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#magick history
lunasapphire · 6 months
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The Occult, Witchcraft, and magic
An illustrated history
By: Christopher Dell
Page: 12
“In 1319 the Franciscan friar Bérnard Delicieux was sent to prison for owning a book of necromancy.”
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fallbabylon · 21 days
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Hex! Museum of Witchcraft-Ribe, Denmark
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upennmanuscripts · 3 months
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Everybody look at your hands!
Diagrams of hands from:
Ms. Codex 1663: For palm reading, f. 122r ff Ms. Codex 1680: For use in chiromancy, f. 77r Ms. Codex 1690: Hand of the Philosopher, p. 193 Ms. Coll. 390 Item 778: Manual and guide for a palm reader Ms. Codex 1248: Guidonian hand, f. 122r
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mila-stardust · 1 year
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Book Of Shadows
。・:*:・゚★,。・:*:・゚☆
I've been editing my Book of Shadows for a few days now and I think it's time to share some of it here. These are just a few excerpts from it. I purposely made it black&white so it looks Victorian and uses less ink when printed on parchment paper.
1. History of Paganism
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2. Satanic Panic
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3. The Sacred Circle & Altar
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4. Lunar Transit
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5. Moon Phases
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6. Wheel of the Year + Imbolc
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Keep in mind that these are just some of the random pages I picked so it's unorganized. I'll be sharing my Table of Contents next time to show you how I organized it all.
P.S. Almost all of the fonts are free to download from Dafont. So if you want any font from these pages let me know :) We do not gatekeep here!
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x-heesy · 2 months
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𝙻𝚘𝚟𝚎 🤍
𝚃𝚠𝚘 𝚖𝚞𝚜𝚕𝚒𝚗 𝚍𝚛𝚎𝚜𝚜𝚎𝚜 𝚍𝚎𝚌𝚘𝚛𝚊𝚝𝚎𝚍 𝚠𝚒𝚝𝚑 𝚎𝚖𝚋𝚛𝚘𝚒𝚍𝚎𝚛𝚢, 1808 𝚊𝚗𝚍 1815
#fashion #fashiongram #fashionable #fashionphotography #fashionlover #fashionart #fashionaddict #fashionphotographer #fashionpost #fashionshoot #fashionlove #fashionlovers #fashioneditoral #editoral #catwalk @bixlasagna
𝙵𝚊𝚋𝚕𝚎𝚜 & 𝙵𝚊𝚒𝚛𝚢𝚝𝚊𝚕𝚎𝚜 - 𝙳𝚎𝚗𝚒𝚣 𝙺𝚞𝚛𝚝𝚎𝚕 𝚁𝚎𝚖𝚒𝚡 𝚋𝚢 𝙽/𝚊, 𝚁𝚘𝚜𝚒𝚗𝚊 ✨
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essektheylyss · 4 months
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I'm sorry, that's the FUNNIEST effect of a magic(k)al object. Here, have some fake visions of shagging a nun.
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Hoodoo 101 - Jezebel Root
What is Jezebel root & why is it used in Traditional Hoodoo & Vodou?
Jezebel Root is a feminine root used in traditional Hoodoo & Vodou for dominating a wealthy man, sugar daddy or powerful person and is sometimes used for hexing or cursing. This root was named after a mythical biblical figure Queen Jezebel who belonged the Omri dynasty of the Kingdom Israel in 852 BC. As a controversial figure, she was known to be extremely cunning and ruthless, using her power to gain the upper hand by any means necessary. Historically this plant has been used by ADOS who practiced Hoodoo & Vodou, for a variety of reasons. The Jezebel stereotype was an oppressive image that was used for the sexual assault and servitude of black women during chattel slavery in the US. This root was typically associated with brothels, working girls, vaudeville/showgirls and mistresses who needed to keep their bills paid and food on their tables, by attracting abundance and docility from rich clients to better their lives as a means of survival.
Today this root is still very potent and extremely beneficial for anyone who works in any type of service industry but is typically used by women seeking a luxury lifestyle via wealthy boyfriend or sugar daddy. Typically, these roots are fed or dressed in a variety of ways and placed in mojo bags, candles or other spells to manifest their intention.
Unfortunately, in modern times authentic Jezebel root has been extremely hard to come by and the majority of Jezebel root being sold on the market is actually common garden variety mulch or cherry bark. To the untrained eye it might resemble an actual root, especially when ground up. Here is a common example of fake jezebel root that you’ll typically see being sold in spiritual shops in person or online below.
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Real jezebel root should not resemble bark or any type of mulch. Depending on the maturity of the root, the main root will always have multiple smaller roots sprouting from it, unless they have been clipped or shaven off. It should always look like a root! Fake jezebel root is also easy to snap and like most bark, has a dark brown center. Real jezebel root should be somewhat flexible and have a white center, when broken open.
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While this is an easy to mistake to make, many trusted shops are STILL selling fake jezebel root to their clientele. I’ve always been passionate about collecting and providing authentic high-quality goods for myself and my patrons at an affordable price. So I’ve been working on a way to provide REAL Jezebel root to the public for the past few years.
I’m pleased to announce my shop will finally be offering in limited quantity plant shares of Jezebel root to purchase during the upcoming spring season of 2023 under our new indoor grow system.
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Click HERE to Shop authentic Jezebel Root
Limited to one per person. We also offer Shop Installments via Affirm and accept PayPal & Apple Pay.
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arsanimarum · 2 years
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The twenty-first Key of the Tarot, surrounded by Mystic and Masonic seals - Eliphas Lévi, 1922.
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lunavenefica · 2 years
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⛤Fairies, Elves and Vile in Slav History and Myth⛤
Many of us know a lot about Greek, Roman and Viking mythology but few of us have ever heard about Slavic folklore.
This is partly due to the attitude of the Church, which throughout history was mostly negative towards mythological beings, holidays and customs from Slavic mythology. 
The myth of fairies (“vile”) is common to many Slavic peoples, and is one of the most widespread and oldest myths. 
We get the first information about fairies in our area from Procopius of Caesarea (6th century), who says that the Slavs "respect rivers and nymphs, as well as other demons, and offer sacrifices to all of them, and on that occasion also do fortune-telling."
In Slavic mythology there are only fairies as supernatural beings, mysterious women who live in nature, mostly on mountains, by lakes and streams or in them, next to springs or in the ground, in special caves and pits. 
Fairies resemble human women, boast a special beauty and have no wings. 
They are tall and slender, with lush hair that is either loose or braided. 
They wear white clothes, and sometimes they have a golden crown, a golden star or an evergreen wreath on their head.
In some stories, fairies have several physical flaws. 
In one version, their hair stinks terribly, and in another version, instead of human feet, they have cat's paws, horse hooves or mule and donkey hooves, and goat or cow legs, which they then hide well. 
Maybe that's why fairies love horses so much. 
If someone's horse stays outside the barn overnight, they play with it until dawn and braid its mane. 
Fairies are mostly good or neutral, but you have to be careful around them because they are easy to anger. 
They help people by giving them useful things, they look after the flock while shepherds sleep, heal people with herbs or teach them which herbs have healing properties. 
They show the way to a lost traveler, strengthen the soldiers and put to sleep a crying child in the cradle. 
Sometimes the fairies make it a condition that the person to whom they gave the gift must not look at the gift until he gets home. 
If the person bows down and looks, the gift turns into coal, eggshell, and the like. 
The four-leaf clover is known in Slavic countries as fairy grass, and the person who finds it will bring luck and wealth, but also great misfortune if he throws the clover into the fire.
Admittedly, sometimes they know how to steal a child they particularly like (most often a beautiful and gifted child) and raise it as their own. 
Sometimes they steal a child and plant their child instead (like changelings). 
Although there are no elves, fairies like to seduce human youths and have offspring with them. 
Men who are somehow related to the fairies are called elves, elves, or elves, but they are definitely of human origin. 
If someone finds the fairies combing at the well, they take him with them. 
They like to take revenge on humans if they break their oath or if they do not accept fairy friendship. 
Those who accept fairy friendship often become clairvoyant or become skilled clairvoyants.
In addition to children, fairies also know how to kidnap adults. 
A myth was recorded in Novigrad that says that fairies know how to kidnap a man and give him the knowledge of divination. They do this by taking him to the mountain where they live. The initiation of man takes place next to an old tree, which is a frequent initiation symbol in many mythologies.
It was also believed that fairies feed on honey, lambs, little pigs or eat lard. 
Word comes  that they ate the crumbs that were left on the table after people had eaten their meal. 
Fairies do not drink water from anywhere but pure springs. 
Sometimes their power was thought to reside in the golden belt or scarf they wore and if it was taken away, they lost their power. 
That power was great, and this is best described by the legend that says that the Arena in Pula was built by fairies in one night. 
They took stones from Učka and stacked them in a circle. 
But fairies, in this version, are creatures of the night and when they heard the song of the first hen in the morning, they had to stop working. 
Because of this, the Arena remained unfinished.
Suđenice (destinies, sujenices, birth women) are also some kind of fairy creatures that determine a person's fate at the moment of birth. 
There are usually three judges who decide the child's fate after birth, and it will be as the last judge says. 
They are invisible to people unless a person has a fern flower with them, and a woman in labor can hear them if she stays up all night. 
In some regions, there was a custom of leaving food on the table, which the judges would then eat and then be gentle and benevolent in divination of the child's fate.
Women who claimed to be particularly skilled in healing and that fairies had taught them to do so were called elves. 
There is a case dating back to 1660 when a notice was received "to the captain of Janjina in the Republic of Dubrovnik, Ivan Gučetić, that there were elves and witches in his captaincy". The captain ordered one of those elves to be brought because he was interested in what elves could do. 
The elf replied that she knew how to heal and that she had been taught it by Aunt Vila, who appeared to her in a white robe, in the form of a nun. 
She also claimed to be able to tell who was harmed by a witch and whether that person would recover or not. 
From this statement, the mixing of the older mythology about fairies with newer Christian elements is obvious. 
The reform of the Church, the fierce Protestant criticism of the situation in the Christian world of that time and the Council of Trent (1545-1563) initiated processes that strongly influenced Europe. 
Namely, in addition to the reform of the Church, there was also a "reform of folk culture" when elves were put in a negative context, even though they had not previously attracted too much attention in church circles. 
In the 17th century, elves were equated with witches, which meant that they were equally subject to persecution. 
The practice of persecuting women accused of possessing supernatural powers was put to an end by Maria Theresa in 1756, and two years later, courts in Slavic countries were prohibited from conducting any trials against witches, elves and sorcery without the empress's direct permission.
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⛤Isidora⛤
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mise-n-abyme · 2 months
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"Through the initial workings of the mind, we have the ability to conceive of a reality which beholds the essence of an ancient spirit; expressing dutiful reckonings of Being through moments which reign endless teachings." ~Mise-n-abyme
|Artwork: 'Birth of Athena', Atalanta Fugiens —Michael Maier (17h century)
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lunasapphire · 6 months
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Know The Difference✨
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fallbabylon · 8 months
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Duloe Stone Circle- Kernow
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appalachianmystic · 18 hours
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“A lady, her cat, and her Cannabis garden.”
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x-heesy · 5 days
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𝙿𝚒𝚗𝚔 𝚍𝚛𝚎𝚜𝚜𝚎𝚜 𝚋𝚢 𝙷𝚘𝚞𝚜𝚎 𝚘𝚏 𝚆𝚘𝚛𝚝𝚑 (1858–1956), 𝙵𝚛𝚊𝚗𝚌𝚎
(𝙳𝚎𝚝𝚊𝚒𝚕𝚜) #vintage #vintagefashion
#fashion #fashiongram #fashionable #fashionphotography #fashionlover #fashionart #fashionaddict #fashionphotographer #fashionpost #fashionshoot #fashionlove #fashionlovers #fashioneditoral #editoral #catwalk #history #historyofart #historycal #historyfacts #historylovers #historyinpictures #historymade #historygeek #historyera #historyphoto #historyclass #historychannel #historylesson #historygram #historynerd #historytour #historyofphotography #historyplace #historylover #historyphotographed #historymatters #historyoffashion #historyiscool #arthistory #historical #historicalplaces #historicalpix #historicalclothing #historicalphotos #historicalromance #historicalmonument #historicalfacts #historicalart #historicalsnapshots #historicalphotography #historicalphoto #historicalpictures #historicalhome #historicalcenter #historicaldesign #historicalfantasy #historicalusociety #fashion #fashiongram #fashionable #fashionphotography #fashionlover #fashionart #fashionaddict #fashionphotographer #fashionpost #fashionshoot #fashionlove #fashionlovers #fashioneditoral #editoral #catwalk
𝚂𝚘𝚞𝚗𝚍𝚝𝚛𝚊𝚌𝚔: 𝙵𝚊𝚋𝚕𝚎𝚜 & 𝙵𝚊𝚒𝚛𝚢𝚝𝚊𝚕𝚎𝚜 - 𝙳𝚎𝚗𝚒𝚣 𝙺𝚞𝚛𝚝𝚎𝚕 𝚁𝚎𝚖𝚒𝚡 𝚋𝚢 𝙽/𝚊, 𝚁𝚘𝚜𝚒𝚗𝚊
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othmeralia · 2 years
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John Dee needed to make this note about good angels... I wonder what he wrote about bad angels!
Found inside: A true and faithful relation of what passed for many yeers between Dr. John Dee (a mathematician of great fame in Q. Eliz. and King James their reignes) and some spirits
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akonoadham · 9 months
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