were never found in written form until
the last hundred years.
Christianity of course did not provide much
in the way of support for competing religions. The Church accepted
some local planting and herding customs and holidays, turned
the local gods and nature spirits into saints and demons, and
went merrily on its way subverting and co-opting the faiths of
the conquered tribes. Now, it could be argued that as an underground
movement, the Witch-Cult provided a subculture that might have
given public support to an oral literature of religious witchcraft.
But Europe of the Middle Ages was not the England or America
of today, where subcultures are somewhat tolerated, even if despised.
A subculture has to be pretty big to provide the necessary amount
of support. Long before it could have reached that size, it would
have been subverted or destroyed by the Church.
The Odds Against Survivals
I think it's useful here to take a glance
at the Moranos, the secret underground Jews of Catholic Spain.
In 1492, the King of Spain ordered all Jews living there to leave
Spain, convert to Catholicism, or be executed. Many left, many
died, but many others chose to convert, at least some of them
under false pretenses. These latter Jews decided to go underground
and practice their faith in secrecy while pretending in public
to be good Catholics. When caught, they were referred to as "Moranos,"
a Spanish word meaning "pigs" used because it was especially
insulting to Jews, who considered pigs unclean animals.
Over four hundred years passed by before some
of the Moranos decided to go public with their religious identities.
Unfortunately, they chose to do so at a very bad time, just before
World War II, and were imprisoned or murdered by Hitler's Spanish
ally, Franco. The remaining Moranos decided to stay hidden for
a while longer. A few years ago, however, many of them went public,
demanding to be allowed to immigrate to Israel under the "Law
of Return," that says Jews anywhere in the world have a
right to move to Israel and become citizens. As the government
of that nation has taken to doing, they sent a team of linguists,
anthropologists and rabbis to Spain to interview the Moranos.
What they discovered was that the Moranos
knew they were supposed to study "the Old Testament"
and ignore the "New," to light candles and say special
prayers on Friday nights and Saturdays, and to use muzuzehs and
other Jewish talismans hidden away. That, except for a handful
of Hebrew words, was about all the Moranos knew about being Jews
(for details, read The
Mezuzeh in the Madonna's Foot). Why do I mention
this story? Because a group of highly literate people, with a
rich and deep tradition of organized religious beliefs and practices,
lost 99% of it after only 500 years of being underground. Just
how likely is it that illiterate members of a Paleopagan belief
system would have been able to keep their religion alive for
nearly twice that long, let alone for three times that long as
believed by some Neopagans?
Sure the medieval peasants went out into the
woods and held orgies, sure they built need-fires at certain
times of the year, sure they followed the agricultural customs
of their ancestors --- anyone who's read Frazer's Golden
Bough knows that. None of this activity necessarily
proves that they had any idea, magically or religiously, of what
they were doing. This is why outside observers must always be
making stupid remarks like "the peasants really did this
because..." or "they didn't know it, but they were
actually worshipping an old Pagan god named Irving, who was..."
You do not need a religious or magical
reason to perform customary or enjoyable acts. The mere fact that "this is the way my Grandfather
did it" or that, "actually, I've always rather enjoyed
orgies," is more than sufficient to assure that some form
or other of that act will be perpetuated in the future. After
all, in magic and religion, as in many other fields, one does
not always have to consciously understand what one is doing in
order to get results (though it helps). Just because a group
of peasants is performing a ritual of possible magical efficacy,
does not mean that they have had someone train them in the art
of magic, or that they have the slightest idea of what they are
doing.
To the average Medieval peasant, the Church
provided (deliberately, and with malice aforethought) nearly
every religious comfort that the old belief systems did, except
for one area: sex. Sexual customs were more likely to be clung
to (!) than nonsexual ones, and were the ones most likely to
occur outside of a Christian context. Granted, there were peasants
who went out into the woods to hold orgies. But it is entirely
possible that they only wanted to get laid, not enlightened.
So, while there is plenty of evidence of ancient
Pagan traditions surviving under thin Christian veneers in isolated
parts of Christendom, there is almost nothing logical to suggest
that the people leading these traditions were in touch with each
other or shared more than the vaguest common beliefs. Therefore,
the theories of both the Inquisition and Margaret Murray have
got to be dismissed as unlikely to be true.
Family Traditions of Witchcraft?
Could there have been a link among underground
Pagans, who weren't peasants? It has been suggested, based on
the well-known historical principle that rich people don't get
persecuted as much as poor people do, that throughout Europe
and the British Isles it would have been possible for wealthy
families and minor nobility to quietly continue Pagan practices
as "private family business." Of course, this ignores
the fact that many Inquisitors chose rich, or at least well-off,
victims precisely because they had wealth that would go to the
Church and local secular authorities.
Considering that these local leaders (of the
"Squire" sort) living in small cities and outside of
large towns, are notoriously conservative about family customs,
it is entirely possible that survivors of the witch-hunts did
prosper and keep their family secrets. Whether such families
thought of themselves as being "witches" of any sort
(say, Classic, as being most likely) or as "Pagans"
or as just plain "family," cannot now be determined.
I have run across people who claim to be descended from such
families, and they usually call themselves "witches"
now. To my everlasting regret, I coined the term "Family
Tradition Witches" or "Fam-Trads" to
describe such persons, though one could also consider some of
them merely present-day Classic witches.
Remember though that such families of petty
nobility (unlike the wealthier and more traveled major nobility)
are usually highly suspicious of outsiders from their own country,
let alone from others. This hardly strikes one as a promising
syndrome for setting up a complex communication network for Pagans
from scores of European cultures.
So while it's possible that Fam-Trads exist,
and have been practicing traditions some of them now describe
as "witchcraft" for centuries, there is as yet no proof
that the influence of any given family could have spread more
than a hundred miles or so, until the 20th century. There is
also no proof that the traditions handed down by these families
are either (a) uncontaminated by later traditions and/or (b)
in agreement with the beliefs of some Neopagan and Feminist Witches
concerning the "Witch-Cult." On the contrary, there
is a great deal of evidence against both of these possibilities,
especially the former.
Real Satanism Arises
The persecutions went on for over three hundred
years, finally petering out in the 1700's, first in western Europe,
then in central and southern Europe. In all that time, with all
those murders, not one shred of proof that would stand up in
a modern court was ever produced to show the existence of an
organized Pagan or Satanic cult among the peasantry (except the
Benandanti in Italy, discussed in Carlo Ginzburg's Night
Battles, which was a Pagan-rooted anti-witch
cult) . One truly ironic note however, was that the creation
of Gothic Witchcraft by the Church did manage to produce actual
Satanic groups -- not among the peasantry, but at the Court of
Louis XIV, King of France. The highest nobility in the land apparently
engaged in hideous crimes and asinine theatrics, trying to relieve
their boredom by holding "Black Masses" and slaughtering
infants, just as they had been told by the Church was the accepted
fashion. In 1662 this all came out and many of the middlemen
and women in the case were punished (though few of the nobles
were). In that same year, by a curious coincidence, Louis issued
an Edict that, in effect, restrained witchcraft trials throughout
France.
To this very day, there are "Neogothic
Witches," or modern Satanists,
trying their very best to be everything the Roman Catholic and
Protestant churches said they should be, though only a few go
so far as to perform human sacrifice like they are "supposed"
to. Representing only a tiny percentage of the people now calling
themselves "witches", these Neogothic types invariably
grab all the publicity they can get, in order to present themselves
as more important than they really are. Naturally, there are
conservative Christian groups who are delighted to have the Neogothic
Witches around to support their idea that "all witches worship
the Devil." Some former Neogothic Witches are now making
lucrative livings as traveling evangelists, denouncing their
former ways.
Neogothic Witches publish books purporting
to be about magic and the occult, but actually being warmed over
techniques for psychological manipulation, seduction, extortion
and right-wing demogogery. The average Satanist has far more
in common with Richard Nixon or Jerry Falwell, than with the
mainstream of occultism and witchcraft in America.
Immigrant Traditions of Witchcraft
After the First Burning Times ended, no one
seemed to be very interested in witches of any sort anymore.
c was dawning, and the powers of the churches dwindling, at least
among the intellectuals of the day (see the 1768 Encyclopedia
Britannica definition of Witchcraft). Freemasonry, Rosicrucianism,
Theosophy and Spiritualism swept over Europe and America, along
with mechanistic theories of Science, the new god. All these
currents of thought had drastic effects upon both rich and poor
alike.
Millions of peasants immigrated to America
(North and South), most of them the descendants of farmers and
serfs. Others came as indentured servants or as convicted criminals,
working for wealthy land owners. In some cases, those rich people
could have been members of Fam-Trads, sent off to America to
earn their fortune, or to establish new holdings, or to escape
quasilegal persecution at home. During the 300 years of settlement,
scores of Pagan and semi-Pagan groups -- both peasant and purported
Fam-Trad -- immigrated here and continued their ways out in the
boondocks (this was especially true of groups from the wilder
parts of Europe and the British Isles). These varied groups,
who soon started to intermingle their beliefs and magical practices
with those of Native American and African peoples, I have refered
to as "Immigrant Traditions" or "Imm-Trads"
(not a felicitious abbreviation, that latter).
A second major change to European peasant
cultures was brought about by the scientific revolution. As was
mentioned by Aidan Kelley (in an article published in Gnostica
when I was editor there), when the average peasant found out
that eclipses were not caused by creatures eating the sun, that
the earth revolved around the sun and not vice-versa, that most
diseases were not caused by demons or fairies, his or her faith
in old Pagan deities began to fail. Since what was considered
to be the basis of all his or he magic was all "false,"
he or she abandoned even more of his or her vestigal Paganism
and became almost exclusively Christian.
The Classic Witches seem to have dwindled
in prestige during this time, but the people who might have been
Fam-Trad witches would not have been so badly affected. Being
more intellectual and better educated, they would have had a
sophisticated enough set of metaphysics (and a better understanding
of magic and psychic powers) so that they could easily handle
the traumatic information. However, since Scientism
was rapidly becoming the supreme religion in the West, most members
of Fam-Trads would have made efforts to conceal their "superstitious"
beliefs and Pagan magical systems, perhaps by getting involved
in Freemasonry and Rosicrucianism in the 18th century, Spiritualism
and Theosophy in the 19th All of these movements were considered
more respectable than witchcraft, and would still have allowed
the Fam-Trads to practice occult arts.
Wealthier nobles and intellectuals had practiced
ceremonial magic (mostly based on Christian Cabala and Greek
and Latin magical texts) throughout the Middle Ages, and most
escaped persecution because of their wealth and power. But during
the 17th, 18th and 19th centuries the ceremonial magicians and
alchemists began to join these various movements just mentioned.
So as the years went by, members of the postulated
Fam-Trads would have absorbed more and more from non-Pagan magical
sources, and handed their new information down to each generation,
perhaps carelessly letting the descendents think that a Rosicrucian
spell or alchemical meditation was a legitimate part of their
Pagan heritage. So by today we would have "Fam-Trad Witches"
who would be closer to being Theosophists or Spiritualists than
to being Classic or Neoclassic Witches.
As modern medicine and pharmacology developed,
fewer and fewer people resorted to the remaining Classic Witches
for aid. Except in isolated villages, witchcraft in western and
southern Europe slowly died out. Not enough is known about what
happened to similar people in central and northern Europe; however,
I believe that the dying out process was much slower for two
reasons:(a) material technology did not spread as fast there
and (b) they had been Christianized at later dates, and hence
had more of their Pagan tradition left at the time of the collapse
of religious authority in the face of scientific authority.
The Early Anthropologists Step into the Debate
From 1860 to 1880, a scholar named J. J. Bachofen
conjectured, from predominately (speculative) philological evidence,
a matriarchial age in early human civilization. His thinking
was based on Hegelian logic and the "Social Darwinism"
movement, and was quickly picked up by an obscure writer named
Karl Marx. This theory of a matriarchal age eventually became
an integral part of Marxist Social Evolution Theory (though few
talk about it anymore among Marxists except for Marxist feminist
theoreticians) and became an extremely popular idea among the
intellectuals of the day.
From 1880 to 1900, much important work was
done in the archeology of the Mediterrean and in comparative
mythology and folklore (i.e., the study of other people's religious
beliefs). Sir James Frazer published the first volume of his
monumental Golden Bough in 1890, proposing his
theories about the presence of the "Divine King" and
goddess worship in most European cultures. In 1887, Karl Pearson
published a speech he had given six years earlier, entitled "Woman
as Witch" (it appeared as one of the essays in The
Chances of Death and Other Studies). Pearson investigated
European folklore and the medieval witchhunts and came to the
conclusion that medieval witches were holdovers from Bachoven's
"Age of Mother Right," in which, women were, not supreme,
but far more powerful than they were in the Christian age. Unfortunately,
most people read him sloppily, and thought he was going further
than he really did. Bachofen and Pearson provided a theoretical
framework used by major figures (to be discussed below) in the
"Neopagan Witchcraft" revival, such as Murray, Leland,
Graves and Gardner.
In 1899, a book was published by the previously
respected folklorist Charles Leland, entitled Aradia:
Or the Gospel of the Witches of Tuscany. The book
was a folklore study of the beliefs of members of a peasant culture
in Italy concerning what they called "The Old Religion."
Despite Leland's high reputation as a scholar, the book was so
greatly ignored as to have been almost suppressed. The book contains
stories, legends, rites and traditions concerning a goddess named
"Aradia," who was the messianic Queen of the Witches,
having inherited her powers from her mother, Diana, and her father
Lucifer! The work shows a heavily Christian influence that was
probably so much a part of the peasants' beliefs that they didn't
know it was there, and the traditions contained do not seem to
go directly back further than the 17th century or so. But Aradia
does show that at least some peasants had retained a self-image
as Pagans, despite all the persecution. Leland's source for most
of the material, his mistress Maddalena, was apparently a Classic
Witch of peasant stock who obtained the written manuscript for
Leland after much urging. It has been suggested (and hotly debated)
that she may have written it herself in order to please Leland;
but Leland thought it reasonably authentic, in that it repeated
at greater length things she had told him verbally before.
If the document was true, it is amusing that
a stone's throw away from Rome, there was still in 1899 an active
Pagan cult of Diana worship. Could this have been a direct survival
of those "abandoned women" who believed that they flew
through the night to a place where they worshipped Diana? Perhaps.
But during the Renaissance, there had been enough of an obsession
with Greek and Roman mythology on the part of artists and scholars,
that any Pagan belief system (if it had died out entirely) could
have been resurrected in mutated form by the gradual sifting
down of data on Roman and Etruscan Paganism to the peasants.
They hated the Church anyway, and may have started worshipping
Diana just to spite the Christian clergy. Centuries later, they
would claim that they had always worshipped Her, with no break.
This of course is pure speculation. It is entirely possible that
among the wild hills of Tuscany (and elsewhere in Italy and Sicily)
genuine Pagan traditions might have survived, including a cult
of Diana.
But again, we have the same problems we had
with Classic Witches in other parts of Europe. Was Maddalena
a strega ("witch") who just happened to also
be familiar with the Aradia cult; or was she a strega
because she belonged to the cult? Were all the witches in Italy
priestesses of the Aradia cult? What happened to all the other
Roman and Etruscan gods and goddesses? After all, the "Old
Religion" in Italy had a lot of deities in it.
Witchcraft in the Early 20th Century c.e.
From 1900 to 1920 the fields of comparative
religions, mythology, folklore, anthropology, archeology, sociology
and psychology really began to develop as sciences in Europe
and America. A tremendous hodgepodge of conflicting data and
theory was erected that would be mined for decades. Tons of books
were published dealing with the beliefs (native or ascribed)
of Pagan cultures, folk societies and nonliterate tribes around
the world. Broad, sweeping generalizations were the order of
the day, as everyone looked for the theory that would explain
all religion. Naturally, nobody succeeded.
At the same time, psychical research became
better known to the public and the superiority of tribal magical
systems began to make itself evident to these researchers (though
many, for racist, creedist, and ethnocentric reasons preferred
not to admit it). Spiritualism and Theosophy were extremely popular,
ceremonial magic was being revived in England and Europe, and
the whole world was intellectually aquiver.
World War I put an end to the isolation of
many villages in Europe, forcebly bringing the survivors into
the 20th century. A lot of peasant cultures, with whatever Pagan
customs they might have had, were irrevocably disrupted.
In 1921, Margaret Alice Murray published The
Witch-Cult in Western Europe, the theories of which I
have already mentioned briefly. Somewhere between 1920 and 1925
in England some folklorists appear to have gotten together with
some Golden Dawn Rosicrucians and a few supposed Fam-Trads to
produce the first modern covens in England; grabbing eclectically
from any source they could find in order to try and reconstruct
the shards of their Pagan past.
Murray's The
God of the Witches, came out in 1933. By this time
archeologists and anthropologists had completely disproven the
Bachofen theory of a universal matriarchal age (though even today
neither Marxists nor some Feminists will admit it); folklorists
and other scholars had torn Murray's first book's theories to
shreds; and all the social scientists had begun to show the enormous
variation of Pagan and folk beliefs throughout Europe. Nonetheless,
Murray went even further out on her limb, claiming that witches
throughout the continent had worshipped the same Goddess and
Horned God, following Frazer's theories exactly, setting up a
political as well as a religious underground.
Enter Gerald Gardner
In the year 1939, a man named Gerald Gardner
(he later claimed) ran into a Theosophical theater group that
was actually a front for a Fam-Trad coven, all of whose members
were very old and who claimed to be the last of their tradition.
Gardner supposedly was initiated into this coven that same year
and, having decided that their traditions were fragmented and
incomplete, he began to research and write new rituals and traditions
in a highly eclectic fashion. Throughout the war he worked, taking
material from any source that didn't run fast enough to get away.
He apparently was friends with Aliester Crowley, who gave him
a charter -- never used -- to found a branch of Crowley's magical
organization, the O.T.O.
Crowley gave him permission to use some of
his poetry and ritual materials, leading to claims years later
by critics that Gardner had paid Crowley to write rituals for
him (as several folks have said, "Rediculous! The poetry
would have been much better!"). Lance Sieveking, in his
autobiography, The Eye of the Beholder, claims
that Montague Summers (author of several credulous books on werewolves,
vampires and the Inquisition) told him in 1922 that Crowley and
he were "both honorary members of several of the best covens"
and had attended "many a sabbat" together. Of course,
there was also a rumour in British occult circles for many years
that Crowley had been "kicked out of" covens for refusing
to obey priestesses, but this rumour started at a time when some
people were trying to "prove" the existence of pre-Gardnerian
priestess-led covens and inventing evidence right and left Handed.
There is little doubt that Gardner was sincerely
trying to reconstruct a Pagan tradition of witchcraft, for he
sent typewritten copies of his first drafts of rituals for the
holidays, poems and theological meditations, etc., to his initiates,
asking for corrections and advice on whether or not the material
"felt right." I have copies of these materials, by
the way, and they have affected my views on several matters.
Some of Gardner's friends may have been, as
claimed, members of a surviving coven of what I call a "FamTrad"
of witchcraft, or they may have been a motley assortment of British
occultists who had decided to create a new religion out of whole-cloth
based on the books of Murray, James Frazer, Charles Leland, and
other folklorists. There appear to have been several groups of
British occultists, with overlapping memberships (England is
a small island), attempting to create a religion of Witchcraft
at the time.
Whether or not he had the "authority"
to do so, from this coven that may or may not have existed, Gerald
Gardner founded his own coven during World War II and went merrily
on his way. The war had a devastating effect on Paganism and
occultism in Europe. Large numbers of peasants were wrenched
from their land and forced into the armies. Many of them were
forced into the Mesopaganism created by Hitler. At least half
the Gypsies in Europe were exterminated, along with many astrologers,
psychics, Rosicrucians, theosophists, spiritualists and occultists.
This period is sometimes referred to as the "Second Burning."
Of any Fam-Trads who might have been left in Europe by 1940,
probably few would have survived, precisely because they had
been masquerading as all those other kinds of occultist, and
were thus known targets.
In 1948, Gerald Gardner published his first
novel, A Goddess Returns, Rachel Levy published
The Gates of Horn, and Robert Graves published
The
White Goddess. This last book had a great effect
upon the theology of the Neopagan Witchcraft movement, most especially
in his promotion of the idea that all goddesses are either Maidens,
Mothers, or Crones. Up to this point, Fam-Trads and other Reconstructionists
had mostly been following the works of Leland, Frazer, and Murray,
all of whom were folklorists and anthropologists. Now Graves,
writer of historical novels and prolific poet, jumped into the
act.
The purpose of The White Goddess was
to prove that the Universal Goddess Worship theories were correct.
To do this he jumped back and forth from the Medditerrean to
the British Isles. After admitting that he spoke no Celtic language,
he appointed himself an authority on Welsh language and customs.
He used obsolete and inaccurate translations of Celtic poetry
(when there were perfectly good ones around in 1948), perhaps
because the then current accurate translations wouldn't have
supported his theories as well. In the book, Graves constantly
asked his readers to accept a "slight" bit of illogic
and error, then built these up into gigantic megaliths of theory.
Everytime I read The White Goddess I become infuriated
by the sloppiness of his logic, the inferior quality of his sources
(he builds a great deal of theory on the "Battle of the
Trees" from Iolo Morganwyg's forged Barddas book,
for example), and his general dishonesty with his readers. Graves
put together a lovely myth system but it had little to do with
historic fact. It was, instead, almost entirely the product of
his poetic inspiration -- which is fine, it's a very pretty system,
but he claimed it to be factual, as do many of his fans today.
In 1949, Gardner published High
Magic's Aid, under the pen name of "Scire."
He was at this time apparently a member of Crowley's O.T.O.,
since the note "4 = 7" appears under his name. This
would indicate that he had reached the level of "Philosophus,"
which was halfway up through the system. Then as now, it was
rare for anyone to actually work through the middle grades of
the system (nepotism and graft being a much faster way to rise),
so Gardner must have had some solid backgroound in the Golden-Dawn
and tantric based O.T.O. system of occult theory and practice.
In 1951, the Witchcraft Law of England was
repealed and a variety of witches surfaced. The most famous of
these was Sybil Leek, who claimed to be what I have called a
Fam-Trad Witch. It appears her mother was a member of a British
occult group, the "Pentagram Club," that competed with
Gardner and his friends in the Witchcraft inventing process.
In 1950 or '51, Gerald Gardner managed to
scrape some money together and moved out to the Isle of Man,
settling into a building known as the "Witches Mill."
Two years later he started a "coven" while running
Cecil Wilkerson's "Witchcraft Museum" there, the first
in the world (the contents of which were later owned by Ripleys).
Among the many well known priestesses he ordained we must include
Doreen Valiente (who dramatically rewrote most of his early ritual
materials, and probably the other fiction as well, before starting
her many excellent books, including An
ABC of Witchcraft Past and Present, Witchcraft
for Tomorrow, and Witchcraft: a Tradition Renewed),
Patricia Crowther (also author of several books, including Lid
off the Cauldron, Witches Were for Hanging
and the forthcoming autobiography, High
Priestess), Monica Wilson, Eleonore Ray Bone, Rosemary
Buckland and others.
In 1954, Murray published The
Divine King in England, in which she essentially
claimed that every king of England had died ritually, as in Frazer's
Golden Bough. By this time there were few scholars in
the world who would believe her arguments, based as they were
on obsolete evidence and sloppy logic. But there were plenty
of would-be witches happy to accept it all.
Witchcraft and the Straight Counterculture
From the late 1950's on, new covens split
off from Gerald's original one, both legitimately (through the
process known as "hiving off") and illegitimately (through
the process known as "stealing a copy of the Book of
Shadows"). The latter groups generally claimed to belong
to "traditions" of Witchcraft that predated Gardner,
as did the members of other competing Witchcraft religions in
England, yet somehow almost all of them wound up using rituals
that were obviously derived from early versions of Gardner's.
The first and most famous of these thieves, Alex Sanders, was
the one who started referring to Gardner's new religion as "the
Gardnerian Tradition" or "Gardnerianism." Gardner
himself called it simply "the Art" until 1958, when
he started calling it "the Craft" or "the Old
Order" or "Wica" (with a single "c").
Later thieves and imitators settled on the last term, eventually
restoring the missing second "c."
According to a letter seen by Aidan Kelley,
Alex Sanders (who was later to make a career for himself as the
King of the Witches) was initiated in 1963 by Patricia
(Pickering) Crowther, one of Gardner's priestesses. Later, Jessie
Wicker Bell or "Lady Sheba," author of Lady Sheba's
Book of Shadows (which was a plaigerism of parts of Gardner's
Book of Shadows), was initiated, probably to the Second
Degree only, by Alex or one of his coven, possibly by mail! She
attempted in the 1970's to get herself declared "Queen of
the Witches" of America. Ray and Rosemary Buckland were
initiated into Gardner's coven, probably by the Wilsons, to all
three Degrees in one weekend (not really unusual by Masonic custom,
by the way).
Almost all of the significant core materials
in the original BOS have been published at one time or another,
either by Gardner himself, his followers and spiritual descendants,
or various plagiarists trying to cash in on his work. It has
not been difficult to learn the basic polytheology and rituals
of the Craft, especially since most of it was borrowed from well-known
occult authors, and I have violated no oaths in my retelling
of the tales. Many sincere people, perhaps inspired by the Goddess
and unable to contact a working coven of any tradition, have
simply created their own traditions of Neopagan Witchcraft from
the available published materials.
Traditions of Wicca can be ranged on a spectrum
of orthodoxy-to-heterodoxy thusly: the Gardnerians, Alexandrians,
and other groups that call themselves "British Traditionalists"
are the oldest and the most conservative. The New Reformed Orthodox
Order of the Golden Dawn ("NROOGD"), the gay/bisexual/straight
groups who call themselves "Elvish" or "Fairy
Traditions" (including that of Starhawk's, author of The
Spiral Dance), and the various feminist groups, are
all on the liberal or heterodox side of the spectrum. Most other
Wiccan groups fall somewhere in between.
Many on the orthodox side like to make a dichotomy
(sometimes a dualism) between themselves as "Traditionalists"
and all the others as "Eclectics." Some Wiccan groups
cheerfully call themselves "Eclectic," but the word
is often used by the conservatives to imply that the liberals
don't have The Real Truth and have to make things up as they
go along. Similarly, the word "traditional" is often
used by the liberals to mean "stuffy." The vast majority
of Wiccans are religiously neither conservative nor liberal (on
this particular spectrum), but somewhere in the middle, so they
are usually accused by members of each extreme of belonging to
the "enemy" camp.
In point of fact, beyond all the arrogance
and egotism of these arguments, the primary difference between
the eclecticism practiced by both the orthodox and the heterodox
Wiccans, going all the way back to Gardner himself, is not the
amount of material borrowed from other sources, but rather
the speed at which new material is accepted as a permanent
part of each tradition/denomination.
I cannot in this short study give an adequate
history of how Gardner's followers carried the faith to America
and elsewhere. Suffice it to say, that by the middle 60's, there
were a handful of Gardnarian "covens" operating in
the United States and Canada, and other parts of the English
speaking world (Aidan Kelley's Crafting the Art of Magic
(though severely flawed by cheap shots at Gardner's sexuality)
and Margot Adler's Drawing
Down the Moon cover this material well). But the
next step in the evolution of the word "witch" occured
in the late 60's with the dawning of the "counterculture."
Whenever drugs with strong mind-altering tendencies
become common in a culture or subculture (I'm speaking of hallucinogens
here) one of the usual reactions is a renewed interest in matters
magical and mystical. Drugs are frequently used in tribal cultures
to help train young magicians and priests/priestesses, because
they give a direct appreciation of the magical Law
of Infinite Universes and the related concept of "multiple
levels of reality." Drugs are an integral part of magical
systems around the world and an interest in either topic (drugs
or magic) sometimes leads to an interest in the other.
So the hippies became interested in magic,
mysticism, psychic phenomena and new religious experiences. Several
individuals started up religious groups of the sort that have
since become known by their members as "Neopagan,"
because they attempt to recreate or invent new religions using
the old (or "Paleopagan") polytheistic faiths as guides.
Naturally, Gardnerian Witchcraft, with its Goddess, Horned God
and unspecified other deities fit very nicely into this mold,
although at the time it was still fairly Mesopagan, and the followers
of Gardner received an unexpected population explosion. The handful
of Gardnerian covens (real and imitators) became a dozen, then
a score, then a hundred...
But during this period of the late 60's and
early 70's (known as the "occult boom") members of
these various Neopagan groups were communicating with each other
through the pages of such periodicals as Green Egg, the
Waxing Moon, the Crystal Well and others, Soon
it became clear to everyone that the Gardnerians were Neopagans
(or could be with a little work), and they and their offshoots
(Alexandrians, Algards, Shebites, etc.) became increasingly termed
"Neopagan Witches," by the Neopagan community.
The First Neopagan Heretic
These Neopagan Witches began to hold conventions
and other meetings, at one of which a major bombshell exploded,
flung by yours truly. At a "Witchmeet" held in Minneapolis
on September 20-23, 1973 c.e., I gave a speech entitled "The
Witch-Cult -- Fact or Fancy?" This was based upon an earlier
article by myself in Tournaments Illuminated, under the
title "Where Hast Thou Been Sister?" and dealt with
most of the materials mentioned in this study.
The result was that I became the first universally
recognized heretic in the Neopagan movements (for by that time
I had been a priest in the Reformed Druids of North America for
several years, and I considered them such). Stunned silence,
then angry shouting greeted my speech. This turned into a positive
roar of anger and hostility after the speech was published (sans
the Bibliography, alas!) in Gnostica News, Llewellyn's
in-house magazine which I was later to edit for two years.
Rebuttals were written and published in Gnostica
News, angry letters poured in to the Neopagan media from
all over the country, then slowly, one by one, various Neopagan
Witchcraft leaders began to publish letters and articles saying,
in essence, "that so-and-so Bonewits is right," though
hardly any of them mentioned my name. Instead they began to talk
about the need for honesty in relating the past of Neopagan Witchcraft,
about the joys of creating whole new religions, about how their
movement could be redefined as a reconstruction from scattered
fragments of how the Old Religions (plural now) might have been,
and so forth. Today, almost every major leader of a Neopagan
Witchcraft sect admits (at least in private) that I was right
and some of them have become friends.
I have mentioned all of this for reasons other
than those of personal pride. Future historians should know the
exact date and action that caused a major change in the faith
known as Neopagan Witchcraft. Twenty-seven years later, only
a handful still believe the dogma that their sects are literally
descended in an unbroken line from the imaginary Universal Goddess
Cult. However, there is one rather sizable exception.
Feminist Witchcraft
For there were other things going on in America
in the early 70's. Perhaps the most important phenomenon was
the rise of the feminist movements. Many feminists were members
of groups seeking new spiritual directions, away from the male-dominated
"great religions." This "women's spirituality
movement" became a strong part of feminist consciousness
for many women, some of whom (perhaps inevitably) ran into some
Neopagan Witches. Morning Glory Zell, spouse and priestess to
the founder of the Neopagan Church of All Worlds, the artist
formerly known as Tim or Otter Zell, claims to have been the
first Neopagan to attend a major feminist event and to speak
about "the Goddess" to the participants.
The discovery of a religion in the 20th century
that worshipped a Goddess was quite a delightful shock. Many
women suddenly felt "at home," and in ever-increasing
numbers many of them had spiritual experiences with this Goddess.
There were already several of the Neopagan Witchcraft leaders
(of both genders) who considered themselves feminists, so an
alliance or merging of the two movements was a natural outgrowth
of their meeting.
There had already been several of the Neopagan
sects (Wiccan and non-Wiccan) which had downplayed the Horned
God part of the theology almost to the point of removing Him
from the religion entirely. Perhaps these were the ones which
had the highest population of strong women to begin with. When
politically active feminists (especially the lesbians and the
feminist separatists) entered "the Craft" and spun
off to start their own all-women covens, they decided that they
could do perfectly well without the Horned God at all.
The result was the creation of a new form
of Witchcraft: "Feminist Witchcraft," a faith originally
based on the Gardnerian systems but which became increasingly
different as various women decided to form new covens (often
with no real knowledge of or contact with the Neopagan ones)
in which a great deal of experimentation and creativity took
place.
There are a number of dogmas that were soon
believed in by most Feminist Witches, the majority of which match
those of the Neopagan Witches prior to my speech of 1973. These
are, as a general rule, even more extreme in their statements
(i.e., the Universal Goddess Cult covered the entire world, not
just Europe; it goes back 100,000 years, not just 10,000; and
so forth), and their scholarly research is even more sloppy.
Any historical, semi-historical or psuedo-historical theory by
any writer (qualified or not) which bolsters their dogmas in
a desired fashion is seized upon and expanded. Statements or
theories which do not support them are ignored as being the products
of male or male-dominated minds, and therefore irrelevant.
The Feminist covens grew (and are still growing)
at a spectacular rate and members of these groups may very well
outnumber those of the Neopagan sects they are a spinoff from.
The number of groups of women who have formed covens completely
independently is impossible to surmise and their thealogies are
no doubt quite mixed, but feminist revisionist "herstory"
is probably common to all of them.
So while the Neopagan Witches were slowly
ceasing to claim literal truth for their religious theories of
history during the middle 70's, the Feminist Witches continued
those same fantasies, and in fact made them more spectacular
and archetypically rich. It has only been in the last decade
or so, that some Feminist Witches have begun to doubt these dogmas.
Perhaps it is finally becoming known that dozens of committed
feminist historians, anthropologists and archeologists of both
genders have been unable to find a shred of evidence to support
the ideas about matriarchies having ever existed, or about there
ever having been an organized religion of Witchcraft in Europe,
or about the likelihood of the intact transmission of a complex
pre-Christian tradition.
I suspect that the feminist movement will
continue like every other political movement in history, to produce
sloppily researched tomes to support its ideals. There is, after
all, no such thing as completely unbiased scholarship and feminists
should be allowed to exercise their historical creativity as
much as any other political group. But I have been noticing increasing
communication between Neopagan and Feminist priestesses and a
gradual transmission of accurate data about the history of what
both groups call "the Craft." Within another decade
or two Feminist Witchcraft groups may well be admitting that
their various sects are not ancient relics, but rather brilliant
and beautiful creations of modern religious geniuses.
Let me stress here that the relative youth
of Neopagan and Feminist Witchcraft, compared to other religions,
is utterly irrelevant to any judgments of spiritual power and
worth. The deities whom Neopagan and Feminist Witches worship
are ancient, no matter how new our religions might be. A large
part of the maturing of the Neopagan community over the past
ten years has been precisely the realization that we don't have
to tell fibs about an unbroken line of succession going back
to the Stone Age in order to have a worthwhile faith
Classifying Witchcrafts
Mind you, this entire discussion of Witchcraft
in the 20th Century has been limited to those individuals and
movements which speak English or American as their mother tongue.
There are thousands of people using various systems of magic
and religion in their own ethnic neighborhoods, who are called
"witches" by many English speakers. In their own languages
(Spanish, Portuguese, Chinese, Japanese, Hawaiian, etc.) they
are called various names which translate out as "priest
or priestess," "healer," "magician,"
"sorcerer or sorceress," and so forth. These often
bear a minor or major simularity to those I have termed "Classic"
or "Gothic" Witches, but in order to keep them clearly
distinguished from our European ancestors, I prefer to call them
"Ethnic Witches," if one has call them any sort of
witch at all.
At this point it would probably be best to
close this study with a review of the classification system I
have presented herein, which I sincerely believe to be one that
will enable the historian, anthropologist, sociologist or theologian
to distinguish the various European and American sorts of "witches"
from one another. As with the words "artist," "doctor,"
or "priest," the word "witch" is almost meaningless
without some sort of qualifying adjective in front of it.
I have used the following terms in this classification
system: Classic and Neoclassic, Gothic and Neogothic, Family
Tradition or Fam-Trad, Immigrant Tradition or Imm-Trad, Neopagan,
Feminist, Ethnic, and Anthropological Witchcraft.
A "Classic Witch" was someone using
herbal remedies and poisons, magic and divination, and practicing
midwifery and other forms of healing on animals and humans. His
or her religion may well have been irrelevant to his or her techniques.
Some became Christians (or Moslems in Spain and Portugal), others
may have retained a certain amount of pre-Christian religious
tradition. Classic Witches have continued to exist to this very
day, in ever dwindling numbers. "Neoclassic Witches"
refers to all those people today who call themselves "witches"
because they are studying herbology, ESP, Tarot, etc., and who
are trying to be modern equivalents of Classic Witches.
"Gothic Witchcraft" or "Satanism"
was the invention of Medieval Christianity, and was said to consist
of people who worshipped the Christian Devil in exchange for
magical powers that they used to harm people with. Gothic Witchcraft
is what most Christians have in mind when they talk about "witches,"
and this concept is also responsible for the Disney stereotype.
"Neogothic Witches" are modern Satanists
who try to follow what the Christians say witches should do.
Some of them perform "Black Masses," commit blasphemy
and sacrilege, hold (or at least long to hold) orgies, etc. They
are almost always "losers" as far as their psychology
is concerned, but some are genuinely sick.
"Family Traditions" or "Fam-Trads"
(also called "Hereditary Witches") are supposedly families
that have been underground Pagans and occultists for generations,
getting away with it by a combination of wealth, power and camouflage.
None of them could have a pure tradition by now, though some
who call themselves by this term claim they do. 99.9% of all
the people I have ever met who claimed to be Fam-trad Witches
were lying, or had been lied to by their teachers.
"Immigrant Traditions" or "Imm-Trads"
refer to both supposed Fam-Trads and Classic Witches and peasants
who moved to America and tried to keep their faith alive. Many
of these mingled their beliefs with those of the Native Americans
and the African slaves, helping to produce the dozens of kinds
of Voodoo or Voudoun, as well as Pennsylvania "hex"
magic and Appalachian magical lore.
"Neopagan Witchcraft" is primarily
the invention of Gerald Gardner and Doreen Valiente. It started
out Mesopagan, and only after arriving in America did it become
Neopagan. It is a duotheistic religion whose members may call
themselves "Wiccans," "followers of Wicca."
"members of the Old Religion," "Crafters"
and/or "members of the Craft." They worship a Goddess
who is a combination of Greco-Roman and Celtic goddesses of the
Moon, the Earth and the Sea, and who is usually described as
having three "aspects" or archetypal images: "the
Mother, the Maiden and the Crone." Most but not all Neopagan
Witches also worship a Horned God who is a combination of Greco-Roman
and Celtic fertility, hunting and sun gods. Where both the Goddess
and the Horned God are worshipped, the former is almost always
superior in power and importance.
"Feminist Witchcraft" is partially
an outgrowth of Neopagan Witchcraft (with the Horned God unceremoniously
booted out of the religion entirely) and partially a conglomeration
of independent and eclectic do-it-yourself covens of spiritually
inclined feminists. It is still very much in the process of formation
and like most new religions is insecure about its history, so
its members tell and believe a number of unlikely tales about
ancient religions and their supposed survival to this day.
"Ethnic Witchcraft" is a catch-all
term for those various practitioners of non-English religious
and magical systems, such as Candomble, Santeria, Huna, Voodoo,
etc. Anglos call them "witches," so eventually some
of them started using the term themselves,
"Anthropological Witches" are people
that English-speaking anthropologists call "witches,"
usually meaning anyone in a culture or subculture who is doing
magic (usually suspected of being evil) outside of the accepted
social structures, and/or is a monster in disguise who can curse
people with the "evil eye." This, in fact, is fairly
close to Paleopagan attitudes towards "bad" Classic
Witches, so their use of the term is entirely logical.
I would like to stress again, now that
I have come to the end of this long story, that this is an incomplete
"beta version" of what will eventually become a full
length book. Comments are welcome, though I may not be able to
respond directly, and legitimate scholarly feedback will be incorporated
in future editions.