HELLO.... A while ago I began creating a work of the Craft. I wanted it to be full of the feel of traditional magicks, but also very practical, ~ cool and current. I called it, ~ Bad Ass: Living And Spells. I soon realized it would develop into a series. Here you will find the "lace and trimmings" of that first volume, plus many more extra fascinations. PLEASE MAKE SURE to scroll down to the very end of this page so as to NOT MISS any of unusual, exquisite things there!!! *********
Yes...
AND, --- while you are being MAGICAL >>> This is what you should do: love the earth and sun and the animals, despise riches, give alms to everyone that asks, stand up for the stupid and crazy, devote your income and labor to others, hate tyrants, argue not concerning God, have patience and indulgence toward the people, take off your hat to nothing known or unknown or to any man or number of men ... re-examine all you have been told at school or church or in any book, dismiss what insults your own soul, and your very flesh shall be a great poem. --- Walt Whitman
Thursday, October 31, 2024
Britain's Last Executed Witch May Have Survived...
The last woman believed to have been executed in England for witchcraft may have avoided the gallows, according to new research.
Alice Molland was sentenced at Exeter Castle, Devon, in 1685 for "bewitching" three of her neighbours.
She was presumed to have been executed in the city's Heavitree area in the same year, making her England's last executed witch.
Prof Stoyle's research suggests that the court documents from the time contained a spelling mistake, and Alice Molland might actually have been called Avis Molland.
He said: "Court records from the 17th century were written in Latin, and in this form it would only have taken a single mis-stroke of the clerk of the court's pen to transform 'Avicia' (Avis) into 'Alicia' (Alice)."
"Almost nothing is known about Alice's life and attempts to illuminate it have failed."
Molland was an unusual name in Exeter, so when Prof Stoyle saw a reference to an Avis Molland in some local archives, he was struck by its close resemblance.
"I immediately asked myself, did Alice Molland ever exist? Is Alice, in fact, Avis?"
According to records from the time, Avis Molland had been married with three children - but they all died.
"By the time of the 1685 trial, Avis Molland was a poor, middle-aged widow, who was burdened with loss - precisely the kind of woman who was likely to be accused of witchcraft in early modern England," Prof Stoyle said.
He added circumstantial evidence suggested Avis was imprisoned at Exeter Castle at the same time as the trial for Alice was listed.
Avis died eight years after the supposed execution of Alice in 1693.
Had there been a simple spelling mistake, the last executed witches in England would in fact be the Bideford Three - Temperance Lloyd, Susannah Edwards and Mary Trembles in 1682.
"The truth is, despite all my diligent searching, we may never know for sure whether history has got it wrong," Prof Stoyle added.
~ BBC, October 31, 2024.
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