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A Black Cauldron Molded Plastic Drink Serving Piece
9.5" WITCHES' CAULDRON PUNCH BOWL WITH LADLE
DETAILS:
Every Tasty Potion Starts In A Cauldron!
Elevate your Halloween festivities with a black cauldron punch bowl and ladle set — the perfect spooky serving piece for your haunted gatherings! Designed with a classic witch's brew aesthetic, this themed punch bowl features a textured, rounded cauldron, complete with a flat ring-style rim and side drop handles molded directly into the design (handles are fixed and do not move).
Though it may look very similar, this plastic cauldron punch bowl is not like the cauldrons used as Halloween decoration only as it is made of a more rigid plastic. Crafted from lightweight yet highly durable molded plastic, this sturdy cauldron measures approximately 9.5 inches in diameter and stands 6.25 inches tall, making it easy to transport and reuse across many haunting seasons. Its durable construction ensures long-lasting use, whether you're serving up festive drinks or simply adding a touch of magic to your décor.
Complementing the punch bowl is a sleek black ladle, also made from durable molded plastic, featuring an approximately 8-inch long stem for easy serving. Perfect for ladling out your favorite spooky beverages or potions, this set is ideal for Halloween parties, intimate family gatherings, or as a prop in your witch-themed décor setup.
Create a bewitching experience this Halloween with a black cauldron punch bowl & ladle set — a must-have for any spooky celebration or themed display!
Enhance It!
Using as a decorative prop? For added flair, the crafty and creative can enhance the cauldron bowl colored or strobe lighting, DIY faux bubbles (i.e. clear plastic baubles or mini balloons), and/or fog effects to up the eerie level and create the ultimate active witches' cauldron.
Dimensions:
Height: approx. 6.25"
Diameter: approx. 9.47"
Circumference: approx. 29.75"
CONDITION:
New without box. Please see photos.
To ensure safe delivery all items are carefully packaged before shipping out.
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"Halloween
or Hallowe'en (less commonly known as Allhalloween,[5] All Hallows'
Eve,[6] or All Saints' Eve)[7] is a celebration observed in many
countries on 31 October, the eve of the Western Christian feast of All
Saints' Day. It begins the observance of Allhallowtide,[8] the time in
the liturgical year dedicated to remembering the dead, including saints
(hallows), martyrs, and all the faithful departed.[9][10][11][12]
One
theory holds that many Halloween traditions were influenced by Celtic
harvest festivals, particularly the Gaelic festival Samhain, which are
believed to have pagan roots.[13][14][15][16] Some go further and
suggest that Samhain may have been Christianized as All Hallow's Day,
along with its eve, by the early Church.[17] Other academics believe
Halloween began solely as a Christian holiday, being the vigil of All
Hallow's Day.[18][19][20][21] Celebrated in Ireland and Scotland for
centuries, Irish and Scottish immigrants took many Halloween customs to
North America in the 19th century,[22][23] and then through American
influence Halloween had spread to other countries by the late 20th and
early 21st century.[24][25]
Popular Halloween activities include
trick-or-treating (or the related guising and souling), attending
Halloween costume parties, carving pumpkins or turnips into
jack-o'-lanterns, lighting bonfires, apple bobbing, divination games,
playing pranks, visiting haunted attractions, telling scary stories, and
watching horror or Halloween-themed films.[26] Some people practice the
Christian religious observances of All Hallows' Eve, including
attending church services and lighting candles on the graves of the
dead,[27][28][29] although it is a secular celebration for
others.[30][31][32] Some Christians historically abstained from meat on
All Hallows' Eve, a tradition reflected in the eating of certain
vegetarian foods on this vigil day, including apples, potato pancakes,
and soul cakes.[33][34][35][36]
Etymology
The word
Halloween or Hallowe'en ("Saints' evening"[37]) is of Christian
origin;[38][39] a term equivalent to "All Hallows Eve" is attested in
Old English.[40] The word hallowe[']en comes from the Scottish form of
All Hallows' Eve (the evening before All Hallows' Day):[41] even is the
Scots term for "eve" or "evening",[42] and is contracted to e'en or
een;[43] (All) Hallow(s) E(v)en became Hallowe'en.
History
Christian origins and historic customs
Halloween
is thought to have influences from Christian beliefs and
practices.[44][45] The English word 'Halloween' comes from "All Hallows'
Eve", being the evening before the Christian holy days of All Hallows'
Day (All Saints' Day) on 1 November and All Souls' Day on 2
November.[46] Since the time of the early Church,[47] major feasts in
Christianity (such as Christmas, Easter and Pentecost) had vigils that
began the night before, as did the feast of All Hallows'.[48][44] These
three days are collectively called Allhallowtide and are a time when
Western Christians honour all saints and pray for recently departed
souls who have yet to reach Heaven. Commemorations of all saints and
martyrs were held by several churches on various dates, mostly in
springtime.[49] In 4th-century Roman Edessa it was held on 13 May, and
on 13 May 609, Pope Boniface IV re-dedicated the Pantheon in Rome to "St
Mary and all martyrs".[50] This was the date of Lemuria, an ancient
Roman festival of the dead.[51]
In the 8th century, Pope Gregory
III (731–741) founded an oratory in St Peter's for the relics "of the
holy apostles and of all saints, martyrs and confessors".[44][52] Some
sources say it was dedicated on 1 November,[53] while others say it was
on Palm Sunday in April 732.[54][55] By 800, there is evidence that
churches in Ireland[56] and Northumbria were holding a feast
commemorating all saints on 1 November.[57] Alcuin of Northumbria, a
member of Charlemagne's court, may then have introduced this 1 November
date in the Frankish Empire.[58] In 835, it became the official date in
the Frankish Empire.[57] Some suggest this was due to Celtic influence,
while others suggest it was a Germanic idea,[57] although it is claimed
that both Germanic and Celtic-speaking peoples commemorated the dead at
the beginning of winter.[59] They may have seen it as the most fitting
time to do so, as it is a time of 'dying' in nature.[57][59] It is also
suggested the change was made on the "practical grounds that Rome in
summer could not accommodate the great number of pilgrims who flocked to
it", and perhaps because of public health concerns over Roman Fever,
which claimed a number of lives during Rome's sultry summers.[60][44]
On
All Hallows' Eve, Christians in some parts of the world visit
cemeteries to pray and place flowers and candles on the graves of their
loved ones.[61] Top: Christians in Bangladesh lighting candles on the
headstone of a relative. Bottom: Lutheran Christians praying and
lighting candles in front of the central crucifix of a graveyard.
By
the end of the 12th century, the celebration had become known as the
holy days of obligation in Western Christianity and involved such
traditions as ringing church bells for souls in purgatory. It was also
"customary for criers dressed in black to parade the streets, ringing a
bell of mournful sound and calling on all good Christians to remember
the poor souls".[62] The Allhallowtide custom of baking and sharing soul
cakes for all christened souls,[63] has been suggested as the origin of
trick-or-treating.[64] The custom dates back at least as far as the
15th century[65] and was found in parts of England, Wales, Flanders,
Bavaria and Austria.[66] Groups of poor people, often children, would go
door-to-door during Allhallowtide, collecting soul cakes, in exchange
for praying for the dead, especially the souls of the givers' friends
and relatives. This was called "souling".[65][67][68] Soul cakes were
also offered for the souls themselves to eat,[66] or the 'soulers' would
act as their representatives.[69] As with the Lenten tradition of hot
cross buns, soul cakes were often marked with a cross, indicating they
were baked as alms.[70] Shakespeare mentions souling in his comedy The
Two Gentlemen of Verona (1593).[71] While souling, Christians would
carry "lanterns made of hollowed-out turnips", which could have
originally represented souls of the dead;[72][73] jack-o'-lanterns were
used to ward off evil spirits.[74][75] On All Saints' and All Souls' Day
during the 19th century, candles were lit in homes in Ireland,[76]
Flanders, Bavaria, and in Tyrol, where they were called "soul
lights",[77] that served "to guide the souls back to visit their earthly
homes".[78] In many of these places, candles were also lit at graves on
All Souls' Day.[77] In Brittany, libations of milk were poured on the
graves of kinfolk,[66] or food would be left overnight on the dinner
table for the returning souls;[77] a custom also found in Tyrol and
parts of Italy.[79][77]
Christian minister Prince Sorie Conteh
linked the wearing of costumes to the belief in vengeful ghosts: "It was
traditionally believed that the souls of the departed wandered the
earth until All Saints' Day, and All Hallows' Eve provided one last
chance for the dead to gain vengeance on their enemies before moving to
the next world. In order to avoid being recognized by any soul that
might be seeking such vengeance, people would don masks or
costumes".[80] In the Middle Ages, churches in Europe that were too poor
to display relics of martyred saints at Allhallowtide let parishioners
dress up as saints instead.[81][82] Some Christians observe this custom
at Halloween today.[83] Lesley Bannatyne believes this could have been a
Christianization of an earlier pagan custom.[84] Many Christians in
mainland Europe, especially in France, believed "that once a year, on
Hallowe'en, the dead of the churchyards rose for one wild, hideous
carnival" known as the danse macabre, which was often depicted in church
decoration.[85] Christopher Allmand and Rosamond McKitterick write in
The New Cambridge Medieval History that the danse macabre urged
Christians "not to forget the end of all earthly things".[86] The danse
macabre was sometimes enacted in European village pageants and court
masques, with people "dressing up as corpses from various strata of
society", and this may be the origin of Halloween costume
parties.[87][88][89][72]
In Britain, these customs came under
attack during the Reformation, as Protestants berated purgatory as a
"popish" doctrine incompatible with the Calvinist doctrine of
predestination. State-sanctioned ceremonies associated with the
intercession of saints and prayer for souls in purgatory were abolished
during the Elizabethan reform, though All Hallow's Day remained in the
English liturgical calendar to "commemorate saints as godly human
beings".[90] For some Nonconformist Protestants, the theology of All
Hallows' Eve was redefined; "souls cannot be journeying from Purgatory
on their way to Heaven, as Catholics frequently believe and assert.
Instead, the so-called ghosts are thought to be in actuality evil
spirits".[91] Other Protestants believed in an intermediate state known
as Hades (Bosom of Abraham).[92] In some localities, Catholics and
Protestants continued souling, candlelit processions, or ringing church
bells for the dead;[46][93] the Anglican church eventually suppressed
this bell-ringing.[94] Mark Donnelly, a professor of medieval
archaeology, and historian Daniel Diehl write that "barns and homes were
blessed to protect people and livestock from the effect of witches, who
were believed to accompany the malignant spirits as they traveled the
earth".[95] After 1605, Hallowtide was eclipsed in England by Guy Fawkes
Night (5 November), which appropriated some of its customs.[96] In
England, the ending of official ceremonies related to the intercession
of saints led to the development of new, unofficial Hallowtide customs.
In 18th–19th century rural Lancashire, Catholic families gathered on
hills on the night of All Hallows' Eve. One held a bunch of burning
straw on a pitchfork while the rest knelt around him, praying for the
souls of relatives and friends until the flames went out. This was known
as teen'lay.[97] There was a similar custom in Hertfordshire, and the
lighting of 'tindle' fires in Derbyshire.[98] Some suggested these
'tindles' were originally lit to "guide the poor souls back to
earth".[99] In Scotland and Ireland, old Allhallowtide customs that were
at odds with Reformed teaching were not suppressed as they "were
important to the life cycle and rites of passage of local communities"
and curbing them would have been difficult.[22]
In parts of Italy
until the 15th century, families left a meal out for the ghosts of
relatives, before leaving for church services.[79] In 19th-century
Italy, churches staged "theatrical re-enactments of scenes from the
lives of the saints" on All Hallow's Day, with "participants represented
by realistic wax figures".[79] In 1823, the graveyard of Holy Spirit
Hospital in Rome presented a scene in which bodies of those who recently
died were arrayed around a wax statue of an angel who pointed upward
towards heaven.[79] In the same country, "parish priests went
house-to-house, asking for small gifts of food which they shared among
themselves throughout that night".[79] In Spain, they continue to bake
special pastries called "bones of the holy" (Spanish: Huesos de Santo)
and set them on graves.[100] At cemeteries in Spain and France, as well
as in Latin America, priests lead Christian processions and services
during Allhallowtide, after which people keep an all night vigil.[101]
In 19th-century San Sebastián, there was a procession to the city
cemetery at Allhallowtide, an event that drew beggars who "appeal[ed] to
the tender recollectons of one's deceased relations and friends" for
sympathy.[102]
Gaelic folk influence
Today's Halloween
customs are thought to have been influenced by folk customs and beliefs
from the Celtic-speaking countries, some of which are believed to have
pagan roots.[103] Jack Santino, a folklorist, writes that "there was
throughout Ireland an uneasy truce existing between customs and beliefs
associated with Christianity and those associated with religions that
were Irish before Christianity arrived".[104] The origins of Halloween
customs are typically linked to the Gaelic festival Samhain.[105]
Samhain
is one of the quarter days in the medieval Gaelic calendar and has been
celebrated on 31 October – 1 November[106] in Ireland, Scotland and the
Isle of Man.[107][108] A kindred festival has been held by the
Brittonic Celts, called Calan Gaeaf in Wales, Kalan Gwav in Cornwall and
Kalan Goañv in Brittany; a name meaning "first day of winter". For the
Celts, the day ended and began at sunset; thus the festival begins the
evening before 1 November by modern reckoning.[109] Samhain is mentioned
in some of the earliest Irish literature. The names have been used by
historians to refer to Celtic Halloween customs up until the 19th
century,[110] and are still the Gaelic and Welsh names for Halloween.
Samhain
marked the end of the harvest season and beginning of winter or the
'darker half' of the year.[112][113] It was seen as a liminal time, when
the boundary between this world and the Otherworld thinned. This meant
the Aos Sí, the 'spirits' or 'fairies', could more easily come into this
world and were particularly active.[114][115] Most scholars see them as
"degraded versions of ancient gods [...] whose power remained active in
the people's minds even after they had been officially replaced by
later religious beliefs".[116] They were both respected and feared, with
individuals often invoking the protection of God when approaching their
dwellings.[117][118] At Samhain, the Aos Sí were appeased to ensure the
people and livestock survived the winter. Offerings of food and drink,
or portions of the crops, were left outside for them.[119][120][121] The
souls of the dead were also said to revisit their homes seeking
hospitality.[122] Places were set at the dinner table and by the fire to
welcome them.[123] The belief that the souls of the dead return home on
one night of the year and must be appeased seems to have ancient
origins and is found in many cultures.[66] In 19th century Ireland,
"candles would be lit and prayers formally offered for the souls of the
dead. After this the eating, drinking, and games would begin".[124]
Throughout
Ireland and Britain, especially in the Celtic-speaking regions, the
household festivities included divination rituals and games intended to
foretell one's future, especially regarding death and marriage.[125]
Apples and nuts were often used, and customs included apple bobbing, nut
roasting, scrying or mirror-gazing, pouring molten lead or egg whites
into water, dream interpretation, and others.[126] Special bonfires were
lit and there were rituals involving them. Their flames, smoke, and
ashes were deemed to have protective and cleansing powers.[112] In some
places, torches lit from the bonfire were carried sunwise around homes
and fields to protect them.[110] It is suggested the fires were a kind
of imitative or sympathetic magic – they mimicked the Sun and held back
the decay and darkness of winter.[123][127][128] They were also used for
divination and to ward off evil spirits.[74] In Scotland, these
bonfires and divination games were banned by the church elders in some
parishes.[129] In Wales, bonfires were also lit to "prevent the souls of
the dead from falling to earth".[130] Later, these bonfires "kept away
the devil".[131]
From at least the 16th century,[133] the
festival included mumming and guising in Ireland, Scotland, the Isle of
Man and Wales.[134] This involved people going house-to-house in costume
(or in disguise), usually reciting verses or songs in exchange for
food. It may have originally been a tradition whereby people
impersonated the Aos Sí, or the souls of the dead, and received
offerings on their behalf, similar to 'souling'. Impersonating these
beings, or wearing a disguise, was also believed to protect oneself from
them.[135] In parts of southern Ireland, the guisers included a hobby
horse. A man dressed as a Láir Bhán (white mare) led youths
house-to-house reciting verses – some of which had pagan overtones – in
exchange for food. If the household donated food it could expect good
fortune from the 'Muck Olla'; not doing so would bring misfortune.[136]
In Scotland, youths went house-to-house with masked, painted or
blackened faces, often threatening to do mischief if they were not
welcomed.[134] F. Marian McNeill suggests the ancient festival included
people in costume representing the spirits, and that faces were marked
or blackened with ashes from the sacred bonfire.[133] In parts of Wales,
men went about dressed as fearsome beings called gwrachod.[134] In the
late 19th and early 20th century, young people in Glamorgan and Orkney
cross-dressed.[134]
Elsewhere in Europe, mumming was part of
other festivals, but in the Celtic-speaking regions, it was
"particularly appropriate to a night upon which supernatural beings were
said to be abroad and could be imitated or warded off by human
wanderers".[134] From at least the 18th century, "imitating malignant
spirits" led to playing pranks in Ireland and the Scottish Highlands.
Wearing costumes and playing pranks at Halloween did not spread to
England until the 20th century.[134] Pranksters used hollowed-out
turnips or mangel wurzels as lanterns, often carved with grotesque
faces.[134] By those who made them, the lanterns were variously said to
represent the spirits,[134] or used to ward off evil spirits.[137][138]
They were common in parts of Ireland and the Scottish Highlands in the
19th century,[134] as well as in Somerset (see Punkie Night). In the
20th century they spread to other parts of Britain and became generally
known as jack-o'-lanterns.[134]
Spread to North America
The
annual New York Halloween Parade in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, is
the world's largest Halloween parade, with millions of spectators
annually, and has its roots in New York’s queer community.[139]
Lesley
Bannatyne and Cindy Ott write that Anglican colonists in the southern
United States and Catholic colonists in Maryland "recognized All
Hallow's Eve in their church calendars",[140][141] although the Puritans
of New England strongly opposed the holiday, along with other
traditional celebrations of the established Church, including
Christmas.[142] Almanacs of the late 18th and early 19th century give no
indication that Halloween was widely celebrated in North America.[22]
It
was not until after mass Irish and Scottish immigration in the 19th
century that Halloween became a major holiday in America.[22] Most
American Halloween traditions were inherited from the Irish and
Scots,[23][143] though "In Cajun areas, a nocturnal Mass was said in
cemeteries on Halloween night. Candles that had been blessed were placed
on graves, and families sometimes spent the entire night at the
graveside".[144] Originally confined to these immigrant communities, it
was gradually assimilated into mainstream society and was celebrated
coast to coast by people of all social, racial, and religious
backgrounds by the early 20th century.[145] Then, through American
influence, these Halloween traditions spread to many other countries by
the late 20th and early 21st century, including to mainland Europe and
some parts of the Far East.[24][25][146]
Symbols
At
Halloween, yards, public spaces, and some houses may be decorated with
traditionally macabre symbols including skeletons, ghosts, cobwebs,
headstones, and scary looking witches.
Development of artifacts
and symbols associated with Halloween formed over time. Jack-o'-lanterns
are traditionally carried by guisers on All Hallows' Eve in order to
frighten evil spirits.[73][147] There is a popular Irish Christian
folktale associated with the jack-o'-lantern,[148] which in folklore is
said to represent a "soul who has been denied entry into both heaven and
hell":[149]
On route home after a night's drinking, Jack
encounters the Devil and tricks him into climbing a tree. A
quick-thinking Jack etches the sign of the cross into the bark, thus
trapping the Devil. Jack strikes a bargain that Satan can never claim
his soul. After a life of sin, drink, and mendacity, Jack is refused
entry to heaven when he dies. Keeping his promise, the Devil refuses to
let Jack into hell and throws a live coal straight from the fires of
hell at him. It was a cold night, so Jack places the coal in a hollowed
out turnip to stop it from going out, since which time Jack and his
lantern have been roaming looking for a place to rest.[150]
In
Ireland and Scotland, the turnip has traditionally been carved during
Halloween,[151][152] but immigrants to North America used the native
pumpkin, which is both much softer and much larger, making it easier to
carve than a turnip.[151] The American tradition of carving pumpkins is
recorded in 1837[153] and was originally associated with harvest time in
general, not becoming specifically associated with Halloween until the
mid-to-late 19th century.[154]
The modern imagery of Halloween
comes from many sources, including Christian eschatology, national
customs, works of Gothic and horror literature (such as the novels
Frankenstein; or, The Modern Prometheus and Dracula) and classic horror
films such as Frankenstein (1931) and The Mummy (1932).[155][156]
Imagery of the skull, a reference to Golgotha in the Christian
tradition, serves as "a reminder of death and the transitory quality of
human life" and is consequently found in memento mori and vanitas
compositions;[157] skulls have therefore been commonplace in Halloween,
which touches on this theme.[158] Traditionally, the back walls of
churches are "decorated with a depiction of the Last Judgment, complete
with graves opening and the dead rising, with a heaven filled with
angels and a hell filled with devils", a motif that has permeated the
observance of this triduum.[159] One of the earliest works on the
subject of Halloween is from Scottish poet John Mayne, who, in 1780,
made note of pranks at Halloween; "What fearfu' pranks ensue!", as well
as the supernatural associated with the night, "bogles" (ghosts),[160]
influencing Robert Burns' "Halloween" (1785).[161] Elements of the
autumn season, such as pumpkins, corn husks, and scarecrows, are also
prevalent. Homes are often decorated with these types of symbols around
Halloween. Halloween imagery includes themes of death, evil, and
mythical monsters.[162] Black cats, which have been long associated with
witches, are also a common symbol of Halloween. Black, orange, and
sometimes purple are Halloween's traditional colors.[163]
Trick-or-treating and guising
Trick-or-treating
is a customary celebration for children on Halloween. Children go in
costume from house to house, asking for treats such as candy or
sometimes money, with the question, "Trick or treat?" The word "trick"
implies a "threat" to perform mischief on the homeowners or their
property if no treat is given.[64] The practice is said to have roots in
the medieval practice of mumming, which is closely related to
souling.[164] John Pymm wrote that "many of the feast days associated
with the presentation of mumming plays were celebrated by the Christian
Church."[165] These feast days included All Hallows' Eve, Christmas,
Twelfth Night and Shrove Tuesday.[166][167] Mumming practiced in
Germany, Scandinavia and other parts of Europe,[168] involved masked
persons in fancy dress who "paraded the streets and entered houses to
dance or play dice in silence".[169]
In England, from the
medieval period,[170] up until the 1930s,[171] people practiced the
Christian custom of souling on Halloween, which involved groups of
soulers, both Protestant and Catholic,[93] going from parish to parish,
begging the rich for soul cakes, in exchange for praying for the souls
of the givers and their friends.[67] In the Philippines, the practice of
souling is called Pangangaluluwa and is practiced on All Hallow's Eve
among children in rural areas.[26] People drape themselves in white
cloths to represent souls and then visit houses, where they sing in
return for prayers and sweets.[26]
In Scotland and Ireland,
guising – children disguised in costume going from door to door for food
or coins – is a traditional Halloween custom.[172] It is recorded in
Scotland at Halloween in 1895 where masqueraders in disguise carrying
lanterns made out of scooped out turnips, visit homes to be rewarded
with cakes, fruit, and money.[152][173] In Ireland, the most popular
phrase for kids to shout (until the 2000s) was "Help the Halloween
Party".[172] The practice of guising at Halloween in North America was
first recorded in 1911, where a newspaper in Kingston, Ontario, Canada,
reported children going "guising" around the neighborhood.[174]
American
historian and author Ruth Edna Kelley of Massachusetts wrote the first
book-length history of Halloween in the US; The Book of Hallowe'en
(1919), and references souling in the chapter "Hallowe'en in
America".[175] In her book, Kelley touches on customs that arrived from
across the Atlantic; "Americans have fostered them, and are making this
an occasion something like what it must have been in its best days
overseas. All Halloween customs in the United States are borrowed
directly or adapted from those of other countries".[176]
While
the first reference to "guising" in North America occurs in 1911,
another reference to ritual begging on Halloween appears, place unknown,
in 1915, with a third reference in Chicago in 1920.[177] The earliest
known use in print of the term "trick or treat" appears in 1927, in the
Blackie Herald, of Alberta, Canada.[178]
The thousands of
Halloween postcards produced between the turn of the 20th century and
the 1920s commonly show children but not trick-or-treating.[179]
Trick-or-treating does not seem to have become a widespread practice in
North America until the 1930s, with the first US appearances of the term
in 1934,[180] and the first use in a national publication occurring in
1939.[181]
A popular variant of trick-or-treating, known as
trunk-or-treating (or Halloween tailgating), occurs when "children are
offered treats from the trunks of cars parked in a church parking lot",
or sometimes, a school parking lot.[100][182] In a trunk-or-treat event,
the trunk (boot) of each automobile is decorated with a certain
theme,[183] such as those of children's literature, movies, scripture,
and job roles.[184] Trunk-or-treating has grown in popularity due to its
perception as being more safe than going door to door, a point that
resonates well with parents, as well as the fact that it "solves the
rural conundrum in which homes [are] built a half-mile apart".[185][186]
Costumes
Halloween
costumes were traditionally modeled after figures such as vampires,
ghosts, skeletons, scary looking witches, and devils.[64] Over time, the
costume selection extended to include popular characters from fiction,
celebrities, and generic archetypes such as ninjas and princesses.
Dressing
up in costumes and going "guising" was prevalent in Scotland and
Ireland at Halloween by the late 19th century.[152] A Scottish term, the
tradition is called "guising" because of the disguises or costumes worn
by the children.[173] In Ireland and Scotland, the masks are known as
'false faces',[38][187] a term recorded in Ayr, Scotland in 1890 by a
Scot describing guisers: "I had mind it was Halloween . . . the wee
callans were at it already, rinning aboot wi’ their fause-faces (false
faces) on and their bits o’ turnip lanthrons (lanterns) in their haun
(hand)".[38] Costuming became popular for Halloween parties in the US in
the early 20th century, as often for adults as for children, and when
trick-or-treating was becoming popular in Canada and the US in the 1920s
and 1930s.[178][188]
Eddie J. Smith, in his book Halloween,
Hallowed is Thy Name, offers a religious perspective to the wearing of
costumes on All Hallows' Eve, suggesting that by dressing up as
creatures "who at one time caused us to fear and tremble", people are
able to poke fun at Satan "whose kingdom has been plundered by our
Saviour". Images of skeletons and the dead are traditional decorations
used as memento mori.[189][190]
"Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF" is a
fundraising program to support UNICEF,[64] a United Nations Programme
that provides humanitarian aid to children in developing countries.
Started as a local event in a Northeast Philadelphia neighborhood in
1950 and expanded nationally in 1952, the program involves the
distribution of small boxes by schools (or in modern times, corporate
sponsors like Hallmark, at their licensed stores) to trick-or-treaters,
in which they can solicit small-change donations from the houses they
visit. It is estimated that children have collected more than $118
million for UNICEF since its inception. In Canada, in 2006, UNICEF
decided to discontinue their Halloween collection boxes, citing safety
and administrative concerns; after consultation with schools, they
instead redesigned the program.[191][192]
The yearly New York's
Village Halloween Parade was begun in 1974; it is the world's largest
Halloween parade and America's only major nighttime parade, attracting
more than 60,000 costumed participants, two million spectators, and a
worldwide television audience.[193]
Since the late 2010s, ethnic
stereotypes as costumes have increasingly come under scrutiny in the
United States.[194] Such and other potentially offensive costumes have
been met with increasing public disapproval.[195][196]
Pet costumes
According
to a 2018 report from the National Retail Federation, 30 million
Americans will spend an estimated $480 million on Halloween costumes for
their pets in 2018. This is up from an estimated $200 million in 2010.
The most popular costumes for pets are the pumpkin, followed by the hot
dog, and the bumblebee in third place.[197]
Games and other activities
There
are several games traditionally associated with Halloween. Some of
these games originated as divination rituals or ways of foretelling
one's future, especially regarding death, marriage and children. During
the Middle Ages, these rituals were done by a "rare few" in rural
communities as they were considered to be "deadly serious"
practices.[198] In recent centuries, these divination games have been "a
common feature of the household festivities" in Ireland and
Britain.[125] They often involve apples and hazelnuts. In Celtic
mythology, apples were strongly associated with the Otherworld and
immortality, while hazelnuts were associated with divine wisdom.[199]
Some also suggest that they derive from Roman practices in celebration
of Pomona.[64]
The following activities were a common feature of
Halloween in Ireland and Britain during the 17th–20th centuries. Some
have become more widespread and continue to be popular today. One common
game is apple bobbing or dunking (which may be called "dooking" in
Scotland)[200] in which apples float in a tub or a large basin of water
and the participants must use only their teeth to remove an apple from
the basin. A variant of dunking involves kneeling on a chair, holding a
fork between the teeth and trying to drive the fork into an apple.
Another common game involves hanging up treacle or syrup-coated scones
by strings; these must be eaten without using hands while they remain
attached to the string, an activity that inevitably leads to a sticky
face. Another once-popular game involves hanging a small wooden rod from
the ceiling at head height, with a lit candle on one end and an apple
hanging from the other. The rod is spun round and everyone takes turns
to try to catch the apple with their teeth.[201]
Several of the
traditional activities from Ireland and Britain involve foretelling
one's future partner or spouse. An apple would be peeled in one long
strip, then the peel tossed over the shoulder. The peel is believed to
land in the shape of the first letter of the future spouse's
name.[202][203] Two hazelnuts would be roasted near a fire; one named
for the person roasting them and the other for the person they desire.
If the nuts jump away from the heat, it is a bad sign, but if the nuts
roast quietly it foretells a good match.[204][205] A salty oatmeal
bannock would be baked; the person would eat it in three bites and then
go to bed in silence without anything to drink. This is said to result
in a dream in which their future spouse offers them a drink to quench
their thirst.[206] Unmarried women were told that if they sat in a
darkened room and gazed into a mirror on Halloween night, the face of
their future husband would appear in the mirror.[207] The custom was
widespread enough to be commemorated on greeting cards[208] from the
late 19th century and early 20th century.
Another popular Irish
game was known as púicíní ("blindfolds"); a person would be blindfolded
and then would choose between several saucers. The item in the saucer
would provide a hint as to their future: a ring would mean that they
would marry soon; clay, that they would die soon, perhaps within the
year; water, that they would emigrate; rosary beads, that they would
take Holy Orders (become a nun, priest, monk, etc.); a coin, that they
would become rich; a bean, that they would be poor.[209][210][211][212]
The game features prominently in the James Joyce short story "Clay"
(1914).[213][214][215]
In Ireland and Scotland, items would be
hidden in food – usually a cake, barmbrack, cranachan, champ or
colcannon – and portions of it served out at random. A person's future
would be foretold by the item they happened to find; for example, a ring
meant marriage and a coin meant wealth.[216]
Up until the 19th
century, the Halloween bonfires were also used for divination in parts
of Scotland, Wales and Brittany. When the fire died down, a ring of
stones would be laid in the ashes, one for each person. In the morning,
if any stone was mislaid it was said that the person it represented
would not live out the year.[110]
Telling ghost stories,
listening to Halloween-themed songs and watching horror films are common
fixtures of Halloween parties. Episodes of television series and
Halloween-themed specials (with the specials usually aimed at children)
are commonly aired on or before Halloween, while new horror films are
often released before Halloween to take advantage of the holiday.
Haunted attractions
Haunted
attractions are entertainment venues designed to thrill and scare
patrons. Most attractions are seasonal Halloween businesses that may
include haunted houses, corn mazes, and hayrides,[217] and the level of
sophistication of the effects has risen as the industry has grown.
The
first recorded purpose-built haunted attraction was the Orton and
Spooner Ghost House, which opened in 1915 in Liphook, England. This
attraction actually most closely resembles a carnival fun house, powered
by steam.[218][219] The House still exists, in the Hollycombe Steam
Collection.
It was during the 1930s, about the same time as
trick-or-treating, that Halloween-themed haunted houses first began to
appear in America. It was in the late 1950s that haunted houses as a
major attraction began to appear, focusing first on California.
Sponsored by the Children's Health Home Junior Auxiliary, the San Mateo
Haunted House opened in 1957. The San Bernardino Assistance League
Haunted House opened in 1958. Home haunts began appearing across the
country during 1962 and 1963. In 1964, the San Manteo Haunted House
opened, as well as the Children's Museum Haunted House in
Indianapolis.[220]
The haunted house as an American cultural icon
can be attributed to the opening of The Haunted Mansion in Disneyland
on 12 August 1969.[221] Knott's Berry Farm began hosting its own
Halloween night attraction, Knott's Scary Farm, which opened in
1973.[222] Evangelical Christians adopted a form of these attractions by
opening one of the first "hell houses" in 1972.[223]
The first
Halloween haunted house run by a nonprofit organization was produced in
1970 by the Sycamore-Deer Park Jaycees in Clifton, Ohio. It was
cosponsored by WSAI, an AM radio station broadcasting out of Cincinnati,
Ohio. It was last produced in 1982.[224] Other Jaycees followed suit
with their own versions after the success of the Ohio house. The March
of Dimes copyrighted a "Mini haunted house for the March of Dimes" in
1976 and began fundraising through their local chapters by conducting
haunted houses soon after. Although they apparently quit supporting this
type of event nationally sometime in the 1980s, some March of Dimes
haunted houses have persisted until today.[225]
On the evening of
11 May 1984, in Jackson Township, New Jersey, the Haunted Castle (Six
Flags Great Adventure) caught fire. As a result of the fire, eight
teenagers perished.[226] The backlash to the tragedy was a tightening of
regulations relating to safety, building codes and the frequency of
inspections of attractions nationwide. The smaller venues, especially
the nonprofit attractions, were unable to compete financially, and the
better funded commercial enterprises filled the vacuum.[227][228]
Facilities that were once able to avoid regulation because they were
considered to be temporary installations now had to adhere to the
stricter codes required of permanent attractions.[229][230][231]
In
the late 1980s and early 1990s, theme parks entered the business
seriously. Six Flags Fright Fest began in 1986 and Universal Studios
Florida began Halloween Horror Nights in 1991. Knott's Scary Farm
experienced a surge in attendance in the 1990s as a result of America's
obsession with Halloween as a cultural event. Theme parks have played a
major role in globalizing the holiday. Universal Studios Singapore and
Universal Studios Japan both participate, while Disney now mounts
Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party events at its parks in Paris, Hong
Kong and Tokyo, as well as in the United States.[232] The theme park
haunts are by far the largest, both in scale and attendance.[233]
Food
On
All Hallows' Eve, many Western Christian denominations encourage
abstinence from meat, giving rise to a variety of vegetarian foods
associated with this day.[234]
Because in the Northern Hemisphere
Halloween comes in the wake of the yearly apple harvest, candy apples
(known as toffee apples outside North America), caramel apples or taffy
apples are common Halloween treats made by rolling whole apples in a
sticky sugar syrup, sometimes followed by rolling them in nuts.
At
one time, candy apples were commonly given to trick-or-treating
children, but the practice rapidly waned in the wake of widespread
rumors that some individuals were embedding items like pins and razor
blades in the apples in the United States.[235] While there is evidence
of such incidents,[236] relative to the degree of reporting of such
cases, actual cases involving malicious acts are extremely rare and have
never resulted in serious injury. Nonetheless, many parents assumed
that such heinous practices were rampant because of the mass media. At
the peak of the hysteria, some hospitals offered free X-rays of
children's Halloween hauls in order to find evidence of tampering.
Virtually all of the few known candy poisoning incidents involved
parents who poisoned their own children's candy.[237]
One custom
that persists in modern-day Ireland is the baking (or more often
nowadays, the purchase) of a barmbrack (Irish: báirín breac), which is a
light fruitcake, into which a plain ring, a coin, and other charms are
placed before baking.[238] It is considered fortunate to be the lucky
one who finds it.[238] It has also been said that those who get a ring
will find their true love in the ensuing year. This is similar to the
tradition of king cake at the festival of Epiphany.
A jack-o'-lantern Halloween cake with a witches hat
List of foods associated with Halloween:
Barmbrack (Ireland)
Bonfire toffee (Great Britain)
Candy apples/toffee apples (Great Britain and Ireland)
Candy apples, candy corn, candy pumpkins (North America)
Chocolate
Monkey nuts (peanuts in their shells) (Ireland and Scotland)
Caramel apples
Caramel corn
Colcannon (Ireland; see below)
Halloween cake
Sweets/candy
Novelty candy shaped like skulls, pumpkins, bats, worms, etc.
Roasted pumpkin seeds
Roasted sweet corn
Soul cakes
Pumpkin Pie
Christian religious observances
On
Hallowe'en (All Hallows' Eve), in Poland, believers were once taught to
pray out loud as they walk through the forests in order that the souls
of the dead might find comfort; in Spain, Christian priests in tiny
villages toll their church bells in order to remind their congregants to
remember the dead on All Hallows' Eve.[239] In Ireland, and among
immigrants in Canada, a custom includes the Christian practice of
abstinence, keeping All Hallows' Eve as a meat-free day and serving
pancakes or colcannon instead.[240] In Mexico children make an altar to
invite the return of the spirits of dead children (angelitos).[241]
The
Christian Church traditionally observed Hallowe'en through a vigil.
Worshippers prepared themselves for feasting on the following All
Saints' Day with prayers and fasting.[242] This church service is known
as the Vigil of All Hallows or the Vigil of All Saints;[243][244] an
initiative known as Night of Light seeks to further spread the Vigil of
All Hallows throughout Christendom.[245][246] After the service,
"suitable festivities and entertainments" often follow, as well as a
visit to the graveyard or cemetery, where flowers and candles are often
placed in preparation for All Hallows' Day.[247][248] In Finland,
because so many people visit the cemeteries on All Hallows' Eve to light
votive candles there, they "are known as valomeri, or seas of
light".[249]
Today, Christian attitudes towards Halloween are
diverse. In the Anglican Church, some dioceses have chosen to emphasize
the Christian traditions associated with All Hallow's Eve.[250][251]
Some of these practices include praying, fasting and attending worship
services.[1][2][3]
O LORD our God, increase, we pray thee,
and multiply upon us the gifts of thy grace: that we, who do prevent the
glorious festival of all thy Saints, may of thee be enabled joyfully to
follow them in all virtuous and godly living. Through Jesus Christ, Our
Lord, who liveth and reigneth with thee, in the unity of the Holy
Ghost, ever one God, world without end. Amen. —Collect of the Vigil of
All Saints, The Anglican Breviary[252]
Other Protestant
Christians also celebrate All Hallows' Eve as Reformation Day, a day to
remember the Protestant Reformation, alongside All Hallow's Eve or
independently from it.[253] This is because Martin Luther is said to
have nailed his Ninety-five Theses to All Saints' Church in Wittenberg
on All Hallows' Eve.[254] Often, "Harvest Festivals" or "Reformation
Festivals" are held on All Hallows' Eve, in which children dress up as
Bible characters or Reformers.[255] In addition to distributing candy to
children who are trick-or-treating on Hallowe'en, many Christians also
provide gospel tracts to them. One organization, the American Tract
Society, stated that around 3 million gospel tracts are ordered from
them alone for Hallowe'en celebrations.[256] Others order
Halloween-themed Scripture Candy to pass out to children on this
day.[257][258]
Some Christians feel concerned about the modern
celebration of Halloween because they feel it trivializes – or
celebrates – paganism, the occult, or other practices and cultural
phenomena deemed incompatible with their beliefs.[259] Father Gabriele
Amorth, an exorcist in Rome, has said, "if English and American children
like to dress up as witches and devils on one night of the year that is
not a problem. If it is just a game, there is no harm in that."[260] In
more recent years, the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston has
organized a "Saint Fest" on Halloween.[261] Similarly, many contemporary
Protestant churches view Halloween as a fun event for children, holding
events in their churches where children and their parents can dress up,
play games, and get candy for free. To these Christians, Halloween
holds no threat to the spiritual lives of children: being taught about
death and mortality, and the ways of the Celtic ancestors actually being
a valuable life lesson and a part of many of their parishioners'
heritage.[262] Christian minister Sam Portaro wrote that Halloween is
about using "humor and ridicule to confront the power of death".[263]
In
the Roman Catholic Church, Halloween's Christian connection is
acknowledged, and Halloween celebrations are common in many Catholic
parochial schools in the United States.[264][265] Many fundamentalist
and evangelical churches use "Hell houses" and comic-style tracts in
order to make use of Halloween's popularity as an opportunity for
evangelism.[266] Others consider Halloween to be completely incompatible
with the Christian faith due to its putative origins in the Festival of
the Dead celebration.[267] Indeed, even though Eastern Orthodox
Christians observe All Hallows' Day on the First Sunday after Pentecost,
The Eastern Orthodox Church recommends the observance of Vespers or a
Paraklesis on the Western observance of All Hallows' Eve, out of the
pastoral need to provide an alternative to popular celebrations.[268]
Analogous celebrations and perspectives
Judaism
According
to Alfred J. Kolatch in the Second Jewish Book of Why, in Judaism,
Halloween is not permitted by Jewish Halakha because it violates
Leviticus 18:3, which forbids Jews from partaking in gentile customs.
Many Jews observe Yizkor communally four times a year, which is vaguely
similar to the observance of Allhallowtide in Christianity, in the sense
that prayers are said for both "martyrs and for one's own family".[269]
Nevertheless, many American Jews celebrate Halloween, disconnected from
its Christian origins.[270] Reform Rabbi Jeffrey Goldwasser has said
that "There is no religious reason why contemporary Jews should not
celebrate Halloween" while Orthodox Rabbi Michael Broyde has argued
against Jews' observing the holiday.[271] Purim has sometimes been
compared to Halloween, in part due to some observants wearing costumes,
especially of Biblical figures described in the Purim narrative.[272]
Islam
Sheikh
Idris Palmer, author of A Brief Illustrated Guide to Understanding
Islam, has ruled that Muslims should not participate in Halloween,
stating that "participation in Halloween is worse than participation in
Christmas, Easter, ... it is more sinful than congratulating the
Christians for their prostration to the crucifix".[273] It has also been
ruled to be haram by the National Fatwa Council of Malaysia because of
its alleged pagan roots stating "Halloween is celebrated using a
humorous theme mixed with horror to entertain and resist the spirit of
death that influence humans".[274][275] Dar Al-Ifta Al-Missriyyah
disagrees provided the celebration is not referred to as an 'eid' and
that behaviour remains in line with Islamic principles.[276]
Hinduism
Hindus
remember the dead during the festival of Pitru Paksha, during which
Hindus pay homage to and perform a ceremony "to keep the souls of their
ancestors at rest". It is celebrated in the Hindu month of Bhadrapada,
usually in mid-September.[277] The celebration of the Hindu festival
Diwali sometimes conflicts with the date of Halloween; but some Hindus
choose to participate in the popular customs of Halloween.[278] Other
Hindus, such as Soumya Dasgupta, have opposed the celebration on the
grounds that Western holidays like Halloween have "begun to adversely
affect our indigenous festivals".[279]
Neopaganism
There is no
consistent rule or view on Halloween amongst those who describe
themselves as Neopagans or Wiccans. Some Neopagans do not observe
Halloween, but instead observe Samhain on 1 November,[280] some
neopagans do enjoy Halloween festivities, stating that one can observe
both "the solemnity of Samhain in addition to the fun of Halloween".
Some neopagans are opposed to the celebration of Hallowe'en, stating
that it "trivializes Samhain",[281] and "avoid Halloween, because of the
interruptions from trick or treaters".[282] The Manitoban writes that
"Wiccans don't officially celebrate Halloween, despite the fact that 31
Oct. will still have a star beside it in any good Wiccan's day planner.
Starting at sundown, Wiccans celebrate a holiday known as Samhain.
Samhain actually comes from old Celtic traditions and is not exclusive
to Neopagan religions like Wicca. While the traditions of this holiday
originate in Celtic countries, modern day Wiccans don't try to
historically replicate Samhain celebrations. Some traditional Samhain
rituals are still practised, but at its core, the period is treated as a
time to celebrate darkness and the dead – a possible reason why Samhain
can be confused with Halloween celebrations."[280]
Geography
The
traditions and importance of Halloween vary greatly among countries
that observe it. In Scotland and Ireland, traditional Halloween customs
include children dressing up in costume going "guising", holding
parties, while other practices in Ireland include lighting bonfires, and
having firework displays.[172][283][284] In Brittany children would
play practical jokes by setting candles inside skulls in graveyards to
frighten visitors.[285] Mass transatlantic immigration in the 19th
century popularized Halloween in North America, and celebration in the
United States and Canada has had a significant impact on how the event
is observed in other nations.[172] This larger North American influence,
particularly in iconic and commercial elements, has extended to places
such as Brazil, Ecuador, Chile,[286] Australia,[287] New Zealand,[288]
(most) continental Europe, Finland,[289] Japan, and other parts of East
Asia." (wikipedia)
"Witchcraft
has a wide range of meanings in anthropological, folkloric,
mythological, and religious contexts. Historically and traditionally,
the term "witchcraft" has meant the use of magic or supernatural powers
to cause harm and misfortune to others.[1] A witch (from Old English
wicce f. / wicca m.) is a practitioner of witchcraft. According to
Encyclopedia Britannica, "Witchcraft thus defined exists more in the
imagination of contemporaries than in any objective reality. Yet this
stereotype has a long history and has constituted for many cultures a
viable explanation of evil in the world."[2] The belief in witchcraft
has been found in a great number of societies worldwide. Anthropologists
have applied the English term "witchcraft" to similar beliefs in occult
practices in many different cultures, and societies that have adopted
the English language have often internalised the term.[3][4][5]
In
medieval and early modern Europe, where belief in witchcraft traces
back to classical antiquity, accused witches were usually women who were
believed to have used black magic (maleficium) against their own
community, and often to have communed with evil beings, though British
anthropologist Jean La Fontaine notes that the "stereotype of evil
appears not to have been closely connected to the actions of real people
except when it was mobilised against the current enemies of the
Church."[6] Usually, accusations of witchcraft were made by their
neighbors and followed from social tensions. It was thought witchcraft
could be thwarted by protective magic or counter-magic, which could be
provided by the 'cunning folk' or 'wise people'. Suspected witches were
also intimidated, banished, attacked or killed. Often they would be
formally prosecuted and punished, if found guilty or simply believed to
be guilty. European witch-hunts and witch trials in the early modern
period led to tens of thousands of executions. While magical healers and
midwives were sometimes accused of witchcraft themselves,[7][8][9][10]
they made up a minority of those accused. European belief in witchcraft
gradually dwindled during and after the Age of Enlightenment.
Indigenous
communities that believe in the existence of witchcraft likewise define
witches as malevolent, and seek healers and people for protection
against witchcraft.[11][12] Some African and Melanesian peoples believe
witches are driven by an evil spirit or substance inside them. Modern
witch-hunting takes place in parts of Africa and Asia.
Today,
some followers of Wiccan-related neo-paganism self-identify as "witches"
and use the term "witchcraft" for their magico-religious beliefs and
practices (see Neopagan Witchcraft), primarily in Western anglophone
countries.[13][14][15] Other neo-pagans avoid the term due to its
negative connotations.[16]
Concept
The concept of
witchcraft and the belief in its existence have persisted throughout
recorded history. The concept of malevolent magic has been found among
cultures worldwide,[3][17] and it is prominent in some cultures
today.[18] Most societies have believed in, and feared, an ability by
some individuals to cause supernatural harm and misfortune to others.
This may come from mankind's tendency "to want to assign occurrences of
remarkable good or bad luck to agency, either human or superhuman".[19]
Historians
and anthropologists see the concept of "witchcraft" as one of the ways
humans have tried to explain strange misfortune.[19][20] Some cultures
have feared witchcraft much less than others, because they tend to have
other explanations for strange misfortune; for example that it was
caused by gods, spirits, demons or fairies, or by other humans who have
unwittingly cast the evil eye.[19] For example, the Gaels of Ireland and
the Scottish Highlands historically held a strong belief in fairy folk,
who could cause supernatural harm, and witch-hunting was very rare in
these regions compared to other regions of the British Isles.[21]
Ronald
Hutton outlined five key characteristics ascribed to witches and
witchcraft by most cultures that believe in the concept. Traditionally,
witchcraft was believed to be the use of magic to cause harm or
misfortune to others; it was used by the witch against their own
community; it was seen as immoral and often thought to involve communion
with evil beings; powers of witchcraft were believed to have been
acquired through inheritance or initiation; and witchcraft could be
thwarted by defensive magic, persuasion, intimidation or physical
punishment of the alleged witch.[22]
Historically, the Christian
concept of witchcraft derives from Old Testament laws against it. In
medieval and early modern Europe, many common folk who were Christians
believed in magic. As opposed to the helpful magic of the cunning folk,
witchcraft was seen as evil and associated with the Devil and Devil
worship. This often resulted in deaths, torture and scapegoating
(casting blame for misfortune),[23][24] and many years of large scale
witch-trials and witch hunts, especially in Protestant Europe, before
largely ending during the European Age of Enlightenment. Christian views
in the modern day are diverse and cover the gamut of views from intense
belief and opposition (especially by Christian fundamentalists) to
non-belief.
Many cultures worldwide continue to have a belief in
the concept of "witchcraft" or malevolent magic. During the Age of
Colonialism, many cultures were exposed to the modern Western world via
colonialism, usually accompanied and often preceded by intensive
Christian missionary activity (see "Christianization"). In these
cultures, beliefs about witchcraft were partly influenced by the
prevailing Western concepts of the time. Witch-hunts, scapegoating, and
the killing or shunning of suspected witches still occur in the modern
era.[25]...
From the mid-20th century, "Witchcraft" was adopted
as the name of some neo-pagan movements, including religions such as
Wicca.[30] Its creators believed in the witch-cult theory, that accused
witches had actually been followers of a surviving pagan religion, but
this witch-cult theory is now discredited.[31]
Etymology
Further information: Witch (word)
The
word is over a thousand years old: Old English formed the compound
wiccecræft from wicce ('witch') and cræft ('craft').[32] The masculine
form was wicca ('male sorcerer').[33]
According to the Oxford
English Dictionary, wicce and wicca were probably derived from the Old
English verb wiccian, meaning 'to practice witchcraft'.[34] Wiccian has a
cognate in Middle Low German wicken (attested from the 13th century).
The further etymology of this word is problematic. It has no clear
cognates in other Germanic languages outside of English and Low German,
and there are numerous possibilities for the Indo-European root from
which it may have derived.
Another Old English word for 'witch'
was hægtes or hægtesse, which became the modern English word "hag" and
is linked to the word "hex". In most other Germanic languages, their
word for 'witch' comes from the same root as these; for example German
Hexe and Dutch heks.[35]
In colloquial modern English, the word
witch is generally used for women. A male practitioner of magic or
witchcraft is more commonly called a 'wizard', or sometimes, 'warlock'.
When the word witch is used to refer to a member of a neo-pagan
tradition or religion (such as Wicca), it can refer to a person of any
gender.[36]
Practices
Preparation for the Witches' Sabbath
by David Teniers the Younger. It shows a witch brewing a potion
overlooked by her familiar spirit or a demon; items on the floor for
casting a spell; and another witch reading from a grimoire while
anointing the buttocks of a young witch about to fly upon an inverted
besom.
The historical and traditional definition of "witchcraft"
is the use of black magic (maleficium) or supernatural powers to cause
harm and misfortune to others. Where belief in harmful magic exists, it
is typically forbidden by law as well as hated and feared by the general
populace, while helpful magic is tolerated or even accepted wholesale
by the people, even if the orthodox establishment opposes it.[37]
It
is commonly believed that witches use objects, words and gestures to
cause supernatural harm, or that they simply have an innate power to do
so. Hutton notes that both kinds of witches are often believed to exist
in the same culture. He says that the two often overlap, in that someone
with an inborn power could wield that power through material
objects.[38] In his 1937 study of Azande witchcraft beliefs, E. E.
Evans-Pritchard reserved the term "witchcraft" for the actions of those
who inflict harm by their inborn power, and used "sorcery" for those who
needed tools to do so.[39]
Historians found it difficult to
apply to European witchcraft, where witches were believed to use
physical techniques, as well as some who were believed to cause harm by
thought alone.[4] This distinction "has now largely been abandoned,
although some anthropologists still sometimes find it relevant to the
particular societies with which they are concerned".[38] While most
cultures believe witchcraft to be something willful, some Indigenous
peoples in Africa and Melanesia believe witches have a substance or an
evil spirit in their bodies that drives them to do harm.[38]
Witches
are commonly believed to cast curses; a spell or set of magical words
and gestures intended to inflict supernatural harm.[40] As well as
repeating words and gestures, cursing could involve inscribing runes or
sigils on an object to give that object magical powers; burning or
binding a wax or clay image (a poppet) of a person to affect them
magically; or using...and other substances to make potions
or....[41][42][43][38]
A common belief in cultures worldwide is
that witches tend to use something from their victim's body to work
black magic against them; for example hair, nail clippings, clothing, or
bodily waste. Such beliefs are found in Europe, Africa, South Asia,
Polynesia, Melanesia, and North America.[38] Another widespread belief
among Indigenous peoples in Africa and North America is that witches
cause harm by introducing cursed magical objects into their victim's
body; such as small bones or ashes.[38]
In some cultures,
malevolent witches are believed to use ... in magic,[38] and they are
commonly believed to murder children for this purpose. In Europe, "cases
in which women did undoubtedly kill their children, because of what
today would be called postpartum psychosis, were often interpreted as
yielding to diabolical temptation".[44]
Witches are believed to
work in secret, sometimes alone and sometimes with other witches. Hutton
writes: "Across most of the world, witches have been thought to gather
at night, when normal humans are inactive, and also at their most
vulnerable in sleep".[38] In most cultures, witches at these gatherings
are thought to transgress social norms by engaging in....[38]
Another
widespread belief is that witches have a demonic helper or "familiar",
often in animal form. Witches are also often thought to be able to
shapeshift into animals themselves.[45]
Witchcraft has been
blamed for many kinds of misfortune. In Europe, by far the most common
kind of harm attributed to witchcraft was illness or death suffered by
adults, their children, or their animals. "Certain ailments, like
impotence in men, infertility in women, and lack of milk in cows, were
particularly associated with witchcraft". Illnesses that were poorly
understood were more likely to be blamed on witchcraft. Edward Bever
writes: "Witchcraft was particularly likely to be suspected when a
disease came on unusually swiftly, lingered unusually long, could not be
diagnosed clearly, or presented some other unusual symptoms".[46]
Necromancy
is the practice of conjuring the spirits of the dead for divination or
prophecy, although the term has also been applied to raising the dead
for other purposes. The biblical Witch of Endor performed it (1 Samuel
28th chapter), and it is among the witchcraft practices condemned by
Ælfric of Eynsham:[47][48][49] "Witches still go to cross-roads and to
heathen burials with their delusive magic and call to the devil; and he
comes to them in the likeness of the man that is buried there, as if he
arises from death."[50]
Historical and religious perspectives
Near East beliefs
The
belief in sorcery and its practice seem to have been widespread in the
ancient Near East and Nile Valley. It played a conspicuous role in the
cultures of ancient Egypt and in Babylonia. The latter tradition
included an Akkadian anti-witchcraft ritual, the Maqlû. A section from
the Code of Hammurabi (about 2000 BC) prescribes:
If a man
has put a spell upon another man and it is not justified, he upon whom
the spell is laid shall go to the holy river; into the holy river shall
he plunge. If the holy river overcome him and he is drowned, the man who
put the spell upon him shall take possession of his house. If the holy
river declares him innocent and he remains unharmed the man who laid the
spell shall be put to death. He that plunged into the river shall take
possession of the house of him who laid the spell upon him.[51]
Abrahamic religions
Witchcraft's
historical evolution in the Middle East reveals a multi-phase journey
influenced by culture, spirituality, and societal norms. Ancient
witchcraft in the Near East intertwined mysticism with nature through
rituals and incantations aligned with local beliefs. In ancient Judaism,
magic had a complex relationship, with some forms accepted due to
mysticism[52] while others were considered heretical.[53] The medieval
Middle East experienced shifting perceptions of witchcraft under Islamic
and Christian influences, sometimes revered for healing and other times
condemned as heresy.
Jewish attitudes toward witchcraft were
rooted in its association with idolatry and necromancy, and some rabbis
even practiced certain forms of magic themselves.[54][55] References to
witchcraft in the Tanakh, or Hebrew Bible, highlighted strong
condemnations rooted in the "abomination" of magical belief.
Christianity similarly condemned witchcraft, considering it an
abomination and even citing specific verses to justify witch-hunting
during the early modern period.
Islamic perspectives on magic
encompass a wide range of practices,[56] with belief in black magic and
the evil eye coexisting alongside strict prohibitions against its
practice.[57] The Quran acknowledges the existence of magic and seeks
protection from its harm. Islam's stance is against the practice of
magic, considering it forbidden, and emphasizes divine miracles rather
than magic or witchcraft.[58] The historical continuity of witchcraft in
the Middle East underlines the complex interaction between spiritual
beliefs and societal norms across different cultures and epochs.
Witchcraft and folk healers
Traditionally,
the terms "witch" and "witchcraft" mean those attempt to do harmful
magic, specifically harm done to the person's own community. Most
societies that have believed in witchcraft and black magic have also
believed in helpful types of magic. Some have termed positive magic,
'white magic', at least in more recent eras, in English.[59] Historian
Owen Davies says the term "white witch" was rarely used before the 20th
century.[60]
In these societies, practitioners of helpful magic,
usually known as cunning folk, have traditionally provided services such
as breaking the effects of witchcraft, healing, divination, finding
lost or stolen goods, and love magic.[61] In Britain, and some other
places in Europe, they have commonly been known as cunning folk or wise
people.[61] Alan McFarlane wrote in 1999 that while cunning folk is the
usual name, some are also known as 'blessers' or 'wizards', but might in
some circumstances be known as 'white', 'good', or 'unbinding
witches'.[62] Ronald Hutton uses the general term "service
magicians".[61] Often these people were involved in identifying alleged
witches.[59]
Such beneficial magic-workers "were normally
contrasted with the witch who practised maleficium—that is, magic used
for harmful ends".[63] In the early years of the witch hunts "the
cunning folk were widely tolerated by church, state and general
populace".[63] Some of the more hostile churchmen and secular
authorities tried to smear folk-healers and magic-workers by falsely
branding them 'witches' and associating them with harmful
'witchcraft',[61] but generally the masses did not accept this and
continued to make use of their services.[64] The English MP and skeptic
Reginald Scot sought to disprove magic and witchcraft, writing in The
Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584), "At this day, it is indifferent to say
in the English tongue, 'she is a witch' or 'she is a wise woman'".[65]
Historian Keith Thomas adds "Nevertheless, it is possible to isolate
that kind of 'witchcraft' which involved the employment (or presumed
employment) of some occult means of doing harm to other people in a way
which was generally disapproved of. In this sense the belief in
witchcraft can be defined as the attribution of misfortune to occult
human agency".[8]}} Emma Wilby says folk magicians in Europe were viewed
ambivalently by communities, and were considered as capable of harming
as of healing,[66] which could lead to their being accused as using
witchcraft to harm the innocent. She suggests some English "witches"
convicted of consorting with demons may have been cunning folk whose
supposed fairy familiars had been demonised.[67]
Hutton says that
healers and cunning folk "were sometimes denounced as witches, but seem
to have made up a minority of the accused in any area studied".[59]
Likewise, Davies says "relatively few cunning-folk were prosecuted under
secular statutes for witchcraft" and were dealt with more leniently
than alleged witches. The Constitutio Criminalis Carolina (1532) of the
Holy Roman Empire, and the Danish Witchcraft Act of 1617, stated that
workers of folk magic should be dealt with differently from witches.[68]
It was suggested by Richard Horsley that cunning folk
(devins-guerisseurs, 'diviner-healers') made up a significant proportion
of those tried for witchcraft in France and Switzerland, but more
recent surveys conclude that they made up less than 2% of the
accused.[69] However, Éva Pócs says that half the accused witches in
Hungary seem to have been healers,[70] and Kathleen Stokker says the
"vast majority" of Norway's accused witches were folk healers.[71]
Thwarting witchcraft
A witch bottle, used as counter-magic against witchcraft
Societies
that believed in witchcraft also believed that it could be thwarted in
various ways. One common way was to use protective magic or
counter-magic, of which the cunning folk were experts.[59] This included
charms, talismans and amulets, anti-witch marks, witch bottles, witch
balls, and burying objects such as horse skulls inside the walls of
buildings.[72] Another believed cure for bewitchment was to persuade or
force the alleged witch to lift their spell.[59] Often, people would
attempt to thwart the witchcraft by physically punishing the alleged
witch, such as by banishing, wounding, torturing or killing them. "In
most societies, however, a formal and legal remedy was preferred to this
sort of private action", whereby the alleged witch would be prosecuted
and then formally punished if found guilty.[59] This often resulted in
execution.
Accusations of witchcraft
Alleged witches being accused in the Salem witch trials
Throughout
the world, accusations of witchcraft are often linked to social and
economic tensions. Females are most often accused, but in some cultures
it is mostly males. In many societies, accusations are directed mainly
against the elderly, but in others age is not a factor, and in some
cultures it is mainly adolescents who are accused.[73]
In
pre-modern Europe, most of those accused were women, and accusations of
witchcraft usually came from their neighbors who accused them of
inflicting harm or misfortune by magical means.[74] Macfarlane found
that women made accusations of witchcraft as much as men did. Deborah
Willis adds, "The number of witchcraft quarrels that began between women
may actually have been higher; in some cases, it appears that the
husband as 'head of household' came forward to make statements on behalf
of his wife".[75] Hutton and Davies note that folk healers were
sometimes accused of witchcraft, but made up a minority of the
accused.[59][76] It is also possible that a small proportion of accused
witches may have genuinely sought to harm by magical means.[77]
Éva Pócs writes that reasons for accusations of witchcraft fall into four general categories:[20]
A person was caught in the act of positive or negative sorcery
A well-meaning sorcerer or healer lost their clients' or the authorities' trust
A person did nothing more than gain the enmity of their neighbors
A person was reputed to be a witch and surrounded with an aura of witch-beliefs or occultism
She identifies three kinds of witch in popular belief:[20]
The "neighborhood witch" or "social witch": a witch who curses a neighbor following some dispute.
The "magical" or "sorcerer" witch: either a professional healer,
sorcerer, seer or midwife, or a person who was thought to have used
magic to increase her fortune to the perceived detriment of a
neighboring household; due to neighborhood or community rivalries, and
the ambiguity between positive and negative magic, such individuals can
become branded as witches.
The "supernatural" or "night" witch: portrayed in court narratives as a demon appearing in visions and dreams.[78]
"Neighborhood
witches" are the product of neighborhood tensions, and are found only
in village communities where the inhabitants largely rely on each other.
Such accusations follow the breaking of some social norm, such as the
failure to return a borrowed item, and any person part of the normal
social exchange could potentially fall under suspicion. Claims of
"sorcerer" witches and "supernatural" witches could arise out of social
tensions, but not exclusively; the supernatural witch often had nothing
to do with communal conflict, but expressed tensions between the human
and supernatural worlds; and in Eastern and Southeastern Europe such
supernatural witches became an ideology explaining calamities that
befell whole communities.[79]
The historian Norman Gevitz has written:
[T]he ... arts played a significant and sometimes pivotal role in the
witchcraft controversies of seventeenth-century New England. Not only
were physicians and surgeons the principal professional arbiters for
determining natural versus preternatural signs and symptoms of disease,
they occupied key legislative, judicial, and ministerial roles relating
to witchcraft proceedings. Forty six male physicians, surgeons, and
apothecaries are named in court transcripts or other contemporary source
materials relating to New England witchcraft. These practitioners
served on coroners' inquests, performed autopsies, took testimony,
issued writs, wrote letters, or committed people to prison, ...
European witch-hunts and witch-trials
A 1613 English pamphlet showing "Witches apprehended, examined and executed"
In
Christianity, sorcery came to be associated with heresy and apostasy
and to be viewed as evil. Among Catholics, Protestants, and the secular
leadership of late medieval/early modern Europe, fears about witchcraft
rose to fever pitch and sometimes led to large-scale witch-hunts. The
fifteenth century saw a dramatic rise in awareness and terror of
witchcraft. Tens of thousands of people were executed, and others were
imprisoned, tortured, banished, and had lands and possessions
confiscated. The majority of those accused were women, though in some
regions the majority were men.[81][82] In Scots, the word warlock came
to be used as the male equivalent of witch (which can be male or female,
but is used predominantly for females).[83][84][85]
The Malleus
Maleficarum (Latin for 'Hammer of The Witches') was a witch-hunting
manual written in 1486 by two German monks, Heinrich Kramer and Jacob
Sprenger. It was used by both Catholics and Protestants[86] for several
hundred years, outlining how to identify a witch, what makes a woman
more likely than a man to be a witch, how to put a witch on trial, and
how to punish a witch. The book defines a witch as evil and typically
female. It became the handbook for secular courts throughout Europe, but
was not used by the Inquisition, which even cautioned against relying
on it.[87] It was the most sold book in Europe for over 100 years, after
the Bible.[88]
From the sixteenth century on, there were some
writers who protested against witch trials, witch hunting and the belief
that witchcraft existed. Among them were Johann Weyer, Reginald
Scot,[89] and Friedrich Spee.[90]
European witch-trials reached
their peak in the early 17th century, after which popular sentiment
began to turn against the practice. In 1682, King Louis XIV prohibited
further witch-trials in France. In 1736, Great Britain formally ended
witch-trials with passage of the Witchcraft Act.[91]
Modern witch-hunts
Belief
in witchcraft continues to be present today in some societies and
accusations of witchcraft are the trigger for serious forms of violence,
including murder. Such incidents are common in countries such as ....
Accusations of witchcraft are sometimes linked to personal disputes,
jealousy, and conflicts between neighbors or family members over land or
inheritance. Witchcraft-related violence is often discussed as a
serious issue in the broader context of violence against
women.[92][93][94][95][96] In Tanzania, about 500 old women are murdered
each year following accusations of witchcraft or accusations of being a
witch.[97] Apart from extrajudicial violence, state-sanctioned violence
also occurs in some jurisdictions. For instance, in Saudi Arabia
practicing witchcraft and sorcery is a crime punishable by death and the
country has executed people for this crime in 2011, 2012 and
2014.[98][99][100]
Children who live in some regions of the
world, such as parts of Africa, are also vulnerable to violence that is
related to witchcraft accusations.[101][102][103][104] Such incidents
have also occurred in immigrant communities in the UK, including the
much publicized case of the murder of Victoria Climbié.[105][106]
By region
Much
of what witchcraft represents in Africa has been susceptible to
misunderstandings and confusion, thanks in no small part to a tendency
among western scholars since the time of the now largely discredited
Margaret Murray to approach the subject through a comparative lens
vis-a-vis European witchcraft.[107]
While some colonialists tried
to eradicate witch hunting by introducing legislation to prohibit
accusations of witchcraft, some of the countries where this was the case
have formally recognized the existence of witchcraft via the law. This
has produced an environment that encourages persecution of suspected
witches.[108]
Azande
Cameroon
In eastern Cameroon,
the term used for witchcraft among the Maka is djambe[109] and refers to
a force inside a person; its powers may make the proprietor more
vulnerable. It encompasses the occult, the transformative, killing and
healing.[110]
Central African Republic
Every year,
hundreds of people in the Central African Republic are convicted of
witchcraft.[111] Christian militias in the Central African Republic have
also kidnapped, burnt and buried alive women accused of being 'witches'
in public ceremonies.[112]
Democratic Republic of the Congo
As
of 2006, between 25,000 and 50,000 children in Kinshasa, Democratic
Republic of the Congo, had been accused of witchcraft and thrown out of
their homes.[113] These children have been subjected to often-violent
abuse during exorcisms, sometimes supervised by self-styled religious
pastors. Other pastors and Christian activists strongly oppose such
accusations and try to rescue children from their unscrupulous
colleagues.[114] The usual term for these children is enfants sorciers
('child witches') or enfants dits sorciers ('children accused of
witchcraft'). In 2002, USAID funded the production of two short films on
the subject, made in Kinshasa by journalists Angela Nicoara and Mike
Ormsby.
In April 2008, in Kinshasa, the police arrested 14
suspected victims (of penis snatching) and sorcerers accused of using
black magic or witchcraft to steal (make disappear) or shrink men's
penises to extort cash for ..., amid a wave of panic.[115]
According
to one study, the belief in magical warfare technologies ... in the
Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo serves a group-level function,
as it increases group efficiency in warfare, even if it is suboptimal at
the individual level.[116] The authors of the study argue that this is
one reason why the belief in witchcraft persists.[116]
Complimentary remarks about witchcraft by a native Congolese initiate:
From witchcraft [...] may be developed the remedy (kimbuki) that will
do most to raise up our country.[117] Witchcraft [...] deserves respect
[...] it can embellish or redeem (ketula evo vuukisa)."[118] The
ancestors were equipped with the protective witchcraft of the clan
(kindoki kiandundila kanda). [...] They could also gather the power of
animals into their hands [...] whenever they needed. [...] If we could
make use of these kinds of witchcraft, our country would rapidly
progress in knowledge of every kind.[119] You witches (zindoki) too,
bring your science into the light to be written down so that [...] the
benefits in it [...] endow our race.[120]
Ghana
In Ghana,
women are often accused of witchcraft and attacked by neighbours.[121]
Because of this, there exist six witch camps in the country where women
suspected of being witches can flee for safety.[122] The witch camps,
which exist solely in Ghana, are thought to house a total of around 1000
women.[122] Some of the camps are thought to have been set up over 100
years ago.[122] The Ghanaian government has announced that it intends to
close the camps.[122]
Arrests were made in an effort to avoid
bloodshed seen in Ghana in 1997, when twelve alleged penis snatchers
were beaten to death by mobs.[123] While it is easy for modern people to
dismiss such reports, Uchenna Okeja argues that a belief system in
which such magical practices are deemed possible offer many benefits to
Africans who hold them. For example, the belief that a sorcerer has
"stolen" a man's penis functions as an anxiety-reduction mechanism for
men suffering from impotence, while simultaneously providing an
explanation that is consistent with African cultural beliefs rather than
appealing to Western scientific notions that are, in the eyes of many
Africans, tainted by the history of colonialism.[124]
Kenya
It was reported that a mob in Kenya had burnt to death at least eleven people accused of witchcraft in 2008.[125]
Malawi
In
Malawi it is common practice to accuse children of witchcraft and many
children have been abandoned, abused, and even killed as a result. As in
other African countries, both a number of African traditional healers
and some of their Christian counterparts are trying to make a living out
of exorcising children and are actively involved in pointing out
children as witches.[126] Various secular and Christian organizations
are combining their efforts to address this problem.[127]
According
to William Kamkwamba, witches and wizards are afraid of money, which
they consider a rival evil. Any contact with cash will snap their spell
and leave the wizard naked and confused, so placing cash, such as
kwacha, around a room or bed mat will protect the resident from their
malevolent spells.[128]
Nigeria
In Nigeria, several
Pentecostal pastors have mixed their evangelical brand of Christianity
with African beliefs in witchcraft to benefit from the lucrative
witch-finding and exorcism business—which in the past was the exclusive
domain of the so-called witch doctor or traditional healers. These
pastors have been involved in the torturing and even killing of children
accused of witchcraft.[129] Over the past decade,[when?] around 15,000
children have been accused, and around 1,000 murdered. Churches are very
numerous in Nigeria, and competition for congregations is hard. Some
pastors attempt to establish a reputation for spiritual power by
"detecting" child witches, usually following a death or loss of a job
within a family, or an accusation of financial fraud against the pastor.
In the course of "exorcisms", accused children may be starved, beaten,
mutilated, set on fire, forced to consume acid or cement, or buried
alive. While some church leaders and Christian activists have spoken out
strongly against these abuses, many Nigerian churches are involved in
the abuse, although church administrations deny knowledge of it.[130]
In
May 2020, fifteen adults, mostly women, were set ablaze after being
accused of witchcraft, including the mother of the instigator of the
attack, Thomas Obi Tawo, a local politician.[108]
Sierra Leone
Among
the Mende (of Sierra Leone), trial and conviction for witchcraft has a
beneficial effect for those convicted. "The witchfinder had warned the
whole village to ensure the relative prosperity of the accused and
sentenced ... old people. ... Six months later all of the people ...
accused, were secure, well-fed and arguably happier than at any
[previous] time; they had hardly to beckon and people would come with
food or whatever was needful. ... Instead of such old and widowed people
being left helpless or (as in Western society) institutionalized in old
people's homes, these were reintegrated into society and left secure in
their old age ... Old people are 'suitable' candidates for this kind of
accusation in the sense that they are isolated and vulnerable, and they
are 'suitable' candidates for 'social security' for precisely the same
reasons."[131] In Kuranko language, the term for witchcraft is
suwa'ye[132] referring to 'extraordinary powers'.
Zulu
In
Zulu culture, and spiritual healers called sangomas protect people from
evil spirits and witchcraft. They perform divination and healing with
ancestral spirits and usually train with elders for about five to seven
years.[133][134] In the cities, however, some offer trainings that take
only several months, but there is concern about inadequately-trained and
... "sangomas" exploiting and harming people who may come to them for
help.[135][136][137][138] Another type of healer is the inyanga, who
.... This is a profession that is hereditary, and passed down through
family lines. While there used to be more of a distinction between the
two types of healers, in contemporary practice, the terms are often used
interchangeably.[139][140][141]
Americas
North America
British America and the United States
Massachusetts
In
1645, Springfield, Massachusetts, experienced America's first
accusations of witchcraft when husband and wife Hugh and Mary Parsons
accused each other of witchcraft. At America's first witch trial, Hugh
was found innocent, while Mary was acquitted of witchcraft but sentenced
to be hanged for the death of her child. She died in prison.[142]
In
1648 Margaret Jones (Puritan midwife) was the first person to be
executed for witchcraft in Massachusetts Bay Colony. From 1645 to 1663,
about eighty people throughout England's Massachusetts Bay Colony were
accused of practicing witchcraft. Thirteen women and two men were
executed in a witch-hunt that lasted throughout New England from 1645 to
1663.[143] The Salem witch trials followed in 1692–93. These witch
trials were the most famous in British North America and took place in
the coastal settlements near Salem, Massachusetts. Prior to the witch
trials, nearly three hundred men and women had been suspected of
partaking in witchcraft, and nineteen of these people were hanged, and
one was "pressed to death".[144]
Despite being generally known as
the Salem witch trials, the preliminary hearings in 1692 were conducted
in a variety of towns across the province: Salem Village (now Danvers),
Salem Town, Ipswich, and Andover. The best-known trials were conducted
by the Court of Oyer and Terminer in 1692 in Salem Town.[145][citation
needed][146] The Crucible by Arthur Miller is a dramatized and partially
fictionalized story of the Salem witch trials that took place in the
Massachusetts Bay Colony during 1692–93.
Maryland
In
Maryland, there is a legend of Moll Dyer, who escaped a fire set by
fellow colonists only to die of exposure in December 1697. The
historical record of Dyer is scant as all official records were burned
in a courthouse fire, though the county courthouse has on display the
rock where her frozen body was found. A letter from a colonist of the
period describes her in most unfavourable terms. A local road is named
after Dyer, where her homestead was said to have been. Many local
families have their own version of the Moll Dyer affair, and her name is
spoken with care in the rural southern counties.[147]
Pennsylvania
Margaret
Mattson and another woman were tried in 1683 on accusations of
witchcraft in the Province of Pennsylvania. They were acquitted by
William Penn after a trial in Philadelphia. These are the only known
trials for witchcraft in Pennsylvania history.
Some of Margaret's
neighbors claimed that she had bewitched cattle.[148] Charges of
practicing witchcraft were brought before the Pennsylvania Provincial
Council in February 1683 (under Julian calendar).[149] This occurred
nineteen years after the Swedish territory became a British common law
colony and subject to English Witchcraft Act 1604.[150] Accused by
several neighbors, as well as her own daughter in law, Mattson's alleged
crimes included making threats against neighbors, causing cows to give
little milk,[151] bewitching and killing livestock and appearing to
witnesses in spectral form. On February 27, 1683, charges against
Mattson and a neighbor Gertro (a.k.a. Yeshro) Jacobsson, wife of
Hendrick Jacobsson, were brought by the Attorney General before a grand
jury of 21 men overseen by the colony's proprietor, William Penn. The
grand jury returned a true bill indictment that afternoon, and the cases
proceeded to trial.[149] A petit jury of twelve men was selected by
Penn and an interpreter was appointed for the Finnish women, who did not
speak English.[152] Penn barred the use of prosecution and defense
lawyers, conducted the questioning himself, and permitted the
introduction of unsubstantiated hearsay.[151] Penn himself gave the
closing charge and directions to the jury, but what he told them was not
transcribed. According to the minutes of the Provincial Council, dated
February 27, 1683, the jury returned with a verdict of "Guilty of having
the Comon Fame of a Witch, but not Guilty in manner and Forme as Shee
stands Endicted."[151][153]
Thus Mattson was found guilty of
having the reputation of a witch, but not guilty of bewitching animals.
Neither woman was convicted of witchcraft. "Hence the superstitious got
enough to have their thinking affirmed. Those less superstitious, and
justice minded, got what they wanted."[154] The accused were released on
their husbands' posting recognizance bonds of 50 pounds and promising
six months' good behavior.[155][149]
A popular legend tells of
William Penn dismissing the charges against Mattson by affirming her
legal right to fly on a broomstick over Philadelphia, saying "Well, I
know of no law against it."[151] The record fails to show any such
commentary, but the story probably reflects popular views of Penn's
socially progressive Quaker values.[156]
Tennessee
Accusations of witchcraft and wizardry led to the prosecution of a man in Tennessee as recently as 1833.[157][158][159]\\
Native Americans in the United States
Native
American communities such as the Cherokee, Chickasaw, Creek, Delaware,
Hopi, Miami, Natchez, Navajo and Seneca have historically defined
witches as evil-doers who harm their own communities. Witches are
traditionally seen as criminals, and witchcraft as a crime punishable by
death, if nothing else as a last resort.[160][161][162] While some
communities have passed laws specifically ...., traditional views of
witches and witchcraft have largely remained the same into 20th
century,[160] and through to the present among traditionals.[162]
Witches
in these communities are defined in contrast to people, who are the
healers and ceremonial leaders, and who provide protection against
witches and witchcraft.[160][161]
Cherokee
The Cherokee
have traditional monster stories of witches, such as Raven Mocker
(Kâ'lanû Ahkyeli'skï) and Spearfinger (U'tlun'ta), both known as
dangerous...[163][164]
Among the Cherokee, the people are seen
as a "priesthood caste",[165] known to work together in groups to help
the community. As in other Native communities, they are defined as the
opposite of witches, who are seen as criminals,[160]
In
contrast, the traditional Cherokee witch lives alone, eats alone ...,
and commits heinous acts alone, surreptitiously under the cover of
darkness. Jealous and hypersensitive by nature, the Cherokee witch lives
in the ever-fearful grip of being publicly exposed.[160]
Cherokee healers have "doctored" dogs so the dogs can help them detect witches.[160]
As
in the other tribes that have agreed to talk to anthropologists,
witchcraft has been traditionally punished by death in Cherokee
communities. In 1824 the western Cherokee passed new laws "forbidding
the wanton killing of suspected witches",[166] however, this attitude
and retribution appears to have continued at the same rate in both the
Cherokee and Creek communities throughout the 19th Century.[166] In the
twentieth century, many communities responded to allegations of
witchcraft with ...,. But despite changes in laws and perspectives,
Kilpatrick (quoting Shimony (1989)) wrote in 1998 that one does still
occasionally read about "the demise of a suspected witch in Native
American communities" but that most of these deaths take place "only
while the witch is in animal guise (by shooting) or by means of
counter-witchcraft".[160]
Hopi
The Hopi have many beliefs and concerns about witches and witchcraft.
To the Hopis, witches or evil-hearted persons deliberately try to
destroy social harmony by sowing discontent, doubt, and criticism
through evil gossip as well as by actively combating men.[162]
Suspicious
deaths are often blamed on witchcraft, with members of the community
trying to figure out who might be a witch, and who might have caused the
death or other misfortune.[162]
They are called popwaqt, the
plural of powaqa, "witch" or "sorcerer." They are unequivocally evil,
casting spells, causing illness, killing babies, and destroying the life
cycle. They practice powaqqatsi, the "life of evil sorcery." The Hopis
call them kwitavi, "shit people."
....
a witch is a
person who ... close family relatives in order to prolong his or her
own life by four years. By killing, I mean causing through occult means
an unnatural death, such as stillbirth, infants dying of ordinary
illnesses, or healthy adults suffering from strange illnesses. Witches
are also the occult cause of unusual circumstances, such as hailstorms
on a sunny day, extreme drought, or people suffering bad fortune.[162]
Navajo
There
are several varieties of those considered to be witches by the Navajo.
The most common variety seen in horror fiction by non-Navajo people is
the yee naaldlooshii (a type of 'ánti'įhnii),[167] known in English as
the skin-walker. They are believed to take the forms of animals in order
to travel in secret and do harm to the innocent.[167] In the Navajo
language, yee naaldlooshii translates to 'with it, he goes on all
fours'. The is used by witches to curse their victims.[5] Traditional
Navajos usually hesitate to discuss things like witches and witchcraft
with non-Navajos.[168] As with other traditional cultures, the term
"witch" is never used for healers or others who help the community with
their ceremonies and spiritual work.[161]
Latin America
When
Franciscan friars from New Spain arrived in the Americas in 1524, they
introduced Diabolism—belief in the Christian Devil—to the Indigenous
peoples of the Americas.[169] Bartolomé de las Casas believed that human
sacrifice was not diabolic, in fact far off from it, and was a natural
result of religious expression.[169] Mexican Indians gladly took in the
belief of Diabolism and still managed to keep their belief in
creator-destroyer deities.[170]
Witchcraft was an important part
of the social and cultural history of late-Colonial Mexico, during the
Mexican Inquisition. Spanish Inquisitors viewed witchcraft as a problem
that could be ... simply through confession. Yet, as anthropologist Ruth
Behar writes, witchcraft, not only in Mexico but in Latin America in
general, was a "conjecture of sexuality, witchcraft, and religion, in
which Spanish, indigenous, and African cultures converged."[171]
Furthermore, witchcraft in Mexico generally required an interethnic and
interclass network of witches.[172] Yet, according to anthropology
professor Laura Lewis, witchcraft in colonial Mexico ultimately
represented an "affirmation of hegemony" for women, Indians, and
especially Indian women over their white male counterparts as a result
of the casta system.[173]
The presence of the witch is a constant
in the ethnographic history of colonial Brazil, especially during the
several denunciations and confessions given to the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith of Bahia (1591–1593), Pernambuco and Paraíba
(1593–1595).[174]
Brujería, often called a Latin American form of
witchcraft, is a syncretic Afro-Caribbean tradition that combines
Indigenous religious and magical practices from Aruba, Bonaire, and
Curaçao in the Dutch Caribbean, Catholicism, and European
witchcraft.[175] The tradition and terminology is considered to
encompass both helpful and harmful practices.[176] A male practitioner
is called a brujo, a female practitioner, a bruja.[176] Healers may be
further distinguished by the terms kurioso or kuradó, a man or woman who
performs trabou chikí ("little works") and trabou grandi ("large
treatments") to ..., bring fortune or misfortune, deal with unrequited
love, and more serious concerns. Sorcery usually involves reference to
an entity referred to as the almasola or homber chiki.[177]
Asia
Asian
witchcraft encompasses various types of witchcraft practices across
Asia. In ancient times, magic played a significant role in societies
such as ancient Egypt and Babylonia, as evidenced by historical records.
In the Middle East, references to magic can be found in the Torah,
where witchcraft is condemned due to its association with belief in
magic.
In the New Testament, both Galatians and Revelation
condemn sorcery, though there is debate over the exact meaning of the
Greek term "pharmakeía". Islamic beliefs incorporate divination and
magic, including black magic, with the Quran offering protection against
malevolent forces. Miracles in Islam are attributed to angels and pious
individuals, distinct from witchcraft.
Judaism views witchcraft
as tied to idolatry and necromancy, and although some rabbis practiced
magic, it was often seen as divine intervention rather than witchcraft.
In Nepal, accusations of witchcraft result in severe mistreatment of
women, leading to societal marginalization and even death. India has
seen incidents of witchcraft-related violence and murder, often
targeting women accused of being witches.
In Chinese culture, the
practice of "Gong Tau" involves black magic for purposes such as
revenge and financial assistance. Japanese folklore features witch
figures who employ foxes as familiars. Korean history includes instances
of individuals being condemned for using spells. The Philippines has
its own tradition of witches, distinct from Western portrayals, with
their practices often countered by indigenous shamans.
Overall,
witchcraft beliefs and practices in Asia vary widely across cultures,
reflecting historical, religious, and social contexts.
Europe
Witchcraft
in Europe between 500 and 1750 was believed to be a combination of
sorcery and heresy. While sorcery attempts to produce negative
supernatural effects through formulas and rituals, heresy is the
Christian contribution to witchcraft in which an individual makes a pact
with the Devil. In addition, heresy denies witches the recognition of
important Christian values such as baptism, salvation, Christ, and
sacraments.[178] The beginning of the witch accusations in Europe took
place in the 14th and 15th centuries, but as the social disruptions of
the 16th century took place, witchcraft trials intensified.[179]
A
1555 German print showing the burning of witches. Current scholarly
estimates of the number of people executed for witchcraft in Europe vary
between 40,000 and 100,000.[180] The number of witch trials in Europe
known to have ended in executions is around 12,000.[181]
In Early
Modern European tradition, witches were stereotypically, though not
exclusively, women.[81][182] European pagan belief in witchcraft was
associated with the goddess Diana and dismissed as "diabolical
fantasies" by medieval Christian authors.[183] Throughout Europe, there
were an estimated 110,000 witchcraft trials between 1450 and 1750 (with
1560 to 1660 being the peak of persecutions), with half of the cases
seeing the accused being executed.[184] Witch-hunts first appeared in
large numbers in southern France and Switzerland during the 14th and
15th centuries. The peak years of witch-hunts in southwest Germany were
from 1561 to 1670.[185]
It was commonly believed that individuals
with power and prestige were involved in acts of witchcraft and even
....[186] Because Europe had a lot of power over individuals living in
West Africa, Europeans in positions of power were often accused of
taking part in these practices. Though it is not likely that these
individuals were actually involved in these practices, they were most
likely associated due to Europe's involvement in things like the slave
trade, which negatively affected the lives of many individuals in the
Atlantic World throughout the fifteenth through seventeenth
centuries.[186]
Early converts to Christianity looked to
Christian clergy to work magic more effectively than the old methods
under Roman paganism, and Christianity provided a methodology involving
saints and relics, similar to the gods and amulets of the Pagan world.
As Christianity became the dominant religion in Europe, its concern with
magic lessened.[187]
The Protestant Christian explanation for
witchcraft, such as those typified in the confessions of the Pendle
witches, commonly involves a diabolical pact or at least an appeal to
the intervention of the spirits of evil. The witches or wizards engaged
in such practices were alleged to reject Jesus and the sacraments;
observe "the witches' sabbath" (performing infernal rites that often
parodied the Mass or other sacraments of the Church); pay Divine honour
to the Prince of Darkness; and, in return, receive from him
preternatural powers. It was a folkloric belief that a Devil's Mark,
like the brand on cattle, was placed upon a witch's skin by the devil to
signify that this pact had been made.[188]
Oceania
Cook Islands
In
pre-Christian times, witchcraft was a common practice in the Cook
Islands. The native name for a sorcerer was tangata purepure (a man who
prays).[189] The prayers offered by the ta'unga (priests)[190] to the
gods worshiped on national or tribal marae (temples) were termed
karakia;[191] those on minor occasions to the lesser gods were named
pure. All these prayers were metrical, and were handed down from
generation to generation with the utmost care. There were prayers for
every such phase in life; for success in battle; for a change in wind
(to overwhelm an adversary at sea, or that an intended voyage be
propitious); that his crops may grow; to curse a thief; or wish ill-luck
and death to his foes. Few men of middle age were without a number of
these prayers or charms. The succession of a sorcerer was from father to
son, or from uncle to nephew. So too of sorceresses: it would be from
mother to daughter, or from aunt to niece. Sorcerers and sorceresses
were often slain by relatives of their supposed victims.[192]
A
singular enchantment was employed to kill off a husband of a pretty
woman desired by someone else. The expanded flower of a Gardenia was
stuck upright—a very difficult performance—in a cup (i.e., half a large
coconut shell) of water. A prayer was then offered for the husband's
speedy death, the sorcerer earnestly watching the flower. Should it fall
the incantation was successful. But if the flower still remained
upright, he will live. The sorcerer would in that case try his skill
another day, with perhaps better success.[193]
According to
Beatrice Grimshaw, a journalist who visited the Cook Islands in 1907,
the uncrowned Queen Makea was believed to have possessed the mystic
power called mana, giving the possessor the power to slay at will. It
also included other gifts, such as second sight to a certain extent, as
well as the power to bring good or evil luck.[194]
Papua New Guinea
A
local newspaper informed that more than fifty people were killed in two
Highlands provinces of Papua New Guinea in 2008 for allegedly
practicing witchcraft.[195] An estimated 50–150 alleged witches are
killed each year in Papua New Guinea.[196]
Demographics and surveys
A
2022 study found that belief in witchcraft, as in the use of malevolent
magic or powers, is still widespread in some parts of the world. It
found that belief in witchcraft varied from 9% of people in some
countries to 90% in others, and was linked to cultural and socioeconomic
factors. Stronger belief in witchcraft correlated with poorer economic
development, weak institutions, lower levels of education, lower life
expectancy, lower life satisfaction, and high religiosity.[197][198]
It contrasted two hypotheses about future changes in witchcraft belief:[198]
witchcraft beliefs should decline "in the process of development due to
improved security and..., lower exposure to shocks, spread of education
and scientific approach to explaining life events" according to
standard modernization theory
"some aspects of development,
namely rising inequality, globalization, technological change, and
migration, may instead revive witchcraft beliefs by disrupting
established social order" according to literature largely inspired by
observations from Sub-Saharan Africa.
Prevalence of belief in witchcraft by country[198]
Socio-demographic correlates of witchcraft beliefs[198]
In
the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, Russian state media claimed that
Ukraine was using black magic against the Russian military, specifically
accusing Oleksiy Arestovych of enlisting sorcerers and witches as well
as Ukrainian soldiers of consecrating weapons "with blood
magick".[199][200]
Neopagan Witchcraft
During the 20th
century, interest in witchcraft rose in English-speaking and European
countries. From the 1920s, Margaret Murray popularized the 'witch-cult
hypothesis': the idea that those persecuted as 'witches' in early modern
Europe were followers of a benevolent pagan religion that had survived
the Christianization of Europe. This has been discredited by further
historical research.[201][202]
From the 1930s, occult neopagan
groups began to emerge who called their religion a kind of 'witchcraft'.
They were initiatory secret societies inspired by Murray's 'witch cult'
theory, ceremonial magic, Aleister Crowley's Thelema, and historical
paganism.[203][204][205] The biggest religious movement to emerge from
this is Wicca. They do not use the term 'witchcraft' in the traditional
way, but instead define their practices as a kind of "positive magic".
Today,
some Wiccans and members of related traditions self-identify as
"witches" and use the term "witchcraft" for their magico-religious
beliefs and practices, primarily in Western anglophone countries.[13]
Various forms of Wicca are now practised as a religion with positive
ethical principles, organized into autonomous covens and led by a High
Priesthood. A survey published in 2000 cited just over 200,000 people
who reported practicing Wicca in the United States.[206] There is also
an "Eclectic Wiccan" movement of individuals and groups who share key
Wiccan beliefs but have no formal link with traditional Wiccan covens.
Some Wiccan-inspired neopagans call their beliefs and practices
"traditional witchcraft" or the "traditional craft" rather than
Wicca.[207]
Witches in art and fiction
Witches have a long
history of being depicted in art, although most of their earliest
artistic depictions seem to originate in Early Modern Europe,
particularly the Medieval and Renaissance periods. Many scholars
attribute their manifestation in art as inspired by texts such as Canon
Episcopi, a demonology-centered work of literature, and Malleus
Maleficarum, a "witch-craze" manual published in 1487, by Heinrich
Kramer and Jacob Sprenger.[208] Witches in fiction span a wide array of
characterizations. They are typically, but not always, female, and
generally depicted as either villains or heroines." (wikipedia)
"Halloween
is a celebration observed on October 31, the day before the feast of
All Hallows, also known as Hallowmas or All Saint's Day. The
celebrations and observances of this day occur primarily in regions of
the Western world, albeit with some traditions varying significantly
between geographical areas.
Origins
Halloween is the eve
of vigil before the Western Christian feast of All Hallows (or All
Saints) which is observed on November 1. This day begins the triduum of
Hallowtide, which culminates with All Souls' Day. In the Middle Ages,
many Christians held a folk belief that All Hallows' Eve was the "night
where the veil between the material world and the afterlife was at its
most transparent".[2]
Americas
Canada
Scottish
emigration, primarily to Canada before 1870 and to the United States
thereafter, brought the Scottish version of the holiday to each country.
The earliest known reference to ritual begging on Halloween in English
speaking North America occurs in 1911 when a newspaper in Kingston,
Ontario reported that it was normal for the smaller children to go
street "guising" on Halloween between 6 and 7 p.m., visiting shops, and
neighbours to be rewarded with nuts and candies for their rhymes and
songs.[3] Canadians spend more on candy at Halloween than at any time
apart from Christmas. Halloween is also a time for charitable
contributions. Until 2006 when UNICEF moved to an online donation
system, collecting small change was very much a part of Canadian
trick-or-treating.[4] Quebec offers themed tours of parts of the old
city and historic cemeteries in the area.[5] In 2014 the hamlet of
Arviat, Nunavut moved their Halloween festivities to the community hall,
cancelling the practice of door-to-door "trick or treating", due to the
risk of roaming polar bears.[6][7] In British Columbia it is a
tradition to set off fireworks at Halloween.[8]
United States
In
the United States, Halloween did not become a holiday until the 19th
century. The transatlantic migration of nearly two million Irish
following the Great Irish Famine (1845–1849) brought the holiday to the
United States.
American librarian and author Ruth Edna Kelley
wrote the first book length history of the holiday in the U.S., The Book
of Hallowe'en (1919), and references souling in the chapter "Hallowe'en
in America": "All Hallowe'en customs in the United States are borrowed
directly or adapted from those of other countries. The taste in
Hallowe'en festivities now is to study old traditions, and hold a Scotch
party, using Robert Burns's poem Halloween as a guide; or to go
a-souling as the English used. In short, no custom that was once honored
at Hallowe'en is out of fashion now."[9] The main event for children of
modern Halloween in the United States and Canada is trick-or-treating,
in which children, teenagers, (sometimes) young adults, and parents
(accompanying their children) disguise themselves in costumes and go
door-to-door in their neighborhoods, ringing each doorbell and yelling
"Trick or treat!" to solicit a gift of candy or similar items.[10]
Teenagers and adults will more frequently attend Halloween-themed
costume parties typically hosted by friends or themed events at
nightclubs either on Halloween itself or a weekend close to the holiday.
At
the turn of the 20th century, Halloween had turned into a night of
vandalism, with destruction of property and cruelty to animals and
people.[11] Around 1912, the Boy Scouts, Boys Clubs, and other
neighborhood organizations came together to encourage a safe celebration
that would end the destruction that had become so common on this night.
The
commercialization of Halloween in the United States did not start until
the 20th century, beginning perhaps with Halloween postcards (featuring
hundreds of designs), which were most popular between 1905 and
1915.[12] Dennison Manufacturing Company (which published its first
Halloween catalog in 1909) and the Beistle Company were pioneers in
commercially made Halloween decorations, particularly die-cut paper
items.[13][14] German manufacturers specialised in Halloween figurines
that were exported to the United States in the period between the two
World Wars.
Halloween is now the United States' second most
popular holiday (after Christmas) for decorating; the sale of candy and
costumes is also extremely common during the holiday, which is marketed
to children and adults alike. The National Confectioners Association
(NCA) reported in 2005 that 80% of American adults planned to give out
candy to trick-or-treaters.[15] The NCA reported in 2005 that 93% of
children planned to go trick-or-treating.[16] According to the National
Retail Federation, the most popular Halloween costume themes for adults
are, in order: witch, pirate, vampire, cat, and clown.[17][when?] Each
year, popular costumes are dictated by various current events and pop
culture icons. On many college campuses, Halloween is a major
celebration, with the Friday and Saturday nearest 31 October hosting
many costume parties. Other popular activities are watching horror
movies and visiting haunted houses. Total spending on Halloween is
estimated to be $8.4 billion.[18]
Events
Many theme parks
stage Halloween events annually, such as Halloween Horror Nights at
Universal Studios Hollywood and Universal Orlando, Mickey's Halloween
Party and Mickey's Not-So-Scary Halloween Party at Disneyland Resort and
Magic Kingdom respectively, and Knott's Scary Farm at Knott's Berry
Farm. One of the more notable parades is New York's Village Halloween
Parade. Each year approximately 50,000 costumed marchers parade up Sixth
Avenue.[19] Salem, Massachusetts, site of the Salem witch trials,
celebrates Halloween throughout the month of October with tours, plays,
concerts, and other activities.[20] A number of venues in New York's
lower Hudson Valley host various events to showcase a connection with
Washington Irving's Legend of Sleepy Hollow. Van Cortlandt Manor stages
the "Great Jack o' Lantern Blaze" featuring thousands of lighted carved
pumpkins.[21]
Some locales have had to modify their celebrations
due to disruptive behavior on the part of young adults. Madison,
Wisconsin hosts an annual Halloween celebration. In 2002, due to the
large crowds in the State Street area, a riot broke out, necessitating
the use of mounted police and tear gas to disperse the crowds.[22]
Likewise, Chapel Hill, site of the University of North Carolina, has a
downtown street party which in 2007 drew a crowd estimated at 80,000 on
downtown Franklin Street, in a town with a population of just 54,000. In
2008, in an effort to curb the influx of out-of-towners, mayor Kevin
Foy put measures in place to make commuting downtown more difficult on
Halloween.[23] In 2014, large crowds of college students rioted at the
Keene, New Hampshire Pumpkin Fest, whereupon the City Council voted not
to grant a permit for the following year's festival,[24] and organizers
moved the event to Laconia for 2015.[25]
Brazil
The
Brazilian non-governmental organization named Amigos do Saci created
Saci Day as a Brazilian parallel in opposition to the
"American-influenced" holiday of Halloween that saw minor celebration in
Brazil. The Saci is a mischievous evil character in Brazilian folkore.
Saci Day is commemorated on October 31st, the same day as Halloween, and
is an official holiday in the state of São Paulo. Despite official
recognition in Sao Paulo and several other municipalities throughout the
country, few Brazilians celebrate it.[26][27]
Dominican Republic
In
the Dominican Republic it has been gaining popularity, largely due to
many Dominicans living in the United States and then bringing the custom
to the island. In the larger cities of Santiago or Santo Domingo it has
become more common to see children trick-or-treating, but in smaller
towns and villages it is almost entirely absent, partly due to religious
opposition. Tourist areas such as Sosua and Punta Cana feature many
venues with Halloween celebrations, predominantly geared towards
adults.[28]
Mexico (Día de Muertos)
Mexican tomb on the
Day of the Dead, adorned with the cempasúchil, the holiday's traditional
flower, and a Halloween ghost balloon, at the historic cemetery of San
Luis Potosí City
Observed in Mexico and Mexican communities
abroad, Day of the Dead (Spanish: Día de Muertos) celebrations arose
from the syncretism of indigenous Aztec traditions with the Christian
Hallowtide of the Spanish colonizers. Flower decorations, altars and
candies are part of this holiday season. The holiday is distinct from
Halloween in its origins and observances, but the two have become
associated because of cross-border connections between Mexico and the
United States through popular culture and migration, as the two
celebrations occur at the same time of year and may involve similar
imagery, such as skeletons. Halloween and Día de Muertos have influenced
each other in some areas of the United States and Mexico, with
Halloween traditions such as costumes and face-painting becoming
increasingly common features of the Mexican festival.[29][30]
Asia
China
The
Chinese celebrate the "Hungry Ghost Festival" in mid-July, when it is
customary to float river lanterns to remember those who have died. By
contrast, Halloween is often called "All Saints' Festival" (Wànshèngjié,
萬聖節), or (less commonly) "All Saints' Eve" (Wànshèngyè, 萬聖夜) or "Eve of
All Saints' Day" (Wànshèngjié Qiányè, 萬聖節前夕), stemming from the term
"All Hallows Eve" (hallow referring to the souls of holy saints).
Chinese Christian churches hold religious celebrations. Non-religious
celebrations are dominated by expatriate Americans or Canadians, but
costume parties are also popular for Chinese young adults, especially in
large cities. Hong Kong Disneyland and Ocean Park (Halloween Bash) host
annual Halloween shows.
Mainland China has been less influenced
by Anglo traditions than Hong Kong and Halloween is generally considered
"foreign". As Halloween has become more popular globally it has also
become more popular in China, however, particularly amongst children
attending private or international schools with many foreign teachers
from North America.[31]
Hong Kong
Traditional
"door-to-door" trick or treating is not commonly practiced in Hong Kong
due to the vast majority of Hong Kong residents living in high-rise
apartment blocks. However, in many buildings catering to expatriates,
Halloween parties and limited trick or treating is arranged by the
management. Instances of street-level trick or treating in Hong Kong
occur in ultra-exclusive gated housing communities such as The Beverly
Hills populated by Hong Kong's super-rich and in expatriate areas like
Discovery Bay and the Red Hill Peninsula. For the general public, there
are events at Tsim Sha Tsui's Avenue of the Stars that try to mimic the
celebration.[32] In the Lan Kwai Fong area of Hong Kong, known as a
major entertainment district for the international community, a
Halloween celebration and parade has taken place for over 20 years, with
many people dressing in costume and making their way around the streets
to various drinking establishments.[33] Many international schools also
celebrate Halloween with costumes, and some put an academic twist on
the celebrations such as the "Book-o-ween" celebrations at Hong Kong
International School where students dress as favorite literary
characters.
Japan
Halloween arrived in Japan mainly as a
result of American pop culture. In 2009 it was celebrated only by
expats.[34] The wearing of elaborate costumes by young adults at night
has since become popular in areas such as Amerikamura in Osaka and
Shibuya in Tokyo, where, in October 2012, about 1700 people dressed in
costumes to take part in the Halloween Festival.[35] Celebrations have
become popular with young adults as a costume party and club event.[36]
Trick-or-treating for Japanese children has taken hold in some areas. By
the mid-2010s, Yakuza were giving snacks and sweets to children.[37]
Philippines
The
period from 31 October through 2 November is a time for remembering
dead family members and friends. Many Filipinos travel back to their
hometowns for family gatherings of festive remembrance.[38]
Trick-or-treating
is gradually replacing the dying tradition of Pangangaluluwâ, a local
analogue of the old English custom of souling. People in the provinces
still observe Pangangaluluwâ by going in groups to every house and
offering a song in exchange for money or food. The participants, usually
children, would sing carols about the souls in Purgatory, with the
abúloy (alms for the dead) used to pay for Masses for these souls. Along
with the requested alms, householders sometimes gave the children suman
(rice cakes). During the night, various small items, such as clothing,
plants, etc., would "mysteriously" disappear, only to be discovered the
next morning in the yard or in the middle of the street. In older times,
it was believed that the spirits of ancestors and loved ones visited
the living on this night, manifesting their presence by taking an
item.[39]
As the observation of Christmas traditions in the
Philippines begins as early as September, it is a common sight to see
Halloween decorations next to Christmas decorations in urban
settings.[citation needed]
Saudi Arabia
Starting 2022, Saudi Arabia began to celebrate Halloween in the public in Riyadh under its Saudi Vision 2030.[40]
Singapore
Around
mid-July Singapore Chinese celebrate "Zhong Yuan Jie / Yu Lan Jie"
(Hungry Ghosts Festival), a time when it is believed that the spirits of
the dead come back to visit their families.[41] In recent years,
Halloween celebrations are becoming more popular, with influence from
the west.[42] In 2012, there were over 19 major Halloween celebration
events around Singapore.[43] SCAPE's Museum of Horrors held its fourth
scare fest in 2014.[44] Universal Studios Singapore hosts "Halloween
Horror Nights".[45]
South Korea
The popularity of the
holiday among young people in South Korea comes from English academies
and corporate marketing strategies, and was influenced by Halloween
celebrations in Japan and America.[46] Despite not being a public
holiday, it is celebrated in different areas around Seoul, especially
Itaewon and Hondae.[47]
Taiwan
Traditionally, Taiwanese
people celebrate "Zhong Yuan Pudu Festival", where spirits that do not
have any surviving family members to pay respects to them, are able to
roam the Earth during the seventh lunar month. It is known as Ghost
Month.[48] While some have compared it to Halloween, it has no relations
and the overall meaning is different. In recent years, mainly as a
result of American pop culture, Halloween is becoming more widespread
amongst young Taiwanese people. Halloween events are held in many areas
across Taipei, such as Xinyi Special District and Shilin District where
there are many international schools and expats.[49] Halloween parties
are celebrated differently based on different age groups. One of the
most popular Halloween event is the Tianmu Halloween Festival, which
started in 2009 and is organised by the Taipei City Office of
Commerce.[50] The 2-day annual festivity has attracted more than 240,000
visitors in 2019. During this festival, stores and businesses in Tianmu
place pumpkin lanterns outside their stores to identify themselves as
trick-or-treat destinations for children.[51]
Australia and New Zealand
Non-religious
celebrations of Halloween modelled on North American festivities are
growing increasingly popular in Australia despite not being
traditionally part of the culture.[52] Some Australians criticise this
intrusion into their culture.[53][54] Many dislike the commercialisation
and American pop-culture influence.[54][55] Some supporters of the
event place it alongside other cultural traditions such as Saint
Patrick's Day.[56]
Halloween historian and author of Halloween:
Pagan Festival to Trick or Treat, Mark Oxbrow says while Halloween may
have been popularised by depictions of it in US movies and TV shows, it
is not a new entry into Australian culture.[57] His research shows
Halloween was first celebrated in Australia in Castlemaine, Victoria, in
1858, which was 43 years before Federation. His research shows
Halloween traditions were brought to the country by Scottish and Irish
miners who settled in Victoria during the Gold Rush.
Because of
the polarised opinions about Halloween, growing numbers of people are
decorating their letter boxes to indicate that children are welcome to
come knocking. In the past decade, the popularity of Halloween in
Australia has grown.[58] In 2020, the first magazine dedicated solely to
celebrating Halloween in Australia was launched, called Hallozween,[59]
and in 2021, sales of costumes, decorations and carving pumpkins soared
to an all-time high[60] despite the effect of the global ... limiting
celebrations.
In New Zealand, Halloween is not celebrated to the
same extent as in North America, although in recent years non-religious
celebrations have become more common.[61][62] Trick-or-treat has become
increasingly popular with minors in New Zealand, despite being not a
"British or Kiwi event" and the influence of American globalisation.[63]
One criticism of Halloween in New Zealand is that it is overly
commercialised - by The Warehouse, for example.[63]
Europe
Over
the years, Halloween has become more popular in Europe and has been
partially ousting some older customs like the Rübengeistern [de]
(English: turnip ghosts, beet spirit), Martinisingen, and others.[64]
France
Halloween
was introduced to most of France in the 1990s.[65] In Brittany,
Halloween had been celebrated for centuries and is known as Kalan Goañv
(Night of Spirits). During this time, it is believed that the spirits of
the dead return to the world of the living lead by the Ankou, the
collector of souls.[66] Also during this time, Bretons bake Kornigou, a
pastry shaped like the antlers of a stag.[citation needed]
Germany
"Don't drink and fly" Halloween decoration in Germany
Halloween
was not generally observed in Germany prior to the 1990s, but has been
increasing in popularity. It has been associated with the influence of
United States culture, and "Trick or Treating" (German: Süßes sonst
gibt's Saures) has been occurring in various German cities, especially
in areas such as the Dahlem neighborhood in Berlin, which was part of
the American zone during the Cold War. Today, Halloween in Germany
brings in 200 million euros a year, through multiple industries.[67]
Halloween is celebrated by both children and adults. Adults celebrate at
themed costume parties and clubs, while children go trick or treating.
Complaints of vandalism associated with Halloween "Tricks" are
increasing, particularly from many elderly Germans unfamiliar with
"Trick or Treating".[68]
Greece
In Greece, Halloween is
not celebrated widely and it is a working day, with little public
interest, since the early 2000s. Recently, it has somewhat increased in
popularity as both a secular celebration; although Carnival is vastly
more popular among Greeks. For very few, Halloween is[when?] considered
the fourth most popular festival in the country after Christmas, Easter,
and Carnival. Retail businesses, bars, nightclubs, and certain theme
parks might organize Halloween parties. This boost in popularity has
been attributed to the influence of western consumerism.
Since it
is a working day, Halloween is not celebrated on 31 October unless the
date falls on a weekend, in which case it is celebrated by some during
the last weekend before All Hallow's Eve, usually in the form of themed
house parties and retail business decorations. Trick-or-treating is not
widely popular because similar activities are already undertaken during
Carnival. The slight rise in popularity of Halloween in Greece has led
to some increase in its popularity throughout nearby countries in the
Balkans and Cyprus. In the latter, there has been an increase in
Greek-Cypriot retailers selling Halloween merchandise every year.[69]
Ireland
A plaster cast of a traditional Irish Halloween turnip (rutabaga) lantern on display in the Museum of Country Life, Ireland[70]
On
Halloween night, adults and children dress up as various monsters and
creatures, light bonfires, and enjoy fireworks displays; Derry in
Northern Ireland is home to the largest organized Halloween celebration
on the island, in the form of a street carnival and fireworks
display.[71]
Games are often played, such as bobbing for apples,
in which apples, peanuts, other nuts and fruits, and some small coins
are placed in a basin of water.[72] Everyone takes turns catching as
many items possible using only their mouths. Another common game
involves the hands-free eating of an apple hung on a string attached to
the ceiling. Games of divination are also played at Halloween.[73]
Colcannon is traditionally served on Halloween.[72]
31 October is
the busiest day of the year for the Emergency Services.[74] Bangers and
fireworks are illegal in the Republic of Ireland; however, they are
commonly smuggled in from Northern Ireland where they are legal.[75]
Bonfires are frequently built around Halloween.[76] Trick-or-treating is
popular amongst children on 31 October and Halloween parties and events
are commonplace.
Italy
In Italy, All Saints' Day is a
public holiday. On 2 November, Tutti i Morti or All Souls' Day, families
remember loved ones who have died. These are still the main
holidays.[77] In some Italian tradition, children would awake on the
morning of All Saints or All Souls to find small gifts from their
deceased ancestors. In Sardinia, Concas de Mortu (Head of the deads),
carved pumpkins that look like skulls, with candles inside are
displayed.[78][79][80] Halloween is, however, gaining in popularity, and
involves costume parties for young adults.[81] The traditions to carve
pumpkins in a skull figure, lighting candles inside, or to beg for small
gifts for the deads e.g. sweets or nuts, also belong to North
Italy.[82] In Veneto these carved pumpkins were called lumère (lanterns)
or suche dei morti (deads' pumpkins).[83]
Poland
Since
the fall of Communism in 1989, Halloween has become increasingly popular
in Poland. Particularly, it is celebrated among younger people. The
influx of Western tourists and expats throughout the 1990s introduced
the costume party aspect of Hallowe'en celebrations, particularly in
clubs and at private house parties. Door-to-door trick or treating is
not common. Pumpkin carving is becoming more evident, following a strong
North American version of the tradition.
Romania
Romanians
observe the Feast of St. Andrew, patron saint of Romania, on 30
November. On St. Andrew's Eve ghosts are said to be about. A number of
customs related to divination, in other places connected to Halloween,
are associated with this night.[84] However, with the popularity of
Dracula in western Europe, around Halloween the Romanian tourist
industry promotes trips to locations connected to the historical Vlad
Tepeș and the more fanciful Dracula of Bram Stoker. One of the most
successful Halloween Parties in Transylvania takes place in Sighișoara,
the citadel where Vlad the Impaler was born. This party include magician
shows, ballet show and The Ritual Killing of a Living Dead[85] The
biggest Halloween party in Transylvania take place at Bran Castle, aka
Dracula's Castle from Transylvania.[86]
Both the Catholic and
Orthodox Churches in Romania discourage Halloween celebrations, advising
their parishioners to focus rather on the "Day of the Dead" on 1
November, when special religious observances are held for the souls of
the deceased.[87] Opposition by religious and nationalist groups,
including calls to ban costumes and decorations in schools in 2015, have
been met with criticism.[88][89][90] Halloween parties are popular in
bars and nightclubs.[91]
Russia
In Russia, most Christians
are Orthodox, and in the Orthodox Church, Halloween is on the Saturday
after Pentecost, and therefore 4 to 5 months before western Halloween.
Celebration of western Halloween began in the 1990s around the downfall
of the Soviet regime, when costume and ghoulish parties spread in night
clubs throughout Russia. Halloween is generally celebrated by younger
generations and is not widely celebrated in civic society (e.g. theaters
or libraries). In fact, Halloween is among the Western celebrations
that the Russian government and politicians—which have grown
increasingly anti-Western in the early 2010s—are trying to eliminate
from public celebration.[92][93][94]
Serbia
Halloween
(Serbian Cyrillic: Ноћ вештица, lit. "Night of Witches") was not
celebrated in Serbia until recently. The main reason was because it was
believed to oppose Serbian traditions and to encourage “feeding the
devil”. Halloween is a work day in Serbia. Nonetheless, it is very
popular among younger generations. Many schools (mostly elementary
schools) in the country throw special Halloween parties, full of
children and teenagers wearing costumes and masks. Bars, nightclubs and
fun parks also organise Halloween parties for adults and young adults.
Spain
In
Spain, celebrations involve eating castanyes (roasted chestnuts),
panellets (special almond balls covered in pine nuts), moniatos (roast
or baked sweet potato), Ossos de Sant cake and preserved fruit (candied
or glazed fruit). Moscatell (Muscat) is drunk from porrons.[95] Around
the time of this celebration, it is common for street vendors to sell
hot toasted chestnuts wrapped in newspaper. In many places,
confectioners often organise raffles of chestnuts and preserved fruit.
The
tradition of eating these foods comes from the fact that during All
Saints' night, on the eve of All Souls' Day in the Christian tradition,
bell ringers would ring bells in commemoration of the dead into the
early morning. Friends and relatives would help with this task, and
everyone would eat these foods for sustenance.[96]
Other versions
of the story state that the Castanyada originates at the end of the
18th century and comes from the old funeral meals, where other foods,
such as vegetables and dried fruit were not served. The meal had the
symbolic significance of a communion with the souls of the departed:
while the chestnuts were roasting, prayers would be said for the person
who had just died.[97]
The festival is usually depicted with the
figure of a castanyera: an old lady, dressed in peasant's clothing and
wearing a headscarf, sitting behind a table, roasting chestnuts for
street sale.
In recent years, the Castanyada has become a
revetlla of All Saints and is celebrated in the home and community. It
is the first of the four main school festivals, alongside Christmas,
Carnestoltes and St George's Day, without reference to ritual or
commemoration of the dead.[98]
Galicia is known two have the
second largest Halloween or Samain festivals in Europe and during this
time, a drink called Queimada is often served.
Sweden
On
All Hallow's Eve, a Requiem Mass is widely attended every year at
Uppsala Cathedral, part of the Lutheran Church of Sweden.[99]
Throughout
the period of Allhallowtide, starting with All Hallow's Eve, Swedish
families visit churchyards and adorn the graves of their family members
with lit candles and wreaths fashioned from pine branches.[99]
Among
children, the practice of dressing in costume and collecting candy
gained popularity beginning around 2005.[100] The American traditions of
Halloween have however been met with skepticism among the older
generations, in part due to conflicting with the Swedish traditions on
All Hallow's Eve and in part due to their commercialism.[101]
Switzerland
In
Switzerland, Halloween, after first becoming popular in 1999, is on the
wane, and is most popular with young adults who attend parties.
Switzerland already has a "festival overload" and even though Swiss
people like to dress up for any occasion, they do prefer a traditional
element, such as in the Fasnacht tradition of chasing away winter using
noise and masks.[102][103]
United Kingdom and Crown dependencies
England
In
the past, on All Souls' Eve families would stay up late, and little
"soul cakes" were eaten. At the stroke of midnight, there was solemn
silence among households, which had candles burning in every room to
guide the souls back to visit their earthly homes and a glass of wine on
the table to refresh them. The tradition of giving soul cakes that
originated in Great Britain and Ireland was known as souling, often seen
as the origin of modern trick or treating in North America, and souling
continued in parts of England as late as the 1930s, with children going
from door to door singing songs and saying prayers for the dead in
return for cakes or money.[104]
Trick or treating and other
Halloween celebrations are extremely popular, with shops decorated with
witches and pumpkins, and young people attending costume parties.[105]
Scotland
The
name Halloween is first attested in the 16th century as a Scottish
shortening of the fuller All-Hallow-Even, that is, the night before All
Hallows' Day.[106] Dumfries poet John Mayne's 1780 poem made note of
pranks at Halloween "What fearfu' pranks ensue!". Scottish poet Robert
Burns was influenced by Mayne's composition, and portrayed some of the
customs in his poem Halloween (1785).[107] According to Burns, Halloween
is "thought to be a night when witches, devils, and other
mischief-making beings are all abroad on their baneful midnight
errands".[108]
Among the earliest record of Guising at Halloween
in Scotland is in 1895, where masqueraders in disguise carrying lanterns
made out of scooped out turnips, visit homes to be rewarded with cakes,
fruit and money.[109] If children approached the door of a house, they
were given offerings of food. The children's practice of "guising",
going from door to door in costumes for food or coins, is a traditional
Halloween custom in Scotland.[3] These days children who knock on their
neighbours doors have to sing a song or tell stories for a gift of
sweets or money.[110]
A traditional Halloween game includes apple
"dooking",[111] or "dunking" or (i.e., retrieving one from a bucket of
water using only one's mouth), and attempting to eat, while blindfolded,
a treacle/jam-coated scone hanging on a piece of string.
Traditional
customs and lore include divination practices, ways of trying to
predict the future. A traditional Scottish form of divining one's future
spouse is to carve an apple in one long strip, then toss the peel over
one's shoulder. The peel is believed to land in the shape of the first
letter of the future spouse's name.[112]
In Kilmarnock, Halloween is also celebrated on the last Friday of the month, and is known colloquially as "Killieween".[113]
Isle of Man
Halloween is a popular traditional occasion on the Isle of Man, where it is known as Hop-tu-Naa.
Elsewhere
Saint Helena
In
Saint Helena, Halloween is actively celebrated, largely along the
American model, with ghosts, skeletons, devils, vampires, witches and
the like. Imitation pumpkins are used instead of real pumpkins because
the pumpkin harvesting season in Saint Helena's hemisphere is not near
Halloween. Trick-or-treating is widespread. Party venues provide
entertainment for adults." (wikipedia)
"A
hag is a wizened old woman, or a kind of fairy or goddess having the
appearance of such a woman, often found in folklore and children's tales
such as "Hansel and Gretel".[1] Hags are often seen as malevolent, but
may also be one of the chosen forms of shapeshifting deities, such as
The Morrígan or Badb, who are seen as neither wholly benevolent nor
malevolent.[2][3]
Etymology
The term appears in Middle
English, and was a shortening of hægtesse, an Old English term for
'witch'; similarly the Dutch heks and German Hexe are also shortenings,
of the Middle Dutch haghetisse and Old High German hagzusa,
respectively.[4] All of these words are derived from the Proto-Germanic
**hagatusjon-[4] which is of unknown origin; the first element may be
related to the word hedge.[4][5]
As a stock character in fairy or
folk tale, the hag shares characteristics with the crone, and the two
words are sometimes used as if interchangeable.[citation needed]
Using
the word hag to translate terms found in non-English (or non-modern
English) is contentious, since use of the word is sometimes associated
with misogyny.[6][7][clarification needed]
In folklore
A
"Night Hag" or "the Old Hag", was a nightmare spirit in English and
anglophone North American folklore. This variety of hag is essentially
identical to the Old English mæra—a being with roots in ancient Germanic
superstition, and closely related to the Scandinavian mara. According
to folklore, the Old Hag sat on a sleeper's chest and sent nightmares to
him or her. When the subject awoke, he or she would be unable to
breathe or even move for a short period of time. In the Swedish film
Marianne (2011), the main character suffers from such nightmares. This
state is now called sleep paralysis, but in the old belief, the subject
was considered "hagridden".[8] It is still frequently discussed as if it
were a paranormal state.[9]
Many stories about hags seem to have
been used to frighten children into being good. In Northern England,
for example, Peg Powler was a river hag who lived in the River Tees and
had skin the colour of green pond scum.[10][11][12] Parents who wanted
to keep their children away from the river's edge told them that if they
got too close to the water, she would pull them in with her long arms,
drown them, and sometimes eat them. This type of nixie or neck has other
regional names, such as Grindylow[13] (a name connected to
Grendel),[13][14] Jenny Greenteeth from Yorkshire, and Nelly Longarms
from several English counties.[15]
Many tales about hags do not
describe them well enough to distinguish between an old woman who knows
magic, or a witch or supernatural being.[16]
In Slavic folklore,
Baba Yaga was a hag who lived in the woods in a house on chickens legs.
She would often ride through the forest on a mortar, sweeping away her
tracks with a broom.[17] Though she is usually a single being, in some
folktales three Baba Yagas are depicted as helping the hero in his
quest, either by giving advice or by giving gifts.[18]
In Irish
and Scottish mythology, the cailleach is a hag goddess concerned with
creation, harvest, the weather, and sovereignty.[3][19] In partnership
with the goddess Bríd, she is a seasonal goddess, seen as ruling the
winter months while Bríd rules the summer.[19] In Scotland, a group of
hags, known as The Cailleachan (The Storm Hags) are seen as
personifications of the elemental powers of nature, especially in a
destructive aspect. They are said to be particularly active in raising
the windstorms of spring, during the period known as A
Chailleach.[19][20]
Hags as sovereignty figures abound in Irish
mythology. The most common pattern is that the hag represents the barren
land, whom the hero of the tale must approach without fear, and come to
love on her own terms. When the hero displays this courage, love, and
acceptance of her hideous side, the sovereignty hag then reveals that
she is also a young and beautiful goddess.[3]
In ancient Greek religion, the Three Fates (particularly Atropos) are often depicted as hags.
Hags are similar to Lilith of the Torah and the Old Testament.
In Western literature
In
mediaeval and later literature, the term hag, and its relatives in
European languages, came to stand for an unattractive, older woman.
Building on the mediaeval tradition of such women as portrayed in comic
and burlesque literature, specifically in the Italian Renaissance, the
hag represented the opposite of the lovely lady familiar from the poetry
of Petrarch.[21]
In The Heroes or Greek Fairy Tales For My Children, Charles Kingsley characterized Scylla as "Scylla the sea hag"." (wikipedia)
"In
Jungian depth psychology, the witch archetype is a common portrayal of a
woman, usually old and living alone, who practices dark magic. Witches
are typically considered to be a dangerous, lurking threat.[1] How the
witch archetype is viewed typically depends on the religious and
political context as well as the social context and its gender
politics.[2] Jean La Fontaine wrote that the "stereotype of evil appears
not to have been closely connected to the actions of real people except
when it was mobilised against the current enemies of the Church."...
Archetypes
In
Jungian psychology, archetypes are innate, universal psychic structures
that influence human thoughts, emotions, and behaviors. The witch
archetype emerges as a dynamic representation of the collective
unconscious, encapsulating both the light and shadow aspects of human
existence. The witch symbolizes the repressed, marginalized, and
misunderstood facets of the psyche, often associated with the darker
aspects of femininity and the mysteries of the unconscious.[6]
According to Jung,
The primordial image, or archetype, is a figure—be it a daemon, a human
being, or a process—that constantly recurs in the course of history and
appears wherever creative fantasy is freely expressed. Essentially,
therefore, it is a mythological figure. When we examine these images
more closely, we find that they give form to countless typical
experiences of our ancestors.[...] In each of these images there is a
little piece of human psychology and human fate, a remnant of the joys
and sorrows that have been repeated countless times in our ancestral
history.[7]
Jung traces the term back to Philo, Irenaeus, and the
Corpus Hermeticum, which associate archetypes with divinity and the
creation of the world, and notes the close relationship of Platonic
ideas.
The archetypal feminine
According to Jungian
psychologist, Erich Neumann, the Archetypal Feminine has two major axes:
"M", her elementary character with focus on the maternal, and "A", her
transformative character with focus on the anima or "soul image".[8]
Each axis is a continuum between positive and negative poles.[9]
Figures
such as the Archetypal Feminine embrace an "uroboric character" (like a
serpent eating its own tail) or bi-valence. Thus the major archetype of
the Great Mother has two major aspects, Good Mother (M+) and Terrible
Mother (M−), which are in opposition and yet coexist. Neumann gives the
example of the witch in the fairytale of Hansel and Gretel whose house
(which symbolises the external) is made of gingerbread, but who in
reality (internally) "eats little children". The other side of the coin
is that the Terrible Mother, which is apparently negative, may exhibit a
positive, transformative character, strengthening the ego, for
instance, as in the case of Perseus who, in order to win Andromeda, must
first kill the Terrible Mother, or witnessed in myths of heroic,
masculine, dragon-slaying.[10]
The Shadow
Central to
Jungian thought is the concept of the "shadow," which encompasses the
suppressed and denied aspects of the self, relegated to the shadow in
the personal or collective unconscious, or projected onto
others.[11][12] According to Jung: "Unfortunately there can be no doubt
that man is, on the whole, less good than he imagines himself or wants
to be. Everyone carries a shadow, and the less it is embodied in the
individual's conscious life, the blacker and denser it is."[13]
Jungian
psychoanalyst James Hollis writes, "As Jung noted, whatever we deny
within ourselves will come to us sooner or later and demand payment.
Then, we are forced to repair within [...] and seek healing from our own
nature and its restorative capacity."[14] Jung provided an example of
what can happen, at a seminar he gave where he discussed the Third Reich
in pre-war Nazi Germany and the persecution of the Jews. According to
author Claire Douglas, Jung suggested that this might be due to "the
unconscious power of the suppressed archaic feminine" which had been
"rejected, unclaimed, and repressed".[15]
The witch archetype
embodies this shadow self, representing the unacknowledged desires,
instincts, and fears that are often relegated to the depths of the
unconscious. For example, a person who identifies strongly with the
witch archetype may struggle with feelings of being an outsider or
having unconventional beliefs, resulting in social isolation or
self-doubt.
Archetype of the witch
Witchcraft: a white-faced witch meeting a black-faced witch with a great beast (Woodcut, 1720)
The
witch archetype, deeply embedded in the collective unconscious, finds
expression in myths, folklore, literature, and art across cultures. From
ancient goddesses to contemporary representations, the witch's image
evolves while retaining its core symbolism.[16][17] The "young witch"
(A−) archetype is associated by Neumann with the Terrible Mother,
seduction,[18] and the negative anima.[19] The "old witch" (M−)[18] is
associated with psycho-spiritual death mysteries and the Terrible
Mother.[20] Isis, goddess of healing, magic and mysteries, also has her
dark side and embraces elements of both Good and Terrible Mothers.[21]
Sophia, archetype or goddess of wisdom, and an archetypal Virgin (A+)
counterpart to motherhood, is associated with the positive.[22]
In
society, the fear and misunderstanding of the witch archetype can lead
to the projection of these repressed aspects onto individuals who may be
seen as different or unconventional. Historical witch hunts and
persecutions are stark examples of how collective anxieties around the
archetype can be channeled into harmful actions. The vilification of
those who exhibit traits associated with the witch, such as
independence, wisdom, and defiance of norms, can result in the
suppression of individual expression and the perpetuation of social
injustices.
In art and literature
Witches have a long
history of being depicted in art, although most of their earliest
artistic depictions seem to originate in Early Modern Europe,
particularly the Medieval and Renaissance periods. Many scholars
attribute their manifestation in art as inspired by texts such as Canon
Episcopi, a demonology-centered work of literature, and Malleus
Maleficarum, a "witch-craze" manual published in 1487, by Heinrich
Kramer and Jacob Sprenger.[25] Witches in fiction span a wide array of
characterizations. They are typically, but not always, female, and
generally depicted as either villains or heroines.
In art
Witches
have a long history of being depicted in art, although most of their
earliest artistic depictions seem to originate in Early Modern Europe,
particularly the Medieval and Renaissance periods. Many scholars
attribute their manifestation in art as inspired by texts such as Canon
Episcopi, a demonology-centered work of literature, and Malleus
Maleficarum, a "witch-craze" manual published in 1487, by Heinrich
Kramer and Jacob Sprenger.[25]
Canon Episcopi, a ninth-century
text that explored the subject of demonology, initially introduced
concepts that would continuously be associated with witches, such as
their ability to fly or their believed fornication and sexual relations
with the devil. The text refers to two women, Diana the Huntress and
Herodias, who both express the duality of female sorcerers. Diana was
described as having a heavenly body and as the "protectress of
childbirth and fertility" while Herodias symbolized "unbridled
sensuality". They thus represent the mental powers and cunning sexuality
that witches used as weapons to trick men into performing sinful acts
which would result in their eternal punishment. These characteristics
were distinguished as Medusa-like or Lamia-like traits when seen in any
artwork (Medusa's mental trickery was associated with Diana the
Huntress's psychic powers and Lamia was a rumored female figure in the
Medieval ages sometimes used in place of Herodias).[27]
One of
the first individuals to regularly depict witches after the witch-craze
of the medieval period was Albrecht Dürer, a German Renaissance artist.
His famous 1497 engraving The Four Witches, portrays four physically
attractive and seductive nude witches. Their supernatural identities are
emphasized by the skulls and bones lying at their feet as well as the
devil discreetly peering at them from their left. The women's sensuous
presentation speaks to the overtly sexual nature they were attached to
in early modern Europe. Moreover, this attractiveness was perceived as a
danger to ordinary men who they could seduce and tempt into their
sinful world.[28] Some scholars interpret this piece as utilizing the
logic of the Canon Episcopi, in which women used their mental powers and
bodily seduction to enslave and lead men onto a path of eternal
damnation, differing from the unattractive depiction of witches that
would follow in later Renaissance years.
Dürer also employed
other ideas from the Middle Ages that were commonly associated with
witches. Specifically, his art often referred to former 12th- to
13th-century Medieval iconography addressing the nature of female
sorcerers. In the Medieval period, there was a widespread fear of
witches, accordingly producing an association of dark, intimidating
characteristics with witches, such as cannibalism (witches described as
"[sucking] the blood of newborn infants"[28]) or described as having the
ability to fly, usually on the back of black goats. As the Renaissance
period began, these concepts of witchcraft were suppressed, leading to a
drastic change in the sorceress' appearances, from sexually explicit
beings to the 'ordinary' typical housewives of this time period. This
depiction, known as the 'Waldensian' witch became a cultural phenomenon
of early Renaissance art. The term originates from the 12th-century monk
Peter Waldo, who established his own religious sect which explicitly
opposed the luxury and commodity-influenced lifestyle of the Christian
church clergy, and whose sect was excommunicated before being persecuted
as "practitioners of witchcraft and magic".[28]
Subsequent
artwork exhibiting witches tended to consistently rely on cultural
stereotypes about these women. These stereotypes were usually rooted in
early Renaissance religious discourse, specifically the Christian belief
that an "earthly alliance" had taken place between Satan's female
minions who "conspired to destroy Christendom".[30]
Another
significant artist whose art consistently depicted witches was Dürer's
apprentice, Hans Baldung Grien, a 15th-century German artist. His
chiaroscuro woodcut, Witches, created in 1510, visually encompassed all
the characteristics that were regularly assigned to witches during the
Renaissance. Social beliefs labeled witches as supernatural beings
capable of doing great harm, possessing the ability to fly, and as
cannibalistic.[30] The urn in Witches seems to contain pieces of the
human body, which the witches are seen consuming as a source of energy.
Meanwhile, their nudity while feasting is recognized as an allusion to
their sexual appetite, and some scholars read the witch riding on the
back of a goat-demon as representative of their "flight-inducing
[powers]". This connection between women's sexual nature and sins was
thematic in the pieces of many Renaissance artists, especially Christian
artists, due to cultural beliefs which characterized women as overtly
sexual beings who were less capable (in comparison to men) of resisting
sinful temptation.[28]
In literature
Witches in fiction
span a wide array of characterizations. They are typically, but not
always, female, and generally depicted as either villains or
heroines.[26]
The classic fairy tale "Hansel and Gretel" presents
an example of the "witch villain" figure. The story involves a
cannibalistic witch that is eventually outwitted by the children she
tries to eat and is burned to death in her own oven. "Snow White"
depicts a murderous, tempting magician for its main antagonist. The
witch is labeled an evil queen and meets her demise after being forced
to dance in red-hot iron shoes. "The Six Swans" includes a step-mother
who magically turns her step-children into swans out of spite and
jealousy. In retaliation, the figure labeled as witch is eventually
burned at the stake. Such examples within the Brothers Grimm's works
demonstrate not only evidence of the figure of "witch villain" but also
exhibits their punishment by injury or violent death.[26] Other examples
of villainous witches in literature include the White Witch from C. S.
Lewis's The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe and the Grand High Witch
from Roald Dahl's The Witches.
Living Alone, published in 1919,
uses the "witch heroine" as an agent in support of female liberation.
Stella Benson's novel surrounds the musings of a female witch who
functions as an anarchic force in the lives of middle-class Londoners.
Her non-harmful magic aims to "shake the most downtrodden women out of
complacency and normality" to meet a state of liberation.[26] The
importance of such a heroine sheds light on the positive effects
associated with magic and witchcraft, a change from the often brutalized
and tortured illustrations found in early nineteenth century
literature. Other examples of heroic witches in fictional literature
include Glinda from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900), Serafina Pekkala
from His Dark Materials (1995–2000), and Hermione Granger from the Harry
Potter series." (wikipedia)
"A witch hat is a style of hat worn
by witches in popular culture depictions, characterized by a conical
crown and a wide brim....Potentially, this style of hat then became
associated with black magic, Satan-worship and other acts of which the
Jews were accused.[1]
Another theory posits that the witch hat
has origins in the phrygian cap which is associated with Mithraism, a
Greek and then Roman mystery cult.[citation needed]
An earlier
theory is the mummified remains of the "witches" of Subeshi, who wore
very tall, pointed black hats that resembled the iconic headgear of
their sisters in medieval Europe. Subeshi, dated to between the 4th and
2nd centuries BCE, is located in a high gorge just to the east of the
important city of Turfan....L. Frank Baum's 1900 novel The Wonderful
Wizard of Oz featured illustrations that portrayed the Wicked Witch of
the West sporting a tall, conical hat.[3] This fashion accessory was
carried over for the 1939 film adaptation, in which the Wicked Witch was
played by character actress Margaret Hamilton." (wikipedia)
"A
Witches' Sabbath is a purported gathering of those believed to practice
witchcraft and other rituals. The phrase became especially popular in
the 20th century.
Origin of the phrase
The most infamous
and influential work of witch-hunting lore, Malleus Maleficarum (1486)
does not contain the word sabbath (sabbatum).
The first recorded
English use of sabbath referring to sorcery was in 1660, in Francis
Brooke's translation of Vincent Le Blanc's book The World Surveyed:
"Divers Sorcerers […] have confessed that in their Sabbaths […] they
feed on such fare."[1] The phrase "Witches' Sabbath" appeared in a 1613
translation by "W.B." of Sébastien Michaëlis's Admirable History of
Possession and Conversion of a Penitent Woman: "He also said to
Magdalene, Art not thou an accursed woman, that the Witches Sabbath
[French le Sabath] is kept here?"[2]
The phrase is used by Henry
Charles Lea in his History of the Inquisition of the Middle Ages
(1888).[3] Writing in 1900, German historian Joseph Hansen who was a
correspondent and a German translator of Lea's work, frequently uses the
shorthand phrase hexensabbat to interpret medieval trial records,
though any consistently recurring term is noticeably rare in the copious
Latin sources Hansen also provides (see more on various Latin synonyms,
below).[4]
Lea and Hansen's influence may have led to a much
broader use of the shorthand phrase, including in English. Prior to
Hansen, use of the term by German historians also seems to have been
relatively rare. A compilation of German folklore by Jakob Grimm in the
1800s (Kinder und HausMärchen, Deutsche Mythologie) seems to contain no
mention of hexensabbat or any other form of the term sabbat relative to
fairies or magical acts.[5] The contemporary of Grimm and early
historian of witchcraft, WG Soldan also doesn't seem to use the term in
his history (1843)....
Cautio Criminalis
In a 2003
translation of Friedrich Spee's Cautio Criminalis (1631) the word
sabbaths is listed in the index with a large number of entries.[18]
However, unlike some of Spee's contemporaries in France (mentioned
above), who occasionally, if rarely, use the term sabbatha, Friedrich
Spee does not ever use words derived from sabbatha or synagoga. Spee was
German-speaking, and like his contemporaries, wrote in Latin.
Conventibus is the word Spee uses most frequently to denote a gathering
of witches, whether supposed or real, physical or spectral, as seen in
the first paragraph of question one of his book.[19] This is the same
word from which English words convention, convent, and coven are
derived. Cautio Criminalis (1631) was written as a passionate innocence
project. As a Jesuit, Spee was often in a position of witnessing the
torture of those accused of witchcraft.
Malleus Maleficarum
In
a 2009 translation of Dominican inquisitor Heinrich Kramer's Malleus
Maleficarum (1486), the word sabbath does not occur. There is a line
describing a supposed gathering that uses the word concionem; it is
accurately translated as an assembly. However in the accompanying
footnote, the translator seems to apologize for the lack of both the
term sabbath and a general scarcity of other gatherings that would seem
to fit the bill for what he refers to as a "black sabbath"....
Ritual elements
Bristol University's Ronald Hutton has encapsulated the witches' sabbath as an essentially modern construction, saying:
[The concepts] represent a combination of three older mythical components, all of which are active at night:
(1) A procession of female spirits, often joined by privileged human beings and often led by a supernatural woman;
(2) A lone spectral huntsman, regarded as demonic, accursed, or otherworldly;
(3) A procession of the human dead, normally thought to be wandering to
expiate their sins, often noisy and tumultuous, and usually consisting
of those who had died prematurely and violently.
The first of
these has pre-Christian origins, and probably contributed directly to
the formulation of the concept of the witches’ sabbath. The other two
seem to be medieval in their inception, with the third to be directly
related to growing speculation about the fate of the dead in the 11th
and 12th centuries."[25]
The book Compendium Maleficarum (1608),
by Francesco Maria Guazzo, illustrates a typical view of gathering of
witches as "the attendants riding flying goats, trampling the cross, and
being re-baptised in the name of the Devil while giving their clothes
to him, kissing his behind, and dancing back to back forming a round."
In
effect, the sabbat acted as an effective 'advertising' gimmick, causing
knowledge of what these authorities believed to be the very real threat
of witchcraft to be spread more rapidly across the continent.[23] That
also meant that stories of the sabbat promoted the hunting, prosecution,
and execution of supposed witches.
The descriptions of Sabbats
were made or published by priests, jurists and judges who never took
part in these gatherings, or were transcribed during the process of the
witchcraft trials.[26] That these testimonies reflect actual events is
for most of the accounts considered doubtful. Norman Cohn argued that
they were determined largely by the expectations of the interrogators
and free association on the part of the accused, and reflect only
popular imagination of the times, influenced by ignorance, fear and
religious intolerance towards minority groups.
Some of the
existing accounts of the Sabbat were given when the person recounting
them was being tortured,[28] and so motivated to agree with suggestions
put to them.
Christopher F. Black claimed that the Roman
Inquisition's sparse employment of torture allowed accused witches to
not feel pressured into mass accusation. This in turn means there were
fewer alleged groups of witches in Italy and places under inquisitorial
influence. Because the Sabbath is a gathering of collective witch
groups, the lack of mass accusation means Italian popular culture was
less inclined to believe in the existence of Black Sabbath. The
Inquisition itself also held a skeptical view toward the legitimacy of
Sabbath Assemblies.[29]
Many of the diabolical elements of the
Witches' Sabbath stereotype, such as the eating of babies, poisoning of
wells, desecration of hosts or kissing of the devil's anus, were also
made about heretical Christian sects, lepers, Muslims and Jews.[30] The
term is the same as the normal English word "Sabbath" (itself a
transliteration of Hebrew "Shabbat", the seventh day, on which the
Creator rested after creation of the world), referring to the witches'
equivalent to the Christian day of rest; a more common term was
"synagogue" or "synagogue of Satan"[31] possibly reflecting anti-Jewish
sentiment, although the acts attributed to witches bear little
resemblance to the Sabbath in Christianity or Jewish Shabbat customs.
The Errores Gazariorum ("Errors of the Cathars"), which mentions the
Sabbat, while not discussing the actual behavior of the Cathars, is
named after them, in an attempt to link these stories to an heretical
Christian group.[32]
More recently, scholars such as Emma Wilby
have argued that although the more diabolical elements of the witches'
sabbath stereotype were invented by inquisitors, the witchcraft suspects
themselves may have encouraged these ideas to circulate by drawing on
popular beliefs and experiences around liturgical misrule, cursing
rites, magical conjuration and confraternal gatherings to flesh-out
their descriptions of the sabbath during interrogations.[33]
Christian
missionaries' attitude to African cults was not much different in
principle to their attitude to the Witches' Sabbath in Europe; some
accounts viewed them as a kind of Witches' Sabbath, but they are
not.[34] Some African communities believe in witchcraft, but as in the
European witch trials, people they believe to be "witches" are condemned
rather than embraced." (wikipedia)
"Trick-or-treating
is a traditional Halloween custom for children and adults in some
countries. During the evening of Halloween, on October 31, people in
costumes travel from house to house, asking for treats with the phrase
"trick or treat". The "treat" is some form of confectionery, usually
candy/sweets, although in some cultures money is given instead. The
"trick" refers to a threat, usually idle, to perform mischief on the
resident(s) or their property if no treat is given. Some people signal
that they are willing to hand out treats by putting up Halloween
decorations outside their doors; houses may also leave their porch
lights on as a universal indicator that they have candy; some simply
leave treats available on their porches for the children to take freely,
on the honor system.
The history of trick-or-treating traces
back to Scotland and Ireland, where the tradition of guising, going
house to house at Halloween and putting on a small performance to be
rewarded with food or treats, goes back at least as far as the 16th
century, as does the tradition of people wearing costumes at Halloween.
There are many accounts from 19th-century Scotland and Ireland of people
going house to house in costume at Halloween, reciting verses in
exchange for food, and sometimes warning of misfortune if they were not
welcomed.[1][2][3] In North America, the earliest known occurrence of
guising is from 1898, when children were recorded as having done this in
the province of British Columbia, Canada.[4] The interjection "trick or
treat!" was then first recorded in the Canadian province of Ontario in
1917.[5] While going house to house in costume has long been popular
among the Scots and Irish, it is only in the 2000s that saying "trick or
treat" has become common in Scotland and Ireland.[2] Prior to this,
children in Ireland would commonly say "help the Halloween party" at the
doors of homeowners.[2]
The activity is prevalent in the
Anglospheric countries of the United Kingdom, Ireland, the United States
and Canada. It also has extended into Mexico. In northwestern and
central Mexico, the practice is called calaverita (Spanish diminutive
for calavera, "skull" in English), and instead of "trick or treat", the
children ask, "¿Me da mi calaverita?" ("[Can you] give me my little
skull?"), where a calaverita is a small skull made of sugar or
chocolate.
History
Ancient precursors
Traditions
similar to the modern custom of trick-or-treating extend all the way
back to classical antiquity, although it is extremely unlikely that any
of them are directly related to the modern custom. The ancient Greek
writer Athenaeus of Naucratis records in his book The Deipnosophists
that, in ancient times, the Greek island of Rhodes had a custom in which
children would go from door-to-door dressed as swallows, singing a
song, which demanded the owners of the house to give them food and
threatened to cause mischief if the owners of the house
refused.[6][7][8] This tradition was claimed to have been started by the
Rhodian lawgiver Cleobulus.[9]
Medieval Christian era
Souling
Starting
as far back as the 15th century, among Christians, there had been a
custom of sharing soul-cakes at Allhallowtide (October 31 through
November 2).[11][12] People would visit houses and take soul-cakes,
either as representatives of the dead, or in return for praying for
their souls.[13] Later, people went "from parish to parish at Halloween,
begging soul-cakes by singing under the windows some such verse as
this: 'Soul, souls, for a soul-cake; Pray you good mistress, a
soul-cake!'"[14] They typically asked for "mercy on all Christian souls
for a soul-cake".[15] It was known as 'Souling' and was recorded in
parts of Britain, Flanders, southern Germany, and Austria.[16]
Shakespeare mentions the practice in his comedy The Two Gentlemen of
Verona (1593), when Speed accuses his master of "puling [whimpering or
whining] like a beggar at Hallowmas".[17] In western England, mostly in
the counties bordering Wales, souling was common.[12] According to one
19th century English writer "parties of children, dressed up in
fantastic costume […] went round to the farm houses and cottages,
singing a song, and begging for cakes (spoken of as "soal-cakes"),
apples, money, or anything that the goodwives would give them".[18] In
England, souling remained an important part of Allhallowtide observances
until the 19th century, in both Protestant and Catholic areas.[19][20]
The
practice of giving and eating soul cakes continues in some countries
today, such as Portugal (where it is known as Pão-por-Deus and occurs on
All Hallows' Day and All Souls' Day), as well as the Philippines (where
it is known as Pangangaluwa and occurs on All Hallows' Eve).[21][22] In
other countries, souling is seen as the origin of the practice of
trick-or-treating.[23] In the United States, some churches, during
Allhallowtide, have invited people to come receive sweets from them and
have offered to "pray for the souls of their friends, relatives or even
pets" as they do so.[24]
Mumming
Since the Middle Ages, a
tradition of mumming on a certain holiday has existed in parts of
Britain and Ireland. It involved going door-to-door in costume,
performing short scenes or parts of plays in exchange for food or drink.
The custom of trick-or-treating on Halloween may come from the belief
that supernatural beings, or the souls of the dead, roamed the earth at
this time and needed to be appeased.
Samhain
It may
otherwise have originated in a Celtic festival, Samhain, held on 31
October–1 November, to mark the beginning of winter, in Ireland,
Scotland and the Isle of Man, and Calan Gaeaf in Wales, Cornwall, and
Brittany. The festival is believed to have pre-Christian roots. In the
9th century, the Catholic Church made 1 November All Saints' Day. Among
Celtic-speaking peoples, it was seen as a liminal time, when the spirits
or fairies (the Aos Sí), and the souls of the dead, came into our world
and were appeased with offerings of food and drink. Similar beliefs and
customs were found in other parts of Europe. It is suggested that
trick-or-treating evolved from a tradition whereby people impersonated
the spirits, or the souls of the dead, and received offerings on their
behalf. S. V. Peddle suggests they "personify the old spirits of the
winter, who demanded reward in exchange for good fortune".[25]
Impersonating these spirits or souls was also believed to protect
oneself from them.[26]
Guising
Halloween shop in Derry, Northern Ireland. Halloween masks are called ‘false faces’ in Ireland and Scotland.
In
Scotland and Ireland, "guising" – children going from door to door in
disguise – is secular, and a gift in the form of food, coins or "apples
or nuts for the Halloween party" (and in more recent times, chocolate)
is given out to the children.[2][27][28] The tradition is called
"guising" because of the disguises or costumes worn by the
children.[3][29] In the West Mid Scots dialect, guising is known as
"galoshans".[30] In Scotland, youths went house to house in white with
masked, painted or blackened faces, reciting rhymes and often
threatening to do mischief if they were not welcomed.[31][32]
Guising
has been recorded in Scotland since the 16th century, often at New
Year. The Kirk Session records of Elgin name men and women who danced at
New Year 1623. Six men, described as guisers or "gwysseris" performed a
sword dance wearing masks and visors covering their faces in the
churchyard and in the courtyard of a house. They were each fined 40
shillings.[33]
A record of guising at Halloween in Scotland in
1895 describes masqueraders in disguise carrying lanterns made out of
scooped out turnips, visit homes to be rewarded with cakes, fruit, and
money.[34] In Ireland, children in costumes would commonly say "Help the
Halloween Party" at the doors of homeowners.[2][35]
Halloween
masks are referred to as "false faces" in Ireland and Scotland.[36][37] A
writer using Scots language recorded guisers in Ayr, Scotland in 1890:
I had mind it was Halloween . . . the wee callans (boys) were at it
already, rinning aboot wi’ their fause-faces (false faces) on and their
bits o’ turnip lanthrons (lanterns) in their haun (hand).[37]
Guising
also involved going to wealthy homes, and in the 1920s, boys went
guising at Halloween up to the affluent Thorntonhall, South
Lanarkshire.[38] An account of guising in the 1950s in Ardrossan, North
Ayrshire, records a child receiving 12 shillings and sixpence, having
knocked on doors throughout the neighbourhood and performed.[39] Growing
up in Derry, Northern Ireland in the 1960s, The Guardian journalist
Michael Bradley recalls children asking, “Any nuts or apples?”.[40] In
Scotland and Ireland, the children are only supposed to receive treats
if they perform a party trick for the households they go to. This
normally takes the form of singing a song or reciting a joke or a funny
poem which the child has memorised before setting out.[27][39] While
going from door to door in disguise has remained popular among Scots and
Irish at Halloween, the North American saying "trick-or-treat" has
become common in the 2000s.[2][35]
Spread to North America
Author
Nicholas Rogers cites an early example of guising in North America in
1911, where a newspaper in Kingston, Ontario, Canada, reported children
going "guising" around the neighborhood.[41] The article itself details
the practice as such:
Between six and seven o'clock, the
children began to appear in the streets, disguised with all kinds of
masks and costumes. The usual programme of visiting the corner groecery
stores, hotels and private residences was carried out, the youngesters
efforts as elecutionists and vocalists being rewarded with money,
apples, nuts, etc.[42]
American historian and author Ruth Edna
Kelley of Massachusetts wrote the first book length history of the
holiday in the United States; The Book of Hallowe'en (1919), and
references souling in the chapter "Hallowe'en in America"; "The taste in
Hallowe'en festivities now is to study old traditions, and hold a
Scotch party, using Burn's poem Hallowe'en as a guide; or to go
a-souling as the English used. In short, no custom that was once honored
at Hallowe'en is out of fashion now."[43] Kelley lived in Lynn,
Massachusetts, a town with 4,500 Irish immigrants, 1,900 English
immigrants, and 700 Scottish immigrants in 1920.[44] In her book, Kelley
touches on customs that arrived from across the Atlantic; "Americans
have fostered them, and are making this an occasion something like what
it must have been in its best days overseas. All Hallowe'en customs in
the United States are borrowed directly or adapted from those of other
countries".[45]
While the first reference to "guising" in North
America occurs in 1911, another reference to ritual begging on Halloween
appears, place unknown, in 1915, with a third reference in Chicago in
1920.[46]
The interjection "Trick or treat!"
The
interjection "Trick or treat!" — a request for sweets or candy,
originally and sometimes still with the implication that anyone who is
asked and who does not provide sweets or other treats will be subjected
to a prank or practical joke — seems to have arisen in central Canada,
before spreading into the northern and western United States in the
1930s and across the rest of the United States through the 1940s and
early 1950s.[47] Initially it was often found in variant forms, such as
"tricks or treats," which was used in the earliest known case, a 1917
report in The Sault Daily Star in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario:[48]
Almost everywhere you went last night, particularly in the early part
of the evening, you would meet gangs of youngsters out to celebrate.
Some of them would have adopted various forms of "camouflage" such as
masks, or would appear in long trousers and big hats or with long
skirts. But others again didn't. . . . "Tricks or treats" you could hear
the gangs call out, and if the householder passed out the "coin" for
the "treats" his establishment would be immune from attack until another
gang came along that knew not of or had no part in the agreement.[5]
As
shown by word sleuth Barry Popik,[49] who also found the first use from
1917,[48] variant forms continued, with "trick or a treat" found in
Chatsworth, Ontario in 1921,[50] "treat up or tricks" and "treat or
tricks" found in Edmonton, Alberta in 1922,[51] and "treat or trick" in
Penhold, Alberta in 1924.[52] The now canonical form of "trick or treat"
was first seen in 1917 in Chatsworth, only one day after the Sault Ste.
Marie use,[53] but "tricks or treats" was still in use in the 1966
television special, It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown.[49]
The
thousands of Halloween postcards produced between the start of the 20th
century and the 1920s commonly show children but do not depict
trick-or-treating.[54] The editor of a collection of over 3,000 vintage
Halloween postcards writes, "There are cards which mention the custom
[of trick-or-treating] or show children in costumes at the doors, but as
far as we can tell they were printed later than the 1920s and more than
likely even the 1930s. Tricksters of various sorts are shown on the
early postcards, but not the means of appeasing them".[55]
Trick-or-treating
does not seem to have become a widespread practice until the 1930s,
with the first appearance in the United States of the term in 1928,[56]
and the first known use in a national publication occurring in 1939.[57]
Behavior
similar to trick-or-treating was more commonly associated with
Thanksgiving from 1870 (shortly after that holiday's formalization)
until the 1930s. In New York City, a Thanksgiving ritual known as
Ragamuffin Day involved children dressing up as beggars and asking for
treats, which later evolved into dressing up in more diverse
costumes.[58][59] Increasing hostility toward the practice in the 1930s
eventually led to the begging aspects being dropped, and by the 1950s,
the tradition as a whole had ceased.
Increased popularity
Almost
all pre-1940 uses of the term "trick-or-treat" are from the United
States and Canada. Trick-or-treating spread throughout the United
States, stalled only by World War II sugar rationing that began in
April, 1942 and lasted until June, 1947.[60][61]
Early national
attention to trick-or-treating was given in October, 1947 issues of the
children's magazines Jack and Jill and Children's Activities,[62] and by
Halloween episodes of the network radio programs The Baby Snooks Show
in 1946 and The Jack Benny Show and The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet
in 1948.[63] Trick-or-treating was depicted in the Peanuts comic strip
in 1951.[64] The custom had become firmly established in popular culture
by 1952, when Walt Disney portrayed it in the cartoon Trick or Treat,
and Ozzie and Harriet were besieged by trick-or-treaters on an episode
of their television show.[65] In 1953 UNICEF first conducted a national
campaign for children to raise funds for the charity while
trick-or-treating.[66]
Although some popular histories of
Halloween have characterized trick-or-treating as an adult invention to
re-channel Halloween activities away from Mischief Night vandalism,
there are very few records supporting this. Des Moines, Iowa is the only
area known to have a record of trick-or-treating being used to deter
crime.[67] Elsewhere, adults, as reported in newspapers from the
mid-1930s to the mid-1950s, typically saw it as a form of extortion,
with reactions ranging from bemused indulgence to anger.[68] Likewise,
as portrayed on radio shows, children would have to explain what
trick-or-treating was to puzzled adults, and not the other way around.
Sometimes even the children protested: for Halloween 1948, members of
the Madison Square Boys Club in New York City carried a parade banner
that read "American Boys Don't Beg."[69] The National Confectioners
Association reported in 2005 that 80 percent of adults in the United
States planned to give out confectionery to trick-or-treaters,[70] and
that 93 percent of children, teenagers, and young adults planned to go
trick-or-treating or participating in other Halloween activities.[71]
Phrase introduction to the United Kingdom and Ireland
Despite
the concept of trick-or-treating originating in Britain and Ireland in
the form of souling and guising, the use of the term "trick or treat" at
the doors of homeowners was not common until the 1980s, with its
popularisation in part through the release of the film E.T.[72] Guising
requires those going door-to-door to perform a song or poem without any
jocular threat,[39] and according to one BBC journalist, in the 1980s,
"trick or treat" was still often viewed as an exotic and not
particularly welcome import, with the BBC referring to it as "the
Japanese knotweed of festivals" and "making demands with menaces".[73]
In Ireland before the phrase "trick or treat" became common in the
2000s, children would say "Help the Halloween Party".[2] Very often, the
phrase "trick or treat" is simply said and the revellers are given
sweets, with the choice of a trick or a treat having been discarded.
Etiquette
Trick-or-treating
typically begins at dusk on October 31. Some municipalities choose
other dates.[74][75][76][77][78][79] Homeowners wishing to participate
sometimes decorate their homes with artificial spider webs, plastic
skeletons and jack-o-lanterns. Conversely, those who do not wish to
participate may turn off outside lights for the evening or lock relevant
gates and fences to keep people from coming onto their property.
In
most areas where trick-or-treating is practiced, it is considered an
activity for children. Some jurisdictions in the United States forbid
the activity for anyone over the age of 12.[80] Dressing up is common at
all ages; adults will often dress up to accompany their children, and
young adults may dress up to go out and ask for gifts for a charity.
Local variants
United States and Canada
Children
of both the St. Louis, Missouri, and Des Moines, Iowa, areas are
expected to perform a joke, usually a simple Halloween-themed pun or
riddle, before receiving any candy; this "trick" earns the "treat".[81]
In addition, trick-or-treating in the Des Moines area is arranged on a
different night preceding Hallowing, known as Beggar's night, with the
expectation it will reduce mischief and keep children safer from adult
parties and drunk driving that may occur on Halloween proper.
In
some parts of Canada, children sometimes say "Halloween apples" instead
of "trick or treat". This probably originated when the toffee apple was a
popular type of candy. Apple-giving in much of Canada, however, has
been taboo since the 1960s when stories (of almost certainly
questionable authenticity) appeared of razors hidden inside Halloween
apples; parents began to check over their children's fruit for safety
before allowing them to eat it. In Quebec, children also go door to door
on Halloween. However, in French-speaking neighbourhoods, instead of
"Trick or treat", they will simply say "Halloween", though it
traditionally used to be "La charité, s'il-vous-plaît" ("Charity,
please").[82]
Trunk-or-treat
Some organizations around the
United States and Canada sponsor a "trunk-or-treat" on Halloween night
(or, on occasion, a day immediately preceding Halloween, or a few days
from it, on a weekend, depending on what is convenient).
Trunk-or-treating is done from parked car to parked car in a local
parking lot, often at a school or church. The activity makes use of the
open trunks of the cars, which display candy, and often games and
decorations. Some parents regard trunk-or-treating as a safer
alternative to trick-or-treating,[83] while other parents see it as an
easier alternative to walking the neighborhood with their children.
This
annual event began in the mid-1990s as a "fall festival" for an
alternative to trick-or-treating, but became "trunk-or-treat" two
decades later. This change was primarily due to "discomfort with some of
Halloween's themes."[84] Some churches and church leaders have
attempted to connect with the cultural phenomenon of Halloween, viewing
it as an opportunity for cultural engagement with the Gospel.[85] But
some have called for more city or community group-sponsored
trunk-or-treats, so they can be more inclusive.[86] By 2006 these had
become increasingly popular.[87]
Portugal and Iberian Peninsula
In
Portugal, children go from house to house on All Saints Day and All
Souls Day, carrying pumpkin carved lanterns called coca,[88] asking
everyone they see for Pão-por-Deus singing rhymes where they remind
people why they are begging, saying "...It is for me and for you, and to
give to the deceased who are dead and buried"[89] or "It is to share
with your deceased"[90] In the Azores the bread given to the children
takes the shape of the top of a skull.[91] The tradition of pão-por-Deus
was already recorded in the 15th century.[92] In Galicia, particularly
in the island of A Illa de Arousa, a similar tradition exists where
children ask for alms (usually bread, sweets, fruits, chestnuts, money
or small toys) with the phrase "unha esmoliña polos defuntiños que van
alá" ("a little charity for the little deceased who are there").[93]
Scandinavia
In
Sweden, children dress up as witches and monsters when they go
trick-or-treating on Maundy Thursday (the Thursday before Easter) while
Danish and Faroese children dress up in various attires and go
trick-or-treating on Fastelavn (or the next day, Shrove Monday). In
Norway, the practice is quite common among children, who come dressed up
to people's doors asking for, mainly, candy. The Easter witch tradition
is done on Palm Sunday in Finland (virvonta).
Europe
In
parts of Flanders, some parts of the Netherlands, and most areas of
Germany, Switzerland, and Austria, children go to houses with home-made
beet lanterns or with paper lanterns (which can hold a candle or
electronic light), singing songs about St. Martin on St. Martin's Day
(the 11th of November), in return for treats.[94] Over the last decade,
Halloween trick-or-treating has experienced a notable surge in
popularity, particularly among children and teenagers in Germany.
Austria and the Netherlands have also witnessed a similar trend. The
equivalent of 'trick-or-treat' in the German language is 'Süßes oder
Saures,' which translates to asking for sweets or threatening something
less pleasant, with the direct translation being "sweet or sour".
In
Northern Germany and Southern Denmark, children dress up in costumes
and go trick-or-treating on New Year's Eve in a tradition called
"Rummelpott [de]".[95] Rummelpott has experienced a massive decrease in
popularity over recent decades, although some towns and communities are
trying to revive it.[96]
Trick-or-treat for charity
UNICEF
started a program in 1950 called Trick-or-Treat for UNICEF in which
trick-or-treaters ask people to give money for the organization, usually
instead of collecting candy. Participating trick-or-treaters say when
they knock at doors "Trick-or-treat for UNICEF!"[97] This program
started as an alternative to candy. The organization has long produced
disposable collection boxes that state on the back what the money can be
used for in developing countries.
In Canada, students from the
local high schools, colleges, and universities dress up to collect food
donations for the local Food Banks as a form of trick-or-treating. This
is sometimes called "Trick-or-Eat"." (wikipedia)
"Symbols
of death are the motifs, images and concepts associated with death
throughout different cultures, religions and societies.
Images
Various
images are used traditionally to symbolize death; these rank from blunt
depictions of cadavers and their parts to more allusive suggestions
that time is fleeting and all men are mortals.
The human skull is
an obvious and frequent symbol of death, found in many cultures and
religious traditions.[1] Human skeletons and sometimes non-human animal
skeletons and skulls can also be used as blunt images of death; the
traditional figures of the Grim Reaper – a black-hooded skeleton with a
scythe – is one use of such symbolism.[2] Within the Grim Reaper itself,
the skeleton represents the decayed body whereas the robe symbolizes
those worn by religious people conducting funeral services.[2] The skull
and crossbones motif (☠) has been used among Europeans as a symbol of
both ....[3] The skull is also important as it remains the only
"recognizable" aspect of a person once they have died.[3]
Decayed
cadavers can also be used to depict death; in medieval Europe, they
were often featured in artistic depictions of the danse macabre, or in
cadaver tombs which depicted the living and decomposed body of the
person entombed. Coffins also serve as blunt reminders of mortality.[4]
Europeans were also seen to use coffins and cemeteries to symbolize the
wealth and status of the person who has died, serving as a reminder to
the living and the deceased as well.[4] Less blunt symbols of death
frequently allude to the passage of time and the fragility of life, and
can be described as memento mori;[5] that is, an artistic or symbolic
reminder of the inevitability of death. Clocks, hourglasses, sundials,
and other timepieces both call to mind that time is passing.[3]
Similarly, a candle both marks the passage of time, and bears witness
that it will eventually burn itself out as well as a symbol of hope of
salvation.[3] These sorts of symbols were often incorporated into
vanitas paintings, a variety of early still life.
Certain animals
such as crows, cats, owls, moths, vultures and bats are associated with
death; some because they feed on carrion, others because they are
nocturnal.[3] Along with death, vultures can also represent
transformation and renewal.
Religious symbols
Religious symbols of death and depictions of the afterlife will vary with the religion practiced by the people who use them.
Tombs,
tombstones, and other items of funeral architecture are obvious
candidates for symbols of death.[3] In ancient Egypt, the gods Osiris
and Ptah were typically depicted as mummies; these gods governed the
Egyptian afterlife. In Christianity, the Christian cross is frequently
used on graves, and is meant to call to mind the crucifixion of
Jesus.[3] Some Christians also erect temporary crosses along public
highways as memorials for those who died in accidents. In Buddhism, the
symbol of a wheel represents the perpetual cycle of death and rebirth
that happens in samsara.[6] The symbol of a grave or tomb, especially
one in a picturesque or unusual location, can be used to represent
death, as in Nicolas Poussin's famous painting Et in Arcadia ego.
Images
of life in the afterlife are also symbols of death. Here, again, the
ancient Egyptians produced detailed pictorial representations of the
life enjoyed by the dead. In Christian folk religion, the spirits of the
dead are often depicted as winged angels or angel-like creatures,
dwelling among the clouds; this imagery of the afterlife is frequently
used in comic depictions of the life after death.[3] In the Islamic view
of the Afterlife, death is symbolised by a black and white ram which in
turn will be slain to symbolise the Death of Death.
The Banshee
also symbolizes the coming of death in Irish Mythology.[3] This is
typically represented by an older woman who is seen sobbing to symbolize
the suffering of a person before their death.[3]
Colors
Black
is the color of mourning in many European cultures. Black clothing is
typically worn at funerals to show mourning for the death of the person.
In East Asia, white is similarly associated with mourning; it
represented the purity and perfection of the deceased person's
spirit.[7] Hindus similarly also wear white during mourning and
funerals. During the Victorian era, purple and grey were considered to
be mourning colors in addition to black.[8] Furthermore, in Revelation 6
in The Bible, Death is one of the four horsemen; and he rides a pale
horse." (wikipedia)
"A
cauldron (or caldron) is a large pot (kettle) for cooking or boiling
over an open fire, with a lid and frequently with an arc-shaped hanger
and/or integral handles or feet. There is a rich history of cauldron
lore in religion, mythology, and folklore.
Etymology
The
word cauldron is first recorded in Middle English as caudroun (13th
century). It was borrowed from Norman caudron[1] (Picard caudron,
French: chaudron). It represents the phonetical evolution of Vulgar
Latin *caldario for Classical Latin caldārium "hot bath", that derives
from cal(i)dus "hot".[1]
The Norman-French word replaces the Old
English ċetel (German (Koch)Kessel "cauldron", Dutch (kook)ketel
"cauldron"), Middle English chetel. The word "kettle" is a borrowing of
the Old Norse variant ketill "cauldron".[2]
History
Cauldrons can be found from the late Bronze Age period; these include vast ones with a volume of 60–70 litres (16–18 US gal).[3]
Symbolism and mythology
Cauldrons
have largely fallen out of use in the developed world as cooking
vessels. While still used for practical purposes, a more common
association in Western culture is the cauldron's use in witchcraft—a
cliché popularized by various works of fiction, such as William
Shakespeare's play Macbeth. In fiction, witches often prepare their
potions in a cauldron. Also, in Irish folklore, a cauldron is purported
to be where leprechauns keep their gold and treasure.
In some
forms of Wicca, appropriating aspects of Celtic mythology, the cauldron
is associated with the goddess Cerridwen. Welsh legend also tells of
cauldrons that were useful to warring armies. In the second branch of
the Mabinogi in the tale of Branwen, Daughter of Llŷr, the Pair Dadeni
(Cauldron of Rebirth) is a magical cauldron in which dead warriors could
be placed and then be returned to life, save that they lacked the power
of speech.[4] It was suspected that they lacked souls. These warriors
could go back into battle until they were killed again. In Wicca and
some other forms of neopagan or pagan belief systems, the cauldron is
still used in magical practices. Most often a cauldron is made of cast
iron and is used to burn loose incense on a charcoal disc, to make black
salt (used in banishing rituals), for ..., or to burn petitions (paper
with words of power or wishes written on them). Cauldrons symbolize not
only the Goddess but also represent the womb (because it holds
something) and on an altar, it represents earth because it is a working
tool. Cauldrons are often sold in New Age or "metaphysical" stores and
may have various symbols of power inscribed on them.
The Holy
Grail of Arthurian legend is sometimes referred to as a "cauldron",
although traditionally the grail is thought of as a hand-held cup rather
than the large pot that the word "cauldron" usually is used to mean.
This may have resulted from the combination of the grail legend with
earlier Celtic myths of magical cauldrons.
The common translation
for ding is often referred to as a cauldron. In Chinese history and
culture, possession of one or more ancient dings is often associated
with power and dominion over the land. Therefore, the ding is often used
as an implicit symbolism for power. The term "inquiring of the ding"
(Chinese: 问鼎; pinyin: wèn dǐng) is often used to symbolize the use of
divination or for the quest for power. One example of the ding cauldron
and gaining power over the traditional provinces of China is the Nine
Tripod Cauldrons (whether regarded as myth or history).
Archeologically intact actual cauldrons with apparent cultural symbolism include:
the Gundestrup cauldron, made in the 2nd or 1st century BC, found at Gundestrup, Denmark
a Bronze Age cauldron found at Hassle, Sweden
the cauldron where the Olympic Flame burns for the duration of the Olympic Games
Cauldrons known only through myth and literature include:
Dagda's Cauldron
The Cauldron of Dyrnwch the Giant
Pair Dadeni
Cauldron of Hymir" (wikipedia)
"A
potion is a liquid "that contains ... or something that is supposed to
have magic powers.”[1] It derives from the Latin word potio which refers
to a drink or the act of drinking.[2] The term philtre is also used,
often specifically for a love potion, a potion that is supposed to
create feelings of love or attraction in the one who drinks it.[3]
Throughout history there have been several types of potions for a range
of purposes.[4] Reasons for taking potions ranged from curing an
illness, to securing immortality to trying to induce love. These
potions, while often ineffective or ..., occasionally had some degree of
... success depending on what they sought to fix and the type and
amount of ingredients used.[5] Some popular ingredients used in potions
across history include ...[7]
During the 17th to 19th century, it
was common in Europe to see peddlers offering potions for .... These
were eventually dismissed as quackery.[8] Prostitutes, courtesans,
enchanters and midwives were also known to distribute potions.
Etymology
The
word potion has its origins in the Latin word potus, an irregular past
participle of potare, meaning "to drink.” This evolved to the word
potionem (nominative potio) meaning either "a potion, a drinking” or a
"poisonous draught, magic potion."[2] In Ancient Greek, the word for
both... and potions was “pharmaka” or “pharmakon.”[10] In the 12th
century, the French had the word pocion, meaning "potion," "draught," or
.... By the 13th century, this word became pocioun, referring to either
a ....
The word "potion" is also cognate with the Spanish words
pocion with the same meaning, and ponzoña, meaning ...; The word pozione
was originally the same word for both "poison" and "potion" in Italian,
but by the early 15th century in Italy, potion began to be known
specifically as a magical or enchanted drink....
Quacks
A quack or charlatan doctor selling potions from his caravan in 19th century Ireland
Quacks
or charlatans are people who sell "medical methods that do not work and
are only intended to make money".[11] In Europe in the 15th century it
was also common to see long-distance peddlers, who sold supposedly
magical healing potions and elixirs.[9] During the Great Plague of
London in the 17th century, quacks sold many fake potions promising
either cures or immunity.[12] Because pills looked less trustworthy to
the public, potions were often the top sellers of quacks.[13] These
potions often included bizarre ingredients such as floral pomanders and
the smoke of fragrant woods.[14] The well known Wessex quack Vilbert was
known to sell love potions made of pigeon hearts.[5] By the 18th
century in England, it was common for middle class households to stock
potions that ... Quackery grew to its height in the 19th century.[8]
Pharmacists
In
18th- and 19th-century Britain, pharmacies or apothecaries were often a
cheaper, more accessible option for... treatment than doctors.[15]
Potions distributed by chemists for ... were often derived from ... and
plants, and based on old beliefs and remedies.[16]
Prior to the
Pharmacy Act 1868 anybody could become a pharmacist or chemist. Since
the practice was unregulated, potions were often made from scratch.[17]
Potions
were additionally used to ... in livestock. One potion found in a
19th-century pharmacist's recipe book was to be used for "lambs of about
7 years old" and contains chalk, pomegranate and ....[17]
The role of women in distributing potions
There
was a strict hierarchy in the ... community of Europe during the 12th
to 15th centuries. Male doctors were the most respected and paid
followed by female apothecaries, barber-surgeons and surgeons.[18] Women
were often the main way that individuals who could not afford doctors
or apothecaries could gain ... treatment[citation needed] Potions, in
addition to calming teas or soup, were a common homemade treatment made
by women. When unable to go to a female house member, early modern
people would often go to the wise women of their village.[citation
needed] Wise women (who were often supposed witches) were knowledgeable
in health care[19] and could administer potions, lotions or salves in
addition to performing prayers or chants. This was often free of charge
or significantly less expensive than the potions of
apothecaries.[citation needed]
The limited jobs available to
women during the 17th to 18th century in Europe often involved a
knowledge of potions as an additional way to gain a financial
income.[20] Jobs that often involved the selling of love potions
included prostitutes, courtesans, enchanters and midwives.[20] These
practices varied by region. In Rome, up until the period of the civil
wars, the only physicians were ..., enchanters and midwives.[21] In
Greece, retired courtesans often both created potions and worked as
midwives.[22] Prostitutes in Europe were often expected to be an expert
in magic and administer love potions....
Popular types of potions
Emotions
such as anger, fear and sadness are universal[27] and as such potions
have been created across history and cultures in response to these human
emotions.[4]
Love potion
Love
potions have been used throughout history and cultures.[6]
Scandinavians often used love-philtres, which is documented in the Norse
poem The Lay of Gudrun.[5]
In 17th-century Cartagena,
Afro-Mexican curer (curanderos/as) and other Indigenous healers could
gain an income and status from selling spells and love potions to women
trying to secure men and financial stability.[28] These love potions
were sold to women of all social classes, who often wished to gain
sexual agency.[28]
Restorative potion
Confectio Alchermes
In
the early 9th century, Arab physician Yuhanna ̄ Ibn Masawaih used the
dye kermes to create a potion called Confectio Alchermes. The potion was
“intended for the caliph and his court and not for commoners.”[29] The
potion was intended to ..., restore strength and ....[29]
During
the Renaissance in Europe, Confectio Alchermes was used widely. Recipes
for the potion appeared in the work of the popular English apothecary
Nicholas Culpeper and the official pharmacopoeia handbooks of London and
Amsterdam. Queen Elizabeth's French ambassador was even ...; however,
the recipe was altered to include a "unicorn’s horn"... in addition to
the traditional ingredients....
Immortality potion
Creating
a potion for immortality, was a common pursuit of alchemists throughout
history.[31] The Elixir of Life is a famous potion that aimed to create
eternal youth.[32] During the Chinese dynasties, this elixir of life
was often recreated and drunk by emperors, nobles and
officials.[citation needed] In India, there is a myth of the potion
amrita, a drink of immortality made out of nectar....
Folklore
Potions
or mixtures are common within many of local mythologies. In particular,
references to love potions are common in many cultures.[36] Yusufzai
witches, for example, would bathe a recently deceased leatherworker and
sell the water to those seeking a male partner; this practice is said to
exist in a modified form in modern times.[36]
Famous potions in literature
Potions
have played a critical role in many pieces of literature. Shakespeare
wrote potions into many of his plays including a love potion in A
Midsummer Night’s Dream, poison in Hamlet, and Juliet takes a potion to
fake her death in Romeo and Juliet.[37]
In the Harry Potter
series, potions also play a main role. The students are required to
attend potion classes and knowledge of potions often becomes a factor
for many of the characters.
In the fairytale "The Little Mermaid"
by Hans Christian Andersen, the Little Mermaid wishes to become human
and have an immortal soul. She visits the Sea Witch who sells her a
potion, in exchange for which she cuts out the Little Mermaid's tongue.
The Sea Witch makes the potion using her own blood that she cuts from
her breast. She warns the Little Mermaid that it will feel as if she
had been cut with a sword when her fin becomes legs, that she will never
be able to become a mermaid again, and risks turning into seafoam and
not having an immortal soul if she fails to win the Prince's love. The
Little Mermaid decides to take the potion which successfully turns her
into a human so that she can try to win the love of the Prince and an
immortal soul.[38]
In the novella The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll
and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson, Dr. Henry Jekyll creates a
potion that transforms him into an evil version of himself called Edward
Hyde. Dr. Jekyll does not explain how he created this potion because
he felt his “discoveries were incomplete,” he only indicates that it
requires a “particular salt.” He uses the potion successfully to go
back and forth between his normal self, Dr. Jekyll, and his evil self,
Mr. Hyde."(wikipedia)
"Magic,
sometimes spelled magick,[1] is an ancient practice rooted in rituals,
spiritual divinations, and/or cultural lineage—with an intention to
invoke, manipulate, or otherwise manifest supernatural forces, beings,
or entities in the natural world.[2] It is a categorical yet often
ambiguous term which has been used to refer to a wide variety of beliefs
and practices, frequently considered separate from both religion and
science.[3]
Connotations have varied from positive to negative at
times throughout history,[4] Within Western culture, magic has been
linked to ideas of the Other,[5] foreignness,[6] and primitivism;[7]
indicating that it is "a powerful marker of cultural difference"[8] and
likewise, a non-modern phenomenon.[9] During the late nineteenth and
early twentieth century, Western intellectuals perceived the practice of
magic to be a sign of a primitive mentality and also commonly
attributed it to marginalised groups of people.[8]
In modern
occultism and neopagan religions, many self-described magicians and
witches regularly practice ritual magic;[10] defining magic as a
technique for bringing about change in the physical world through the
force of one's will. This definition was popularised by Aleister Crowley
(1875–1947), an influential British occultist. This view has been
incorporated into chaos magic and the new religious movements of Thelema
and Wicca.
Etymology
One of the earliest surviving accounts of the Persian mágoi was provided by the Greek historian Herodotus.
The
English words magic, mage and magician come from the Latin term magus,
through the Greek μάγος, which is from the Old Persian maguš.
(𐎶𐎦𐎢𐏁|𐎶𐎦𐎢𐏁, magician).[11] The Old Persian magu- is derived from
the Proto-Indo-European megʰ-*magh (be able). The Persian term may have
led to the Old Sinitic *Mγag (mage or shaman).[12] The Old Persian form
seems to have permeated ancient Semitic languages as the Talmudic
Hebrew magosh, the Aramaic amgusha (magician), and the Chaldean maghdim
(wisdom and philosophy); from the first century BCE onwards, Syrian
magusai gained notoriety as magicians and soothsayers.[13]
During
the late-sixth and early-fifth centuries BCE, the term goetia found its
way into ancient Greek, where it was used with negative connotations to
apply to rites that were regarded as fraudulent, unconventional, and
dangerous.[14] The Latin language adopted this meaning of the term in
the first century BCE. Via Latin, the concept became incorporated into
Christian theology during the first century CE. Early Christians
associated magic with demons, and thus regarded it as against Christian
religion. This concept remained pervasive throughout the Middle Ages,
when Christian authors categorised a diverse range of practices—such as
enchantment, witchcraft, incantations, divination, necromancy, and
astrology—under the label "magic". In early modern Europe, Protestants
often claimed that Roman Catholicism was magic rather than religion, and
as Christian Europeans began colonizing other parts of the world in the
sixteenth century, they labelled the non-Christian beliefs they
encountered as magical. In that same period, Italian humanists
reinterpreted the term in a positive sense to express the idea of
natural magic. Both negative and positive understandings of the term
recurred in Western culture over the following centuries.
Since
the nineteenth century, academics in various disciplines have employed
the term magic but have defined it in different ways and used it in
reference to different things. One approach, associated with the
anthropologists Edward Tylor (1832–1917) and James G. Frazer
(1854–1941), uses the term to describe beliefs in hidden sympathies
between objects that allow one to influence the other. Defined in this
way, magic is portrayed as the opposite to science. An alternative
approach, associated with the sociologist Marcel Mauss (1872–1950) and
his uncle Émile Durkheim (1858–1917), employs the term to describe
private rites and ceremonies and contrasts it with religion, which it
defines as a communal and organised activity. By the 1990s many scholars
were rejecting the term's utility for scholarship. They argued that the
label drew arbitrary lines between similar beliefs and practices that
were alternatively considered religious, and that it constituted
ethnocentric to apply the connotations of magic—rooted in Western and
Christian history—to other cultures.
Branches or types
White, gray and black
Historian
Owen Davies says the term "white witch" was rarely used before the 20th
century.[15] White magic is understood as the use of magic for selfless
or helpful purposes, while black magic was used for selfish, harmful or
evil purposes.[16] Black magic is the malicious counterpart of the
benevolent white magic. There is no consensus as to what constitutes
white, gray or black magic, as Phil Hine says, "like many other aspects
of occultism, what is termed to be 'black magic' depends very much on
who is doing the defining."[17] Gray magic, also called "neutral magic",
is magic that is not performed for specifically benevolent reasons, but
is also not focused towards completely hostile practices.[18][19]
High and low
Historians
and anthropologists have distinguished between practitioners who engage
in high magic, and those who engage in low magic.[20] High magic, also
known as theurgy and ceremonial or ritual magic,[21] is more complex,
involving lengthy and detailed rituals as well as sophisticated,
sometimes expensive, paraphernalia.[20] Low magic and natural magic[21]
are associated with peasants and folklore[22] with simpler rituals such
as brief, spoken spells.[20] Low magic is also closely associated with
sorcery and witchcraft.[23] Anthropologist Susan Greenwood writes that
"Since the Renaissance, high magic has been concerned with drawing down
forces and energies from heaven" and achieving unity with divinity.[24]
High magic is usually performed indoors while witchcraft is often
performed outdoors.[25]
History
Mesopotamia
Magic
was invoked in many kinds of rituals and ..., and to counteract evil
omens. Defensive or legitimate magic in Mesopotamia (asiputu or
masmassutu in the Akkadian language) were incantations and ritual
practices intended to alter specific realities. The ancient
Mesopotamians believed that magic was the only viable defense against
demons, ghosts, and evil sorcerers.[26] To defend themselves against the
spirits of those they had wronged, they would leave offerings known as
kispu in the person's tomb in hope of appeasing them.[27] If that
failed, they also sometimes took a figurine of the deceased and buried
it in the ground, demanding for the gods to eradicate the spirit, or
force it to leave the person alone.[28]
The ancient Mesopotamians
also used magic intending to protect themselves from evil sorcerers who
might place curses on them.[29] Black magic as a category did not exist
in ancient Mesopotamia, and a person legitimately using magic to defend
themselves against illegitimate magic would use exactly the same
techniques.[29] The only major difference was that curses were enacted
in secret;[29] whereas a defense against sorcery was conducted in the
open, in front of an audience if possible.[29] One ritual to punish a
sorcerer was known as Maqlû, or "The Burning".[29] The person viewed as
being afflicted by witchcraft would create an effigy of the sorcerer and
put it on trial at night.[29] Then, once the nature of the sorcerer's
crimes had been determined, the person would burn the effigy and thereby
break the sorcerer's power over them.[29]
The ancient
Mesopotamians also performed magical rituals to purify themselves of
sins committed unknowingly.[29] One such ritual was known as the Šurpu,
or "Burning",[30] in which the caster of the spell would transfer the
guilt for all their misdeeds onto various objects such as a strip of
dates, an onion, and a tuft of wool.[30] The person would then burn the
objects and thereby purify themself of all sins that they might have
unknowingly committed.[30] A whole genre of love spells existed.[31]
Such spells were believed to cause a person to fall in love with another
person, restore love which had faded, or cause a male sexual partner to
be able to sustain an erection when he had previously been unable.[31]
Other spells were used to reconcile a man with his patron deity or to
reconcile a wife with a husband who had been neglecting her.[32]
The
ancient Mesopotamians made no distinction between rational science and
magic.[33][34][35] When a person became ill, doctors would prescribe
both magical formulas to be recited as well as ....[34][35][36] Most
magical rituals were intended to be performed by an āšipu, an expert in
the magical arts.[34][35][36][37] The profession was generally passed
down from generation to generation[36] and was held in extremely high
regard and often served as advisors to kings and great leaders.[38] An
āšipu probably served not only as a magician, but also as a physician, a
priest, a scribe, and a scholar.[38]
The Sumerian god Enki, who
was later syncretized with the East Semitic god Ea, was closely
associated with magic and incantations;[39] he was the patron god of the
bārȗ and the ašipū and was widely regarded as the ultimate source of
all arcane knowledge.[40][41][42] The ancient Mesopotamians also
believed in omens, which could come when solicited or unsolicited.[43]
Regardless of how they came, omens were always taken with the utmost
seriousness.[43]
Incantation bowls
A
common set of shared assumptions about the causes of evil and how to
avert it are found in a form of early protective magic called
incantation bowl or magic bowls. The bowls were produced in the Middle
East, particularly in Upper Mesopotamia and Syria, what is now Iraq and
Iran, and fairly popular during the sixth to eighth centuries.[44][45]
The bowls were buried face down and were meant to capture demons. They
were commonly placed under the threshold, courtyards, in the corner of
the homes of the recently deceased and in cemeteries.[46] A subcategory
of incantation bowls are those used in Jewish magical practice. Aramaic
incantation bowls are an important source of knowledge about Jewish
magical practices.
Egypt
Ancient Egyptian Eye of Horus amulet
In
ancient Egypt (Kemet in the Egyptian language), Magic (personified as
the god heka) was an integral part of religion and culture which is
known to us through a substantial corpus of texts which are products of
the Egyptian tradition.[52]
While the category magic has been
contentious for modern Egyptology, there is clear support for its
applicability from ancient terminology.[53] The Coptic term hik is the
descendant of the pharaonic term heka, which, unlike its Coptic
counterpart, had no connotation of impiety or illegality, and is
attested from the Old Kingdom through to the Roman era.[53] heka was
considered morally neutral and was applied to the practices and beliefs
of both foreigners and Egyptians alike.[54] The Instructions for
Merikare informs us that heka was a beneficence gifted by the creator to
humanity "... in order to be weapons to ward off the blow of
events".[55]
Magic was practiced by both the literate priestly
hierarchy and by illiterate farmers and herdsmen, and the principle of
heka underlay all ritual activity, both in the temples and in private
settings.[56]
The main principle of heka is centered on the power
of words to bring things into being.[57]: 54 Karenga[58] explains the
pivotal power of words and their vital ontological role as the primary
tool used by the creator to bring the manifest world into being. Because
humans were understood to share a divine nature with the gods, snnw ntr
(images of the god), the same power to use words creatively that the
gods have is shared by humans.[59]
Illustration from the Book of the Dead of Hunefer showing the Opening of the Mouth ceremony being performed before the tomb
Book of the Dead
The
interior walls of the pyramid of Unas, the final pharaoh of the
Egyptian Fifth Dynasty, are covered in hundreds of magical spells and
inscriptions, running from floor to ceiling in vertical
columns.[57]: 54 These inscriptions are known as the Pyramid
Texts[57]: 54 and they contain spells needed by the pharaoh in order to
survive in the Afterlife.[57]: 54 The Pyramid Texts were strictly for
royalty only;[57]: 56 the spells were kept secret from commoners and
were written only inside royal tombs.[57]: 56 During the chaos and
unrest of the First Intermediate Period, however, tomb robbers broke
into the pyramids and saw the magical inscriptions.[57]: 56 Commoners
began learning the spells and, by the beginning of the Middle Kingdom,
commoners began inscribing similar writings on the sides of their own
coffins, hoping that doing so would ensure their own survival in the
afterlife.[57]: 56 These writings are known as the Coffin
Texts.[57]: 56
After a person died, his or her corpse would be
mummified and wrapped in linen bandages to ensure that the deceased's
body would survive for as long as possible[60] because the Egyptians
believed that a person's soul could only survive in the afterlife for as
long as his or her physical body survived here on earth.[60] The last
ceremony before a person's body was sealed away inside the tomb was
known as the Opening of the Mouth.[60] In this ritual, the priests would
touch various magical instruments to various parts of the deceased's
body, thereby giving the deceased the ability to see, hear, taste, and
smell in the afterlife.[60]
Amulets
The
use of amulets, (meket) was widespread among both living and dead
ancient Egyptians.[61][57]: 66 They were used for protection and as a
means of "...reaffirming the fundamental fairness of the universe".[62]
The oldest amulets found are from the predynastic Badarian Period, and
they persisted through to Roman times.[63]
Judea
In
the Mosaic Law, practices such as witchcraft (Heb. קְסָמִ֔ים), being a
soothsayer (מְעוֹנֵ֥ן) or a sorcerer (וּמְכַשֵּֽׁף) or one who conjures
spells (וְחֹבֵ֖ר חָ֑בֶר) or one who calls up the dead (וְדֹרֵ֖שׁ
אֶל־הַמֵּתִֽים) are specifically forbidden as abominations to the
Lord.[64]
Halakha (Jewish religious law) forbids divination and
other forms of soothsaying, and the Talmud lists many persistent yet
condemned divining practices.[65] Practical Kabbalah in historical
Judaism, is a branch of the Jewish mystical tradition that concerns the
use of magic. It was considered permitted white magic by its
practitioners, reserved for the elite, who could separate its spiritual
source from Qliphoth realms of evil if performed under circumstances
that were holy (Q-D-Š) and pure (טומאה וטהרה, tvmh vthrh[66]). The
concern of overstepping Judaism's strong prohibitions of impure magic
ensured it remained a minor tradition in Jewish history. Its teachings
include the use of Divine and angelic names for amulets and
incantations.[67] These magical practices of Judaic folk religion which
became part of practical Kabbalah date from Talmudic times.[67] The
Talmud mentions the use of charms for healing, and a wide range of
magical cures were sanctioned by rabbis. It was ruled that any practice
actually producing a cure was not to be regarded superstitiously and
there has been the widespread practice of ..., and folk remedies
(segullot) in Jewish societies across time and geography.[68]
Although
magic was forbidden by Levitical law in the Hebrew Bible, it was widely
practised in the late Second Temple period, and particularly well
documented in the period following the destruction of the temple into
the 3rd, 4th, and 5th centuries CE.[69][70][71]
Asia
China
Chinese
shamanism, alternatively called Wuism (Chinese: 巫教; pinyin: wū jiào;
lit. 'wu religion, shamanism, witchcraft'; alternatively 巫觋宗教 wū xí
zōngjiào), refers to the shamanic religious tradition of China.[72][73]
Its features are especially connected to the ancient Neolithic cultures
such as the Hongshan culture.[74] Chinese shamanic traditions are
intrinsic to Chinese folk religion.[75] Various ritual traditions are
rooted in original Chinese shamanism: contemporary Chinese ritual
masters are sometimes identified as wu by outsiders,[76] though most
orders do not self-identify as such.
Also Taoism has some of its
origins from Chinese shamanism:[72][77] it developed around the pursuit
of long life (shou 壽/寿), or the status of a xian (仙, "mountain man",
"holy man").[72] Taoism in ancient times until the modern day has used
rituals, mantras, and amulets with godly or supernatural powers. Taoist
worldviews were thought of as magical or alchemical.[78]
Greco-Roman world
Hecate, the ancient Greek goddess of magic
The
English word magic has its origins in ancient Greece.[79] During the
late sixth and early fifth centuries BCE, the Persian maguš was
Graecicized and introduced into the ancient Greek language as μάγος and
μαγεία.[14] In doing so it transformed meaning, gaining negative
connotations, with the magos being regarded as a charlatan whose ritual
practices were fraudulent, strange, unconventional, and dangerous.[14]
As noted by Davies, for the ancient Greeks—and subsequently for the
ancient Romans—"magic was not distinct from religion but rather an
unwelcome, improper expression of it—the religion of the other".[80] The
historian Richard Gordon suggested that for the ancient Greeks, being
accused of practicing magic was "a form of insult".[81]
This
change in meaning was influenced by the military conflicts that the
Greek city-states were then engaged in against the Persian Empire.[14]
In this context, the term makes appearances in such surviving text as
Sophocles' Oedipus Rex, Hippocrates' De morbo sacro, and Gorgias'
Encomium of Helen.[14] In Sophocles' play, for example, the character
Oedipus derogatorily refers to the seer Tiresius as a magos—in this
context meaning something akin to quack or charlatan—reflecting how this
epithet was no longer reserved only for Persians.[82]
In the
first century BCE, the Greek concept of the magos was adopted into Latin
and used by a number of ancient Roman writers as magus and magia.[14]
The earliest known Latin use of the term was in Virgil's Eclogue,
written around 40 BCE, which makes reference to magicis... sacris (magic
rites).[83] The Romans already had other terms for the negative use of
supernatural powers, such as veneficus and saga.[83] The Roman use of
the term was similar to that of the Greeks, but placed greater emphasis
on the judicial application of it.[14] Within the Roman Empire, laws
would be introduced criminalising things regarded as magic.[84]
In
ancient Roman society, magic was associated with societies to the east
of the empire; the first century CE writer Pliny the Elder for instance
claimed that magic had been created by the Iranian philosopher
Zoroaster, and that it had then been brought west into Greece by the
magician Osthanes, who accompanied the military campaigns of the Persian
King Xerxes.[85]
Ancient Greek scholarship of the 20th century,
almost certainly influenced by Christianising preconceptions of the
meanings of magic and religion, and the wish to establish Greek culture
as the foundation of Western rationality, developed a theory of ancient
Greek magic as primitive and insignificant, and thereby essentially
separate from Homeric, communal (polis) religion. Since the last decade
of the century, however, recognising the ubiquity and respectability of
acts such as katadesmoi (binding spells), described as magic by modern
and ancient observers alike, scholars have been compelled to abandon
this viewpoint.[86]: 90–95 The Greek word mageuo (practice magic)
itself derives from the word Magos, originally simply the Greek name for
a Persian tribe known for practicing religion.[87] Non-civic mystery
cults have been similarly re-evaluated:[86]: 97–98
the
choices which lay outside the range of cults did not just add additional
options to the civic menu, but ... sometimes incorporated critiques of
the civic cults and Panhellenic myths or were genuine alternatives to
them.
— Simon Price, Religions of the Ancient Greeks (1999)[88]
Katadesmoi
(Latin: defixiones), curses inscribed on wax or lead tablets and buried
underground, were frequently executed by all strata of Greek society,
sometimes to protect the entire polis.[86]: 95–96 Communal curses
carried out in public declined after the Greek classical period, but
private curses remained common throughout antiquity.[89] They were
distinguished as magical by their individualistic, instrumental and
sinister qualities.[86]: 96 These qualities, and their perceived
deviation from inherently mutable cultural constructs of normality, most
clearly delineate ancient magic from the religious rituals of which
they form a part.[86]: 102–103
A large number of magical papyri,
in Greek, Coptic, and Demotic, have been recovered and translated.[90]
They contain early instances of:
the use of magic words said to have the power to command spirits;[91]
the use of mysterious symbols or sigils which are thought to be useful when invoking or evoking spirits.[92]
The practice of magic was banned in the late Roman world, and the Codex Theodosianus (438 AD) states:[93]
If any wizard therefore or person imbued with magical contamination who
is called by custom of the people a magician...should be apprehended in
my retinue, or in that of the Caesar, he shall not escape punishment
and torture by the protection of his rank.
Middle Ages
Part of a series on
Hermeticism
Hermes Trismegistus
Hermes Trismegistus
Hermetic writings
Historical figures
Modern offshoots
Magic
practices such as divination, interpretation of omens, sorcery, and use
of charms had been specifically forbidden in Mosaic Law [94] and
condemned in Biblical histories of the kings.[95] Many of these
practices were spoken against in the New Testament as well.[96][97]
Some
commentators say that in the first century CE, early Christian authors
absorbed the Greco-Roman concept of magic and incorporated it into their
developing Christian theology,[84]and that these Christians retained
the already implied Greco-Roman negative stereotypes of the term and
extented them by incorporating conceptual patterns borrowed from Jewish
thought, in particular the opposition of magic and miracle.[84] Some
early Christian authors followed the Greek-Roman thinking by ascribing
the origin of magic to the human realm, mainly to Zoroaster and
Osthanes. The Christian view was that magic was a product of the
Babylonians, Persians, or Egyptians.[98] The Christians shared with
earlier classical culture the idea that magic was something distinct
from proper religion, although drew their distinction between the two in
different ways.[99]
A 17th-century depiction of the medieval writer Isidore of Seville, who provided a list of activities he regarded as magical
For
early Christian writers like Augustine of Hippo, magic did not merely
constitute fraudulent and unsanctioned ritual practices, but was the
very opposite of religion because it relied upon cooperation from
demons, the henchmen of Satan.[84] In this, Christian ideas of magic
were closely linked to the Christian category of paganism,[100] and both
magic and paganism were regarded as belonging under the broader
category of superstitio (superstition), another term borrowed from
pre-Christian Roman culture.[99] This Christian emphasis on the inherent
immorality and wrongness of magic as something conflicting with good
religion was far starker than the approach in the other large
monotheistic religions of the period, Judaism and Islam.[101] For
instance, while Christians regarded demons as inherently evil, the
jinn—comparable entities in Islamic mythology—were perceived as more
ambivalent figures by Muslims.[101]
The model of the magician in
Christian thought was provided by Simon Magus, (Simon the Magician), a
figure who opposed Saint Peter in both the Acts of the Apostles and the
apocryphal yet influential Acts of Peter.[102] The historian Michael D.
Bailey stated that in medieval Europe, magic was a "relatively broad and
encompassing category".[103] Christian theologians believed that there
were multiple different forms of magic, the majority of which were types
of divination, for instance, Isidore of Seville produced a catalogue of
things he regarded as magic in which he listed divination by the four
elements i.e. geomancy, hydromancy, aeromancy, and pyromancy, as well as
by observation of natural phenomena e.g. the flight of birds and
astrology. He also mentioned enchantment and ligatures (the ... use of
magical objects bound to the patient) as being magical.[104] Medieval
Europe also saw magic come to be associated with the Old Testament
figure of Solomon; various grimoires, or books outlining magical
practices, were written that claimed to have been written by Solomon,
most notably the Key of Solomon.[105]
In early medieval Europe,
magia was a term of condemnation.[106] In medieval Europe, Christians
often suspected Muslims and Jews of engaging in magical practices;[107]
in certain cases, these perceived magical rites—including the alleged
Jewish sacrifice of Christian children—resulted in Christians massacring
these religious minorities.[108] Christian groups often also accused
other, rival Christian groups such as the Hussites—which they regarded
as heretical—of engaging in magical activities.[102][109] Medieval
Europe also saw the term maleficium applied to forms of magic that were
conducted with the intention of causing harm.[103] The later Middle Ages
saw words for these practitioners of harmful magical acts appear in
various European languages: sorcière in French, Hexe in German, strega
in Italian, and bruja in Spanish.[110] The English term for malevolent
practitioners of magic, witch, derived from the earlier Old English term
wicce.[110]
Ars Magica or magic is a major component and
supporting contribution to the belief and practice of spiritual, and in
many cases, physical healing throughout the Middle Ages. Emanating from
many modern interpretations lies a trail of misconceptions about magic,
one of the largest revolving around wickedness or the existence of
nefarious beings who practice it. These misinterpretations stem from
numerous acts or rituals that have been performed throughout antiquity,
and due to their exoticism from the commoner's perspective, the rituals
invoked uneasiness and an even stronger sense of dismissal.[111][112]
In
the Medieval Jewish view, the separation of the mystical and magical
elements of Kabbalah, dividing it into speculative theological Kabbalah
(Kabbalah Iyyunit) with its meditative traditions, and theurgic
practical Kabbalah (Kabbalah Ma'asit), had occurred by the beginning of
the 14th century.[113]
One societal force in the Middle Ages more
powerful than the singular commoner, the Christian Church, rejected
magic as a whole because it was viewed as a means of tampering with the
natural world in a supernatural manner associated with the biblical
verses of Deuteronomy 18:9–12.[further explanation needed] Despite the
many negative connotations which surround the term magic, there exist
many elements that are seen in a divine or holy light.[114]
The
divine right of kings in England was thought to be able to give them
"sacred magic" power to heal thousands of their subjects from
sicknesses.[115]
Diversified instruments or rituals used in
medieval magic include, but are not limited to: various amulets,
talismans, potions, as well as specific chants, dances, and prayers.
Along with these rituals are the adversely imbued notions of demonic
participation which influence of them. The idea that magic was devised,
taught, and worked by demons would have seemed reasonable to anyone who
read the Greek magical papyri or the Sefer-ha-Razim and found that
healing magic appeared alongside rituals for killing people, gaining
wealth, or personal advantage, and coercing women into sexual
submission.[116] Archaeology is contributing to a fuller understanding
of ritual practices performed in the home, on the body and in monastic
and church settings.[117][118]
The Islamic reaction towards magic
did not condemn magic in general and distinguished between magic which
can heal sickness and possession, and sorcery. The former is therefore a
special gift from God, while the latter is achieved through help of
Jinn and devils. Ibn al-Nadim held that exorcists gain their power by
their obedience to God, while sorcerers please the devils by acts of
disobedience and sacrifices and they in return do him a favor.[119]
According to Ibn Arabi, Al-Ḥajjāj ibn Yusuf al-Shubarbuli was able to
walk on water due to his piety.[120] According to the Quran 2:102, magic
was also taught to humans by devils and the fallen angels Harut and
Marut.[121]
Frontispiece of an English translation of Natural Magick published in London in 1658
During
the early modern period, the concept of magic underwent a more positive
reassessment through the development of the concept of magia naturalis
(natural magic).[84] This was a term introduced and developed by two
Italian humanists, Marsilio Ficino and Giovanni Pico della
Mirandola.[84] For them, magia was viewed as an elemental force
pervading many natural processes,[84] and thus was fundamentally
distinct from the mainstream Christian idea of demonic magic.[122] Their
ideas influenced an array of later philosophers and writers, among them
Paracelsus, Giordano Bruno, Johannes Reuchlin, and Johannes
Trithemius.[84] According to the historian Richard Kieckhefer, the
concept of magia naturalis took "firm hold in European culture" during
the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries,[123] attracting the interest of
natural philosophers of various theoretical orientations, including
Aristotelians, Neoplatonists, and Hermeticists.[124]
Adherents of
this position argued that magia could appear in both good and bad
forms; in 1625, the French librarian Gabriel Naudé wrote his Apology for
all the Wise Men Falsely Suspected of Magic, in which he distinguished
"Mosoaicall Magick"—which he claimed came from God and included
prophecies, miracles, and speaking in tongues—from "geotick" magic
caused by demons.[125] While the proponents of magia naturalis insisted
that this did not rely on the actions of demons, critics disagreed,
arguing that the demons had simply deceived these magicians.[126] By the
seventeenth century the concept of magia naturalis had moved in
increasingly 'naturalistic' directions, with the distinctions between it
and science becoming blurred.[127] The validity of magia naturalis as a
concept for understanding the universe then came under increasing
criticism during the Age of Enlightenment in the eighteenth
century.[128]
Despite the attempt to reclaim the term magia for
use in a positive sense, it did not supplant traditional attitudes
toward magic in the West, which remained largely negative.[128] At the
same time as magia naturalis was attracting interest and was largely
tolerated, Europe saw an active persecution of accused witches believed
to be guilty of maleficia.[124] Reflecting the term's continued negative
associations, Protestants often sought to denigrate Roman Catholic
sacramental and devotional practices as being magical rather than
religious.[129] Many Roman Catholics were concerned by this allegation
and for several centuries various Roman Catholic writers devoted
attention to arguing that their practices were religious rather than
magical.[130] At the same time, Protestants often used the accusation of
magic against other Protestant groups which they were in contest
with.[131] In this way, the concept of magic was used to prescribe what
was appropriate as religious belief and practice.[130] Similar claims
were also being made in the Islamic world during this period. The
Arabian cleric Muhammad ibn Abd al-Wahhab—founder of Wahhabism—for
instance condemned a range of customs and practices such as divination
and the veneration of spirits as sihr, which he in turn claimed was a
form of shirk, the sin of idolatry.[132]
The Renaissance
Renaissance
humanism saw a resurgence in hermeticism and Neo-Platonic varieties of
ceremonial magic. The Renaissance, on the other hand, saw the rise of
science, in such forms as the dethronement of the Ptolemaic theory of
the universe, the distinction of astronomy from astrology, and of
chemistry from alchemy.[133][page needed]
There was great
uncertainty in distinguishing practices of superstition, occultism, and
perfectly sound scholarly knowledge or pious ritual. The intellectual
and spiritual tensions erupted in the Early Modern witch craze, further
reinforced by the turmoil of the Protestant Reformation, especially in
Germany, England, and Scotland.[133][page needed]
In Hasidism,
the displacement of practical Kabbalah using directly magical means, by
conceptual and meditative trends gained much further emphasis, while
simultaneously instituting meditative theurgy for material blessings at
the heart of its social mysticism.[134] Hasidism internalised Kabbalah
through the psychology of deveikut (cleaving to God), and cleaving to
the Tzadik (Hasidic Rebbe). In Hasidic doctrine, the tzaddik channels
Divine spiritual and physical bounty to his followers by altering the
Will of God (uncovering a deeper concealed Will) through his own
deveikut and self-nullification. Dov Ber of Mezeritch is concerned to
distinguish this theory of the Tzadik's will altering and deciding the
Divine Will, from directly magical process.[135]
In
the nineteenth century, the Haitian government began to legislate
against Vodou, describing it as a form of witchcraft; this conflicted
with Vodou practitioners' own understanding of their religion.[136]
In
the sixteenth century, European societies began to conquer and colonise
other continents around the world, and as they did so they applied
European concepts of magic and witchcraft to practices found among the
peoples whom they encountered.[137] Usually, these European colonialists
regarded the natives as primitives and savages whose belief systems
were diabolical and needed to be eradicated and replaced by
Christianity.[138] Because Europeans typically viewed these non-European
peoples as being morally and intellectually inferior to themselves, it
was expected that such societies would be more prone to practicing
magic.[139] Women who practiced traditional rites were labelled as
witches by the Europeans.[139]
In various cases, these imported
European concepts and terms underwent new transformations as they merged
with indigenous concepts.[140] In West Africa, for instance, Portuguese
travellers introduced their term and concept of the feitiçaria (often
translated as sorcery) and the feitiço (spell) to the native population,
where it was transformed into the concept of the fetish. When later
Europeans encountered these West African societies, they wrongly
believed that the fetiche was an indigenous African term rather than the
result of earlier inter-continental encounters.[140] Sometimes,
colonised populations themselves adopted these European concepts for
their own purposes. In the early nineteenth century, the newly
independent Haitian government of Jean-Jacques Dessalines began to
suppress the practice of Vodou, and in 1835 Haitian law-codes
categorised all Vodou practices as sortilège (sorcery/witchcraft),
suggesting that it was all conducted with harmful intent, whereas among
Vodou practitioners the performance of harmful rites was already given a
separate and distinct category, known as maji.[136]
Baroque period
During
the Baroque era, several intriguing figures engaged with occult and
magical themes that went beyond conventional thinking. Michael
Sendivogius (1566–1636), a Polish alchemist, emphasized empirical
experimentation in alchemy and made notable contributions to early
chemistry. Tommaso Campanella (1568–1639), an Italian philosopher,
blended Christianity with mysticism in works like The City of the Sun,
envisioning an ideal society governed by divine principles. Jakob Böhme
(1575–1624), a German mystic, explored the relationship between the
divine and human experience, influencing later mystical movements.
Jan
Baptist van Helmont, a Flemish chemist, coined the term "gas" and
conducted experiments on plant growth, expanding the understanding of
chemistry. Sir Kenelm Digby, known for his diverse interests, created
the "Sympathetic Powder", believed to have mystical healing properties.
Isaac Newton, famous for his scientific achievements, also delved into
alchemy and collected esoteric manuscripts, revealing his fascination
with hidden knowledge. These individuals collectively embody the
curiosity and exploration characteristic of the Baroque period.
Modernity
By
the nineteenth century, European intellectuals no longer saw the
practice of magic through the framework of sin and instead regarded
magical practices and beliefs as "an aberrational mode of thought
antithetical to the dominant cultural logic – a sign of psychological
impairment and marker of racial or cultural inferiority".[141]
As
educated elites in Western societies increasingly rejected the efficacy
of magical practices, legal systems ceased to threaten practitioners of
magical activities with punishment for the crimes of diabolism and
witchcraft, and instead threatened them with the accusation that they
were defrauding people through promising to provide things which they
could not.[142]
This spread of European colonial power across the
world influenced how academics would come to frame the concept of
magic.[143] In the nineteenth century, several scholars adopted the
traditional, negative concept of magic.[128] That they chose to do so
was not inevitable, for they could have followed the example adopted by
prominent esotericists active at the time like Helena Blavatsky who had
chosen to use the term and concept of magic in a positive sense.[128]
Various writers also used the concept of magic to criticise religion by
arguing that the latter still displayed many of the negative traits of
the former. An example of this was the American journalist H. L. Mencken
in his polemical 1930 work Treatise on the Gods; he sought to critique
religion by comparing it to magic, arguing that the division between the
two was misplaced.[144] The concept of magic was also adopted by
theorists in the new field of psychology, where it was often used
synonymously with superstition, although the latter term proved more
common in early psychological texts.[145]
In the late nineteenth
and twentieth centuries, folklorists examined rural communities across
Europe in search of magical practices, which at the time they typically
understood as survivals of ancient belief systems.[146] It was only in
the 1960s that anthropologists like Jeanne Favret-Saada also began
looking in depth at magic in European contexts, having previously
focused on examining magic in non-Western contexts.[147] In the
twentieth century, magic also proved a topic of interest to the
Surrealists, an artistic movement based largely in Europe; the
Surrealism André Breton for instance published L'Art magique in 1957,
discussing what he regarded as the links between magic and art.[148]
The
scholarly application of magic as a sui generis category that can be
applied to any socio-cultural context was linked with the promotion of
modernity to both Western and non-Western audiences.[149]
The
term magic has become pervasive in the popular imagination and idiom.[7]
In contemporary contexts, the word magic is sometimes used to "describe
a type of excitement, of wonder, or sudden delight", and in such a
context can be "a term of high praise".[150] Despite its historical
contrast against science, scientists have also adopted the term in
application to various concepts, such as magic acid, magic bullets, and
magic angles.[7]
Many concepts of modern ceremonial magic are heavily influenced by the ideas of Aleister Crowley.
Modern
Western magic has challenged widely-held preconceptions about
contemporary religion and spirituality.[151] The polemical discourses
about magic influenced the self-understanding of modern magicians,
several whom—such as Aleister Crowley —were well versed in academic
literature on the subject.[152] According to scholar of religion Henrik
Bogdan, "arguably the best known emic definition" of the term magic was
provided by Crowley.[152] Crowley—who favoured the spelling 'magick'
over magic to distinguish it from stage illusionism[1]—was of the view
that "Magick is the Science and Art of causing Change to occur in
conformity with Will".[152] Crowley's definition influenced that of
subsequent magicians.[152] Dion Fortune of the Fraternity of the Inner
Light for instance stated that "Magic is the art of changing
consciousness according to Will".[152] Gerald Gardner, the founder of
Gardnerian Wicca, stated that magic was "attempting to cause the
physically unusual",[152] while Anton LaVey, the founder of LaVeyan
Satanism, described magic as "the change in situations or events in
accordance with one's will, which would, using normally acceptable
methods, be unchangeable."[152]
The chaos magic movement emerged
during the late 20th century, as an attempt to strip away the symbolic,
ritualistic, theological or otherwise ornamental aspects of other occult
traditions and distill magic down to a set of basic techniques.[153]
These
modern Western concepts of magic rely on a belief in correspondences
connected to an unknown occult force that permeates the universe.[154]
As noted by Hanegraaff, this operated according to "a new meaning of
magic, which could not possibly have existed in earlier periods,
precisely because it is elaborated in reaction to the "disenchantment of
the world"."[154] For many, and perhaps most, modern Western magicians,
the goal of magic is deemed to be personal spiritual development.[155]
The perception of magic as a form of self-development is central to the
way that magical practices have been adopted into forms of modern
Paganism and the New Age phenomenon.[155] One significant development
within modern Western magical practices has been sex magic.[155] This
was a practice promoted in the writings of Paschal Beverly Randolph and
subsequently exerted a strong interest on occultist magicians like
Crowley and Theodor Reuss.[155]
The adoption of the term magic by
modern occultists can in some instances be a deliberate attempt to
champion those areas of Western society which have traditionally been
marginalised as a means of subverting dominant systems of power.[156]
The influential American Wiccan and author Starhawk for instance stated
that "Magic is another word that makes people uneasy, so I use it
deliberately, because the words we are comfortable with, the words that
sound acceptable, rational, scientific, and intellectually correct, are
comfortable precisely because they are the language of
estrangement."[157] In the present day, "among some countercultural
subgroups the label is considered 'cool'"[158]
Sorcery is a legal
concept in Papua New Guinea law, which differentiates between legal
good magic, such as healing and fertility, and illegal black magic, held
responsible for unexplained deaths.[159]
Conceptual development
According
to anthropologist Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard, magic formed a rational
framework of beliefs and knowledge in some cultures, like the Azande
people of Africa.[160] The historian Owen Davies stated that the word
magic was "beyond simple definition",[161] and had "a range of
meanings".[162] Similarly, the historian Michael D. Bailey characterised
magic as "a deeply contested category and a very fraught label";[163]
as a category, he noted, it was "profoundly unstable" given that
definitions of the term have "varied dramatically across time and
between cultures".[164] Scholars have engaged in extensive debates as to
how to define magic,[165] with such debates resulting in intense
dispute.[166] Throughout such debates, the scholarly community has
failed to agree on a definition of magic, in a similar manner to how
they have failed to agree on a definition of religion.[166] According
with scholar of religion Michael Stausberg the phenomenon of people
applying the concept of magic to refer to themselves and their own
practices and beliefs goes as far back as late antiquity. However, even
among those throughout history who have described themselves as
magicians, there has been no common ground of what magic is.[167]
In
Africa, the word magic might simply be understood as denoting
management of forces, which, as an activity, is not weighted morally and
is accordingly a neutral activity from the start of a magical practice,
but by the will of the magician, is thought to become and to have an
outcome which represents either good or bad (evil).[168][169] Ancient
African culture was in the habit customarily of always discerning
difference between magic, and a group of other things, which are not
magic, these things were..., divination, witchcraft and sorcery.[170]
Opinion differs on how religion and magic are related to each other with
respect development or to which developed from which, some think they
developed together from a shared origin, some think religion developed
from magic, and some, magic from religion.[171]
Anthropological
and sociological theories of magic generally serve to sharply demarcate
certain practices from other, otherwise similar practices in a given
society.[99] According to Bailey: "In many cultures and across various
historical periods, categories of magic often define and maintain the
limits of socially and culturally acceptable actions in respect to
numinous or occult entities or forces. Even more, basically, they serve
to delineate arenas of appropriate belief."[172] In this, he noted that
"drawing these distinctions is an exercise in power".[172] This tendency
has had repercussions for the study of magic, with academics
self-censoring their research because of the effects on their
careers.[173]
Randall Styers noted that attempting to define
magic represents "an act of demarcation" by which it is juxtaposed
against "other social practices and modes of knowledge" such as religion
and science.[174] The historian Karen Louise Jolly described magic as
"a category of exclusion, used to define an unacceptable way of thinking
as either the opposite of religion or of science".[175]
Modern
scholarship has produced various definitions and theories of magic.[176]
According to Bailey, "these have typically framed magic in relation to,
or more frequently in distinction from, religion and science."[176]
Since the emergence of the study of religion and the social sciences,
magic has been a "central theme in the theoretical literature" produced
by scholars operating in these academic disciplines.[165] Magic is one
of the most heavily theorized concepts in the study of religion,[177]
and also played a key role in early theorising within anthropology.[178]
Styers believed that it held such a strong appeal for social theorists
because it provides "such a rich site for articulating and contesting
the nature and boundaries of modernity".[179] Scholars have commonly
used it as a foil for the concept of religion, regarding magic as the
"illegitimate (and effeminized) sibling" of religion.[180] Alternately,
others have used it as a middle-ground category located between religion
and science.[180]
The context in which scholars framed their
discussions of magic was informed by the spread of European colonial
power across the world in the modern period.[143] These repeated
attempts to define magic resonated with broader social concerns,[9] and
the pliability of the concept has allowed it to be "readily adaptable as
a polemical and ideological tool".[130] The links that intellectuals
made between magic and those they characterized as primitives helped to
legitimise European and Euro-American imperialism and colonialism, as
these Western colonialists expressed the view that those who believed in
and practiced magic were unfit to govern themselves and should be
governed by those who, rather than believing in magic, believed in
science and/or (Christian) religion.[8] In Bailey's words, "the
association of certain peoples [whether non-Europeans or poor, rural
Europeans] with magic served to distance and differentiate them from
those who ruled over them, and in large part to justify that rule."[6]
Many
different definitions of magic have been offered by scholars,
although—according to Hanegraaff—these can be understood as variations
of a small number of heavily influential theories.[177]
Intellectualist approach
Edward
Tylor, an anthropologist who used the term magic in reference to
sympathetic magic, an idea that he associated with his concept of
animism
The intellectualist approach to defining magic is
associated with two prominent British anthropologists, Edward Tylor and
James G. Frazer.[181] This approach viewed magic as the theoretical
opposite of science,[182] and came to preoccupy much anthropological
thought on the subject.[183] This approach was situated within the
evolutionary models which underpinned thinking in the social sciences
during the early 19th century.[184] The first social scientist to
present magic as something that predated religion in an evolutionary
development was Herbert Spencer;[185] in his A System of Synthetic
Philosophy, he used the term magic in reference to sympathetic
magic.[186] Spencer regarded both magic and religion as being rooted in
false speculation about the nature of objects and their relationship to
other things.[187]
Tylor's understanding of magic was linked to
his concept of animism.[188] In his 1871 book Primitive Culture, Tylor
characterized magic as beliefs based on "the error of mistaking ideal
analogy for real analogy". [189] In Tylor's view, "primitive man, having
come to associate in thought those things which he found by experience
to be connected in fact, proceeded erroneously to invert this action,
and to conclude that association in thought must involve similar
connection in reality. He thus attempted to discover, to foretell, and
to cause events by means of processes which we can now see to have only
an ideal significance".[190] Tylor was dismissive of magic, describing
it as "one of the most pernicious delusions that ever vexed
mankind".[191] Tylor's views proved highly influential,[192] and helped
to establish magic as a major topic of anthropological research.[185]
James Frazer regarded magic as the first stage in human development, to be followed by religion and then science.
Tylor's
ideas were adopted and simplified by James Frazer.[193] He used the
term magic to mean sympathetic magic,[194] describing it as a practice
relying on the magician's belief "that things act on each other at a
distance through a secret sympathy", something which he described as "an
invisible ether".[190] He further divided this magic into two forms,
the "homeopathic (imitative, mimetic)" and the "contagious".[190] The
former was the idea that "like produces like", or that the similarity
between two objects could result in one influencing the other. The
latter was based on the idea that contact between two objects allowed
the two to continue to influence one another at a distance.[195] Like
Taylor, Frazer viewed magic negatively, describing it as "the bastard
sister of science", arising from "one great disastrous fallacy".[196]
Where
Frazer differed from Tylor was in characterizing a belief in magic as a
major stage in humanity's cultural development, describing it as part
of a tripartite division in which magic came first, religion came
second, and eventually science came third.[197] For Frazer, all early
societies started as believers in magic, with some of them moving away
from this and into religion.[198] He believed that both magic and
religion involved a belief in spirits but that they differed in the way
that they responded to these spirits. For Frazer, magic "constrains or
coerces" these spirits while religion focuses on "conciliating or
propitiating them".[198] He acknowledged that their common ground
resulted in a cross-over of magical and religious elements in various
instances; for instance he claimed that the sacred marriage was a
fertility ritual which combined elements from both world-views.[199]
Some
scholars retained the evolutionary framework used by Frazer but changed
the order of its stages; the German ethnologist Wilhelm Schmidt argued
that religion—by which he meant monotheism—was the first stage of human
belief, which later degenerated into both magic and polytheism.[200]
Others rejected the evolutionary framework entirely. Frazer's notion
that magic had given way to religion as part of an evolutionary
framework was later deconstructed by the folklorist and anthropologist
Andrew Lang in his essay "Magic and Religion"; Lang did so by
highlighting how Frazer's framework relied upon misrepresenting
ethnographic accounts of beliefs and practiced among indigenous
Australians to fit his concept of magic.[201]
Functionalist approach
The
functionalist approach to defining magic is associated with the French
sociologists Marcel Mauss and Emile Durkheim.[202] In this approach,
magic is understood as being the theoretical opposite of religion.[203]
Mauss
set forth his conception of magic in a 1902 essay, "A General Theory of
Magic".[204] Mauss used the term magic in reference to "any rite that
is not part of an organized cult: a rite that is private, secret,
mysterious, and ultimately tending towards one that is forbidden".[202]
Conversely, he associated religion with organised cult.[205] By saying
that magic was inherently non-social, Mauss had been influenced by the
traditional Christian understandings of the concept.[206] Mauss
deliberately rejected the intellectualist approach promoted by Frazer,
believing that it was inappropriate to restrict the term magic to
sympathetic magic, as Frazer had done.[207] He expressed the view that
"there are not only magical rites which are not sympathetic, but neither
is sympathy a prerogative of magic, since there are sympathetic
practices in religion".[205]
Mauss' ideas were adopted by
Durkheim in his 1912 book The Elementary Forms of the Religious
Life.[208] Durkheim was of the view that both magic and religion
pertained to "sacred things, that is to say, things set apart and
forbidden".[209] Where he saw them as being different was in their
social organisation. Durkheim used the term magic to describe things
that were inherently anti-social, existing in contrast to what he
referred to as a Church, the religious beliefs shared by a social group;
in his words, "There is no Church of magic."[210] Durkheim expressed
the view that "there is something inherently anti-religious about the
maneuvers of the magician",[203] and that a belief in magic "does not
result in binding together those who adhere to it, nor in uniting them
into a group leading a common life."[209] Durkheim's definition
encounters problems in situations—such as the rites performed by
Wiccans—in which acts carried out communally have been regarded, either
by practitioners or observers, as being magical.[211]
Scholars
have criticized the idea that magic and religion can be differentiated
into two distinct, separate categories.[212] The social anthropologist
Alfred Radcliffe-Brown suggested that "a simple dichotomy between magic
and religion" was unhelpful and thus both should be subsumed under the
broader category of ritual.[213] Many later anthropologists followed his
example.[213] Nevertheless, this distinction is still often made by
scholars discussing this topic.[212]
Emotionalist approach
The
emotionalist approach to magic is associated with the English
anthropologist Robert Ranulph Marett, the Austrian Sigmund Freud, and
the Polish anthropologist Bronisław Malinowski.[214]
Marett
viewed magic as a response to stress.[215] In a 1904 article, he argued
that magic was a cathartic or stimulating practice designed to relieve
feelings of tension.[215] As his thought developed, he increasingly
rejected the idea of a division between magic and religion and began to
use the term "magico-religious" to describe the early development of
both.[215] Malinowski similarly understood magic to Marett, tackling the
issue in a 1925 article.[216] He rejected Frazer's evolutionary
hypothesis that magic was followed by religion and then science as a
series of distinct stages in societal development, arguing that all
three were present in each society.[217] In his view, both magic and
religion "arise and function in situations of emotional stress" although
whereas religion is primarily expressive, magic is primarily
practical.[217] He therefore defined magic as "a practical art
consisting of acts which are only means to a definite end expected to
follow later on".[217] For Malinowski, magical acts were to be carried
out for a specific end, whereas religious ones were ends in
themselves.[211] He for instance believed that fertility rituals were
magical because they were carried out with the intention of meeting a
specific need.[217] As part of his functionalist approach, Malinowski
saw magic not as irrational but as something that served a useful
function, being sensible within the given social and environmental
context.[218]
Ideas about magic were also promoted by Sigmund Freud.
The
term magic was used liberally by Freud.[219] He also saw magic as
emerging from human emotion but interpreted it very differently to
Marett.[220] Freud explains that "the associated theory of magic merely
explains the paths along which magic proceeds; it does not explain its
true essence, namely the misunderstanding which leads it to replace the
laws of nature by psychological ones".[221] Freud emphasizes that what
led primitive men to come up with magic is the power of wishes: "His
wishes are accompanied by a motor impulse, the will, which is later
destined to alter the whole face of the earth to satisfy his wishes.
This motor impulse is at first employed to give a representation of the
satisfying situation in such a way that it becomes possible to
experience the satisfaction by means of what might be described as motor
hallucinations. This kind of representation of a satisfied wish is
quite comparable to children's play, which succeeds their earlier purely
sensory technique of satisfaction. [...] As time goes on, the
psychological accent shifts from the motives for the magical act on to
the measures by which it is carried out—that is, on to the act itself.
[...] It thus comes to appear as though it is the magical act itself
which, owing to its similarity with the desired result, alone determines
the occurrence of that result."[222]
In the early 1960s, the
anthropologists Murray and Rosalie Wax put forward the argument that
scholars should look at the magical worldview of a given society on its
own terms rather than trying to rationalize it in terms of Western ideas
about scientific knowledge.[223] Their ideas were heavily criticised by
other anthropologists, who argued that they had set up a false
dichotomy between non-magical Western worldview and magical non-Western
worldviews.[224] The concept of the magical worldview nevertheless
gained widespread use in history, folkloristics, philosophy, cultural
theory, and psychology.[225] The notion of magical thinking has also
been utilised by various psychologists.[226] In the 1920s, the
psychologist Jean Piaget used the concept as part of his argument that
children were unable to clearly differentiate between the mental and the
physical.[226] According to this perspective, children begin to abandon
their magical thinking between the ages of six and nine.[226]
According
to Stanley Tambiah, magic, science, and religion all have their own
"quality of rationality", and have been influenced by politics and
ideology.[227] As opposed to religion, Tambiah suggests that mankind has
a much more personal control over events. Science, according to
Tambiah, is "a system of behavior by which man acquires mastery of the
environment."[228]
Ethnocentrism
The
magic-religion-science triangle developed in European society based on
evolutionary ideas i.e. that magic evolved into religion, which in turn
evolved into science.[203] However using a Western analytical tool when
discussing non-Western cultures, or pre-modern forms of Western society,
raises problems as it may impose alien Western categories on them.[229]
While magic remains an emic (insider) term in the history of Western
societies, it remains an etic (outsider) term when applied to
non-Western societies and even within specific Western societies. For
this reason, academics like Michael D. Bailey suggest abandon the term
altogether as an academic category.[230] During the twentieth century,
many scholars focusing on Asian and African societies rejected the term
magic, as well as related concepts like witchcraft, in favour of the
more precise terms and concepts that existed within these specific
societies like Juju.[231] A similar approach has been taken by many
scholars studying pre-modern societies in Europe, such as Classical
antiquity, who find the modern concept of magic inappropriate and favour
more specific terms originating within the framework of the ancient
cultures which they are studying.[232] Alternately, this term implies
that all categories of magic are ethnocentric and that such Western
preconceptions are an unavoidable component of scholarly research.[229]
This century has seen a trend towards emic ethnographic studies by
scholar practitioners that explicitly explore the emic/etic divide.[233]
Many
scholars have argued that the use of the term as an analytical tool
within academic scholarship should be rejected altogether.[234] The
scholar of religion Jonathan Z. Smith for example argued that it had no
utility as an etic term that scholars should use.[235] The historian of
religion Wouter Hanegraaff agreed, on the grounds that its use is
founded in conceptions of Western superiority and has "...served as a
'scientific' justification for converting non-European peoples from
benighted superstitions..." stating that "the term magic is an important
object of historical research, but not intended for doing
research."[236]
Bailey noted that, as of the early 21st century,
few scholars sought grand definitions of magic but instead focused with
"careful attention to particular contexts", examining what a term like
magic meant to a given society; this approach, he noted, "call[ed] into
question the legitimacy of magic as a universal category".[237] The
scholars of religion Berndt-Christian Otto and Michael Stausberg
suggested that it would be perfectly possible for scholars to talk about
amulets, curses, healing procedures, and other cultural practices often
regarded as magical in Western culture without any recourse to the
concept of magic itself.[238] The idea that magic should be rejected as
an analytic term developed in anthropology, before moving into Classical
studies and Biblical studies in the 1980s.[239] Since the 1990s, the
term's usage among scholars of religion has declined.[235]
Witchcraft
The
historian Ronald Hutton notes the presence of four distinct meanings of
the term witchcraft in the English language. Historically, the term
primarily referred to the practice of causing harm to others through
supernatural or magical means. This remains, according to Hutton, "the
most widespread and frequent" understanding of the term.[240] Moreover,
Hutton also notes three other definitions in current usage; to refer to
anyone who conducts magical acts, for benevolent or malevolent intent;
for practitioners of the modern Pagan religion of Wicca; or as a symbol
of women resisting male authority and asserting an independent female
authority.[241] Belief in witchcraft is often present within societies
and groups whose cultural framework includes a magical world view.[242]
Those
regarded as being magicians have often faced suspicion from other
members of their society.[243] This is particularly the case if these
perceived magicians have been associated with social groups already
considered morally suspect in a particular society, such as foreigners,
women, or the lower classes.[244] In contrast to these negative
associations, many practitioners of activities that have been labelled
magical have emphasised that their actions are benevolent and
beneficial.[245] This conflicted with the common Christian view that all
activities categorised as being forms of magic were intrinsically bad
regardless of the intent of the magician, because all magical actions
relied on the aid of demons.[101] There could be conflicting attitudes
regarding the practices of a magician; in European history, authorities
often believed that cunning folk and traditional healers were harmful
because their practices were regarded as magical and thus stemming from
contact with demons, whereas a local community might value and respect
these individuals because their skills and services were deemed
beneficial.[246]
In Western societies, the practice of magic,
especially when harmful, was usually associated with women.[247] For
instance, during the witch trials of the early modern period, around
three quarters of those executed as witches were female, to only a
quarter who were men.[248] That women were more likely to be accused and
convicted of witchcraft in this period might have been because their
position was more legally vulnerable, with women having little or no
legal standing that was independent of their male relatives.[248] The
conceptual link between women and magic in Western culture may be
because many of the activities regarded as magical—from rites to
encourage fertility to potions to induce abortions—were associated with
the female sphere.[249] It might also be connected to the fact that many
cultures portrayed women as being inferior to men on an intellectual,
moral, spiritual, and physical level.[250]
Magicians
The Magician card from a 15th-century tarot deck
Many
of the practices which have been labelled magic can be performed by
anyone.[251] For instance, some charms can be recited by individuals
with no specialist knowledge nor any claim to having a specific
power.[252] Others require specialised training in order to perform
them.[251] Some of the individuals who performed magical acts on a more
than occasional basis came to be identified as magicians, or with
related concepts like sorcerers/sorceresses, witches, or cunning
folk.[252] Identities as a magician can stem from an individual's own
claims about themselves, or it can be a label placed upon them by
others.[252] In the latter case, an individual could embrace such a
label, or they could reject it, sometimes vehemently.[252]
Economic
incentives can encourage individuals to identify as magicians.[142] In
the cases of various forms of traditional healer, as well as the later
stage magicians or illusionists, the label of magician could become a
job description.[252] Others claim such an identity out of a genuinely
held belief that they have specific unusual powers or talents.[253]
Different societies have different social regulations regarding who can
take on such a role; for instance, it may be a question of familial
heredity, or there may be gender restrictions on who is allowed to
engage in such practices.[254] A variety of personal traits may be
credited with giving magical power, and frequently they are associated
with an unusual birth into the world.[255] For instance, in Hungary it
was believed that a táltos would be born with teeth or an additional
finger.[256] In various parts of Europe, it was believed that being born
with a caul would associate the child with supernatural abilities.[256]
In some cases, a ritual initiation is required before taking on a role
as a specialist in such practices, and in others it is expected that an
individual will receive a mentorship from another specialist.[257]
Davies
noted that it was possible to "crudely divide magic specialists into
religious and lay categories".[258] He noted for instance that Roman
Catholic priests, with their rites of exorcism, and access to holy water
and ..., could be conceived as being magical practitioners.[259]
Traditionally, the most common method of identifying, differentiating,
and establishing magical practitioners from common people is by
initiation. By means of rites the magician's relationship to the
supernatural and his entry into a closed professional class is
established (often through rituals that simulate death and rebirth into a
new life).[260] However, Berger and Ezzy explain that since the rise of
Neopaganism, "As there is no central bureaucracy or dogma to determine
authenticity, an individual's self-determination as a Witch, Wiccan,
Pagan or Neopagan is usually taken at face value".[261] Ezzy argues that
practitioners' worldviews have been neglected in many sociological and
anthropological studies and that this is because of "a culturally narrow
understanding of science that devalues magical beliefs".[262]
Mauss
argues that the powers of both specialist and common magicians are
determined by culturally accepted standards of the sources and the
breadth of magic: a magician cannot simply invent or claim new magic. In
practice, the magician is only as powerful as his peers believe him to
be.[263]
Throughout recorded history, magicians have often faced
skepticism regarding their purported powers and abilities.[264] For
instance, in sixteenth-century England, the writer Reginald Scot wrote
The Discoverie of Witchcraft, in which he argued that many of those
accused of witchcraft or otherwise claiming magical capabilities were
fooling people using illusionism." (wikipedia)
"A
magician, also known as an archmage, mage, magus, magic-user,
spellcaster, enchanter/enchantress, sorcerer/sorceress, warlock, witch,
or wizard, is someone who uses or practices magic derived from
supernatural, occult, or arcane sources.[2]: 54 Magicians enjoy a rich
history in mythology, legends, fiction, and folklore, and are common
figures in works of fantasy, such as fantasy literature and role-playing
games.
Character archetypes
The Enchanter Merlin, by Howard Pyle, from The Story of King Arthur and His Knights (1903)
People
who work magic are called by several names in fantasy works, and
terminology differs widely from one fantasy world to another. While
derived from real-world vocabulary, the terms: magician, mage, magus,
enchanter/enchantress, sorcerer/sorceress, warlock, witch, and wizard,
each have different meanings depending upon context and the story in
question.[3]: 619 Archmage is used in fantasy works to indicate a
powerful magician or a leader of magicians.[3]: 1027
The Love Potion by Evelyn De Morgan (1903)
Enchanters
typically practice a type of imbued magic that produces no permanent
effects on objects or people, and are temporary, or of an indefinite
duration, or which may require some item or act, to nullify or reverse.
For example, this could include enchanting a weapon or tool to be more
(or less) effective, enchanting a person or object to have a changed
shape or appearance, creating illusions intended to deceive the
observer, compelling a person to perform an action they might not
normally do, or attempting to charm or seduce someone.[3]: 318 For
instance, the Lady of the Green Kirtle in C. S. Lewis's The Silver Chair
can transform herself into a large green serpent. She also enchants
Rilian, compelling him to forget his father and Narnia. And when that
enchantment is broken, she attempts further enchantments with a
sweet-smelling smoke and a thrumming musical instrument to attempt to
baffle him and his rescuers into forgetting them again.[4]
The
term sorcerer has moved from meaning a fortune-teller, or "one who
alters fate", to meaning a practitioner of magic who can alter reality.
They are also sometimes shown as able to conjure supernatural beings or
spirits, such as in The Sorcerer's Apprentice. Due to this perception of
their powers, this character may be depicted as feared, or even seen as
evil. In sword and sorcery works, typically the hero would be the
sword-wielder, thus leaving the sorcery for his opponent. Villainous
sorcerers were so crucial to pulp fantasy that the genre in which they
appeared was dubbed "sword and sorcery".[3]: 885
Witch (an—often
female—practitioner of witchcraft) and wicked (an adjective meaning
"bad, evil, false") are both derivative terms from the word, wicca (an
Old English word with varied meaning, including: soothsayer, astrologer,
..., ..., seductress, or devotee of supernatural beings or spirits). L.
Frank Baum combined these terms in naming the Wicked Witch of the West,
and other witches in the Land of Oz. Baum named Glinda the "Good Witch
of the South" in The Wonderful Wizard of Oz. In The Marvelous Land of
Oz, he dubbed her "Glinda the Good," and from that point forward and in
subsequent books, Baum referred to her as a sorceress rather than a
witch to avoid the term that was more regarded as evil.[5] In modern
fiction, a witch may be depicted more neutrally, such as the female
witches (comparable to the male wizards) in the Harry Potter series of
books by J. K. Rowling.
In medieval chivalric romance, the wizard
often appears as a wise old man and acts as a mentor, with Merlin from
the King Arthur stories being a prime example.[6]: 195 Wizards such as
Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings and Albus Dumbledore from Harry Potter
are also featured as mentors, and Merlin remains prominent as both an
educative force and mentor in modern works of Arthuriana.[3]: 637 [7]
Wizards
can be cast similarly to the absent-minded professor: being foolish and
prone to misconjuring. They can also be capable of great magic, both
good or evil.[2]: 140–141 Even comical magicians are often capable of
great feats, such as those of Miracle Max in The Princess Bride;
although he is a washed-up wizard fired by the villain, he saves the
dying hero.[8]
Other wizards, such as Saruman from The Lord of
the Rings or Lord Voldemort from Harry Potter, can appear as hostile
villains.[6]: 193
Ursula K. Le Guin's A Wizard of Earthsea
explored the question of how wizards learned their art, introducing to
modern fantasy the role of the wizard as protagonist.[9] This theme has
been further developed in modern fantasy, often leading to wizards as
heroes on their own quests.[10] Such heroes may have their own mentor, a
wizard as well.[3]: 637
In role-playing games
Magicians in
role-playing games often use names borrowed from fiction, myth and
legend. They are typically delineated and named so that the game's
players and game masters can know which rules apply.[3]: 385 Gary Gygax
and Dave Arneson introduced the term "magic-user" in the original
Dungeons & Dragons as a generic term for a practitioner of magic (in
order to avoid the connotations of terms such as wizard or warlock);
this lasted until the second edition of Advanced Dungeons & Dragons,
where it was replaced with mage (later to become wizard). The exact
rules vary from game to game.[citation needed] The wizard or mage, as a
character class, is distinguished by the ability to cast certain kinds
of magic but being weak in combat; sub-classes are distinguished by
strengths in some areas of magic and weakness in others.[11] Sorcerers
are distinguished from wizards as having an innate gift with magic, as
well as having mystical or magical ancestry.[12] Warlocks are
distinguished from wizards as creating forbidden "pacts" with powerful
creatures to harness their innate magical gifts.
Appearance
White-haired and white-bearded wizard with robes and hat
Due
to their traditional image as a wise old man or wise old woman,
magicians may be depicted as old, white-haired, and in some instances
with their hair (and in the case of male wizards, beards), being long
and majestic enough to occasionally host lurking woodland creatures.
This depiction predates the modern fantasy genre, being derived from the
traditional image of wizards such as Merlin.[7][13]
In fantasy, a
magician may be shown wearing a pointed hat, robes, and/or a cloak. In
more modern stories, a magician may be dressed similarly to a stage
magician, wearing a top hat and tails, with an optional cape.
Several
golden hats adorned with astronomical sequences have been found in
Europe. It has been speculated by archaeologists and historians that
they were worn by ancient wizards.[14] The similarities shared with a
fantasy magician's hat shape may mean that it is ultimately derived from
them. Golden Hat of Schifferstadt, circa 1,400-1,300 BC, Historical
Museum of the Palatinate in Speyer, Germany.
Terry Pratchett
described robes as a magician's way of establishing to those they meet
that they are capable of practicing magic.[15]
In the Dragonlance
campaign setting of the Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game,
wizards show their moral alignment by the colour of their robes.[16]
Magical implements
The
Crystal Ball by John William Waterhouse (1902): showing implements used
for magical purposes; the crystal, a book, a skull, and a wand
A magician's crystal ball is a crystal or glass ball commonly associated with clairvoyance, fortune-telling, or scrying.
Wands
and staves have long been used as requirements for the
magician.[6]: 152 Possibly derived from wand-like implements used in
fertility rituals, such as apotropaic wands, the earliest known instance
of the modern magical wand was featured in the Odyssey, used by Circe
to transform Odysseus's men into animals. Italian fairy tales put wands
into the hands of powerful fairies by the Late Middle Ages.[17] Today,
magical wands are widespread in literature and are used from Witch World
to Harry Potter. In The Lord of the Rings, Gandalf refuses to surrender
his own staff, breaking Saruman's, which strips the latter of his
power. This dependency on a particular magical item is common, and
necessary to limit the magician's power for the story's sake – without
it, the magician's powers may be weakened or absent entirely.[18] In the
Harry Potter universe, a wizard must expend much greater effort and
concentration to use magic without a wand, and only a few can control
magic without one; taking away a wizard's wand in battle essentially
disarms them.[citation needed]
In the Enchanted Forest
Chronicles, Patricia Wrede depicts wizards who use magic based on their
staves, and magicians who practice several kinds of magic, including
wizard magic;[clarification needed] in the Regency fantasies, she and
Caroline Stevermer depict magicians as identical to wizards, though
inferior in skill and training.
Education
The Alchemist by William Fettes Douglas (1853): studying for arcane knowledge
Magicians
normally learn spells by reading ancient tomes called grimoires, which
may have magical properties of their own.[3]: 126 Sorcerers in Conan
the Barbarian often gained powers from such books, which are demarcated
by their strange bindings. In worlds where magic is not an innate trait,
the scarcity of these strange books may be a facet of the story; in
Poul Anderson's A Midsummer Tempest, Prince Rupert seeks out the books
of the magician Prospero to learn magic. The same occurs in the Dungeons
and Dragons-based novel series Dragonlance Chronicles, wherein Raistlin
Majere seeks out the books of the sorcerer Fistandantilus. In JK
Rowling's Harry Potter series, wizards already have skills of magic but
they need to practise magic in Wizarding Schools in order to be able to
use it properly.
Some magicians, even after training, continue
their education by learning more spells, inventing new ones (and new
magical objects), or rediscovering ancient spells, beings, or objects.
For example, Dr. Strange from the Marvel Universe continues to learn
about magic even after being named Sorcerer Supreme. He often encounters
creatures that haven't been seen for centuries or more. In the same
universe, Dr. Doom continues to pursue magical knowledge after mastering
it by combining magic with science. Fred and George Weasley from Harry
Potter invent new magical items and sell them as legitimate defense
items, new spells and potions can be made in the Harry Potter Universe;
Severus Snape invented a variety of jinxes and hexes as well as
substantial improvements in the process of making potions; Albus
Dumbledore, along with Nicolas Flamel, is credited with discovering the
twelve uses of dragon's blood.
Limits on magic
To introduce
conflict, writers of fantasy fiction often place limits on the magical
abilities of magicians to prevent them from solving problems too
easily.[3]: 616
A common motif in fiction is that the ability to
use magic is innate and often rare, or gained through a large amount of
study and practice.[3]: 616 In J. R. R. Tolkien's Middle-earth, it is
mostly limited to non-humans, such as the Istari (more commonly known as
wizards), or elves crafting magical items. In many writers' works, it
is reserved for a select group of humans,[citation needed] such as in
Katherine Kurtz's Deryni novels, JK Rowling's Harry Potter novels or
Randall Garrett's Lord Darcy universe.
A common limit invented by
Jack Vance in his The Dying Earth series, and later popularized in
role-playing games is that a wizard can only cast a specific number of
spells in a day.[3]: 385 In Larry Niven's The Magic Goes Away, once an
area's mana is exhausted, no one can use magic.[3]: 942
The
extent of a magician's knowledge is limited to which spells a wizard
knows and can cast.[18] Magic may also be limited by its danger; if a
powerful spell can cause grave harm if miscast, magicians are likely to
be wary of using it.[2]: 142 Other forms of magic are limited by
consequences that, while not inherently dangerous, are at least
undesirable. In A Wizard of Earthsea, every act of magic distorts the
equilibrium of the world, which in turn has far-reaching consequences
that can affect the entire world and everything in it. As a result,
competent wizards do not use their magic frivolously.[18]
In
Terry Pratchett's Discworld series, the Law of Conservation of Reality
is a principle imposed by forces wanting wizards to not destroy the
world, and works to limit how much power it is humanly possible to
wield.[citation needed] Whatever your means, the effort put into
reaching the ends stays the same. For example, when the wizards of
Unseen University are chasing the hapless wizard Rincewind in the forest
of Skund, the wizards send out search teams to go and find him on foot.
The Archchancellor beats them to it by using a powerful spell from his
own office, and while he gets there first by clever use of his spell, he
has used no less effort than the others.[citation needed]
Magic
may require rare and precious materials, such as rare ... or flowers
(often selected by prescribed rituals), minerals or metals such as
mercury, parts of creatures such as the eye of a newt, or even fantastic
ingredients like the cool of a soft breeze on a summer's day. Even if
the magician lacks scruples, obtaining the materials in question may be
difficult.[19] This can vary by fantasy work. Many magicians require no
materials at all;[3]: 617 or those that do may require only simple and
easily obtained materials. Role-playing games are more likely to require
such materials for at least some spells for game balance
reasons.[20][self-published source?]
Use of magic in society
Nevertheless,
many magicians live in pseudo-medieval settings in which their magic is
not put to practical use in society; they may serve as mentors, act as
quest companions, or even go on a quest themselves,[3]: 1027 but their
magic does not build roads or buildings, provide immunizations,
construct indoor plumbing, or do any of the other functions served by
machinery; their worlds remain at a medieval level of technology.[21]
Sometimes
this is justified by having the negative effects of magic outweigh the
positive possibilities.[2]: 8 In Barbara Hambley's Windrose Chronicles,
wizards are precisely pledged not to interfere because of the terrible
damage they can do. In Discworld, the importance of wizards is that they
actively do not do magic, because when wizards have access to
sufficient "thaumaturgic energy", they develop many psychotic attributes
and may eventually destroy the world. This may be a direct effect or
the result of a miscast spell wreaking terrible havoc.[2]: 142
In
other works, developing magic is difficult.[citation needed] In Rick
Cook's Wizardry series, the extreme danger presented by magic and the
difficulty of analyzing the magic have stymied magic and left humanity
at the mercy of the dangerous elves until a wizard summons a computer
programmer from a parallel world — ours — to apply the skills he learned
in our world to magic.
At other times, magic and technology do
develop in tandem; this is most common in the alternate history
genre.[citation needed] Patricia Wrede's Regency fantasies include a
Royal Society of Wizards and a technological level equivalent to the
actual Regency; Randall Garrett's Lord Darcy series, Robert A.
Heinlein's Magic, Incorporated, and Poul Anderson's Operation Chaos all
depict modern societies with magic equivalent to twentieth-century
technology. In Harry Potter, wizards have magical equivalents to
non-magical inventions; sometimes they duplicate them, as with the
Hogwarts Express train.
The powers ascribed to magicians often
affect their roles in society.[original research?] In practical terms,
their powers may give them authority; magicians may advise kings, such
as Gandalf in The Lord of the Rings and Belgarath and Polgara the
Sorceress in David Eddings's The Belgariad. They may be rulers
themselves, as in E.R. Eddison's The Worm Ouroboros, where both the
heroes and the villains, although kings and lords, supplement their
physical power with magical knowledge, or as in Jonathan Stroud's
Bartimaeus Trilogy, where magicians are the governing class.[3]: 1027
On the other hand, magicians often live like hermits, isolated in their
towers and often in the wilderness, bringing no change to society. In
some works, such as many of Barbara Hambly's, they are despised and
outcast specifically because of their knowledge and powers.[3]: 745
In
the magic-noir world of the Dresden Files, wizards generally keep a low
profile, though there is no explicit prohibition against interacting
openly with non-magical humanity. The protagonist of the series, Harry
Dresden, openly advertises in the Yellow Pages under the heading
"Wizard" and maintains a business office, though other wizards tend to
resent him for practicing his craft openly. Dresden primarily uses his
magic to make a living finding lost items and people, performing
exorcisms, and providing protection against the supernatural.[22]
In
the series Sorcerous Stabber Orphen human forms of life should have
only been capable of acquiring divine magic powers through individual
spiritual development, whereas the race of human magicians with inborn
magical ability ended in conflict with pureblood human society, because
this race appeared as a result of an experiment of mixing humans with
non-human sentient Heavenly Beings that acquired magic powers not
through spiritual development, but through deep studying of laws of
nature and by falsely causing the world’s laws to react to actions of
the Heavenly Beings as to actions of Divinities.[23] In the Harry Potter
series, the Wizarding World hides themselves from the rest of the
non-magic world, because, as described by Hagrid simply, "Why? Blimey,
Harry, everyone’d be wantin’ magic solutions to their problems. Nah,
we’re best left alone.”" (wikipedia)
"Witchcraft is the use of magic by a person called a witch. Traditionally, "witchcraft" means the use of magic to inflict supernatural harm or misfortune on others, and this remains the most common and widespread meaning.[1] According to Encyclopedia Britannica, "Witchcraft thus defined exists more in the imagination", but it "has constituted for many cultures a viable explanation of evil in the world".[2] The belief in witches has been found throughout history in a great number of societies worldwide. Most of these societies have used protective magic or counter-magic against witchcraft, and have shunned, banished, imprisoned, physically punished or killed alleged witches. Anthropologists use the term "witchcraft" for similar beliefs about harmful occult practices in different cultures, and these societies often use the term when speaking in English.[3][4][5]
Belief in witchcraft as malevolent magic is attested from ancient Mesopotamia, and in Europe, belief in witches traces back to classical antiquity. In medieval and early modern Europe, accused witches were usually women[6] who were believed to have secretly used black magic (maleficium) against their own community. Usually, accusations of witchcraft were made by neighbors of accused witches, and followed from social tensions. Witches were sometimes said to have communed with demons or with the Devil, though anthropologist Jean La Fontaine notes that such accusations were mainly made against perceived "enemies of the Church".[7] It was thought witchcraft could be thwarted by white magic, provided by 'cunning folk' or 'wise people'. Suspected witches were often prosecuted and punished, if found guilty or simply believed to be guilty. European witch-hunts and witch trials in the early modern period led to tens of thousands of executions. While magical healers and midwives were sometimes accused of witchcraft themselves,[8][4][9][10] they made up a minority of those accused. European belief in witchcraft gradually dwindled during and after the Age of Enlightenment.
Many indigenous belief systems that include the concept of witchcraft likewise define witches as malevolent, and seek healers (such as medicine people and witch doctors) to ward off and undo bewitchment.[11][12] Some African and Melanesian peoples believe witches are driven by an evil spirit or substance inside them. Modern witch-hunting takes place in parts of Africa and Asia.
Since the 1930s, followers of certain kinds of modern paganism identify as witches and redefine the term "witchcraft" as part of their neopagan beliefs and practices.[13][14][15] Other neo-pagans avoid the term due to its negative connotations.[16]
Concept
The most common meaning of "witchcraft" worldwide is the use of harmful magic.[17] Belief in malevolent magic and the concept of witchcraft has lasted throughout recorded history and has been found in cultures worldwide, regardless of development.[3][18] Most societies have feared an ability by some individuals to cause supernatural harm and misfortune to others. This may come from mankind's tendency "to want to assign occurrences of remarkable good or bad luck to agency, either human or superhuman".[19] Historians and anthropologists see the concept of "witchcraft" as one of the ways humans have tried to explain strange misfortune.[19][20] Some cultures have feared witchcraft much less than others because they tend to have other explanations for strange misfortune.[19] For example, the Gaels of Ireland and the Scottish Highlands historically held a strong belief in fairy folk, who could cause supernatural harm, and witch-hunting was very rare in these regions compared to other regions of the British Isles.[21]
Historian Ronald Hutton outlined five key characteristics ascribed to witches and witchcraft by most cultures that believe in this concept: the use of magic to cause harm or misfortune to others; it was used by the witch against their own community; powers of witchcraft were believed to have been acquired through inheritance or initiation; it was seen as immoral and often thought to involve communion with evil beings; and witchcraft could be thwarted by defensive magic, persuasion, intimidation or physical punishment of the alleged witch.[17]
A common belief worldwide is that witches use objects, words, and gestures to cause supernatural harm, or that they simply have an innate power to do so. Hutton notes that both kinds of practitioners are often believed to exist in the same culture and that the two often overlap, in that someone with an inborn power could wield that power through material objects.[22]
One of the most influential works on witchcraft and concepts of magic was E. E. Evans-Pritchard's Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic Among the Azande, a study of Azande witchcraft beliefs published in 1937. This provided definitions for witchcraft which became a convention in anthropology.[20] However, some researchers argue that the general adoption of Evans-Pritchard's definitions constrained discussion of witchcraft beliefs, and even broader discussion of magic and religion, in ways that his work does not support.[23] Evans-Pritchard reserved the term "witchcraft" for the actions of those who inflict harm by their inborn power and used "sorcery" for those who needed tools to do so.[24] Historians found these definitions difficult to apply to European witchcraft, where witches were believed to use physical techniques, as well as some who were believed to cause harm by thought alone.[25][26] The distinction "has now largely been abandoned, although some anthropologists still sometimes find it relevant to the particular societies with which they are concerned".[22]
While most cultures believe witchcraft to be something willful, some Indigenous peoples in Africa and Melanesia believe witches have a substance or an evil spirit in their bodies that drives them to do harm.[22] Such substances may be believed to act on their own while the witch is sleeping or unaware.[23] The Dobu people believe women work harmful magic in their sleep while men work it while awake.[27] Further, in cultures where substances within the body are believed to grant supernatural powers, the substance may be good, bad, or morally neutral.[28][29] Hutton draws a distinction between those who unwittingly cast the evil eye and those who deliberately do so, describing only the latter as witches.[19]
The universal or cross-cultural validity of the terms "witch" and "witchcraft" are debated.[20] Hutton states:
[Malevolent magic] is, however, only one current usage of the word. In fact, Anglo-American senses of it now take at least four different forms, although the one discussed above seems still to be the most widespread and frequent. The others define the witch figure as any person who uses magic ... or as the practitioner of nature-based Pagan religion; or as a symbol of independent female authority and resistance to male domination. All have validity in the present.[19]
According to the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Extrajudicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions there is "difficulty of defining 'witches' and 'witchcraft' across cultures—terms that, quite apart from their connotations in popular culture, may include an array of traditional or faith healing practices".[30]
Anthropologist Fiona Bowie notes that the terms "witchcraft" and "witch" are used differently by scholars and the general public in at least four ways.[20] Neopagan writer Isaac Bonewits proposed dividing witches into even more distinct types including, but not limited to: Neopagan, Feminist, Neogothic, Neoclassical, Classical, Family Traditions, Immigrant Traditions, and Ethnic.
Etymology
The word "witchcraft" is over a thousand years old: Old English formed the compound wiccecræft from wicce ('witch') and cræft ('craft').[32] The masculine form was wicca ('male sorcerer').[33]
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, wicce and wicca were probably derived from the Old English verb wiccian, meaning 'to practice witchcraft'.[34] Wiccian has a cognate in Middle Low German wicken (attested from the 13th century). The further etymology of this word is problematic. It has no clear cognates in other Germanic languages outside of English and Low German, and there are numerous possibilities for the Indo-European root from which it may have derived.
Another Old English word for 'witch' was hægtes or hægtesse, which became the modern English word "hag" and is linked to the word "hex". In most other Germanic languages, their word for 'witch' comes from the same root as these; for example German Hexe and Dutch heks.[35]
In colloquial modern English, the word witch is particularly used for women.[36] A male practitioner of magic or witchcraft is more commonly called a 'wizard', or sometimes, 'warlock'. When the word witch is used to refer to a member of a neo-pagan tradition or religion (such as Wicca), it can refer to a person of any gender.[37]
Beliefs about practices
Witches are commonly believed to cast curses; a spell or set of magical words and gestures intended to inflict supernatural harm.[38] Cursing could also involve inscribing runes or sigils on an object to give that object magical powers; burning or binding a wax or clay image (a poppet) of a person to affect them magically; or using ..., animal parts and other substances to make potions or ....[39][40][41][22] Witchcraft has been blamed for many kinds of misfortune. In Europe, by far the most common kind of harm attributed to witchcraft was illness or death suffered by adults, their children, or their animals. "Certain ailments, like impotence in men, infertility in women, and lack of milk in cows, were particularly associated with witchcraft". Illnesses that were poorly understood were more likely to be blamed on witchcraft. Edward Bever writes: "Witchcraft was particularly likely to be suspected when a ... came on unusually swiftly, lingered unusually long, could not be diagnosed clearly, or presented some other unusual symptoms".[42]
A common belief in cultures worldwide is that witches tend to use something from their target's body to work magic against them; for example hair, nail clippings, clothing, or bodily waste.[22] Such beliefs are found in Europe, Africa, South Asia, Polynesia, Melanesia, and North America.[22] Another widespread belief among Indigenous peoples in Africa and North America is that witches cause harm by introducing cursed magical objects into their victim's body; such as small bones or ashes.[22] James George Frazer described this kind of magic as imitative.[a]
In some cultures, witches are believed to use human body parts in magic,[22] and they are commonly believed to murder children for this purpose. In Europe, "cases in which women did undoubtedly kill their children, because of what today would be called postpartum psychosis, were often interpreted as yielding to diabolical temptation".[44]
Witches are believed to work in secret, sometimes alone and sometimes with other witches. Hutton writes: "Across most of the world, witches have been thought to gather at night, when normal humans are inactive, and also at their most vulnerable in sleep".[22] In most cultures, witches at these gatherings are thought to transgress social norms by engaging in ..., incest and open nudity.[22]
Witches around the world commonly have associations with animals.[45] Rodney Needham identified this as a defining feature of the witch archetype.[46] In some parts of the world, it is believed witches can shapeshift into animals,[47] or that the witch's spirit travels apart from their body and takes an animal form, an activity often associated with shamanism.[47] Another widespread belief is that witches have an animal helper.[47] In English these are often called "familiars", and meant an evil spirit or demon that had taken an animal form.[47] As researchers examined traditions in other regions, they widened the term to servant spirit-animals which are described as a part of the witch's own soul.[48]
Necromancy is the practice of conjuring the spirits of the dead for divination or prophecy, although the term has also been applied to raising the dead for other purposes. The biblical Witch of Endor performed it (1 Samuel 28th chapter), and it is among the witchcraft practices condemned by Ælfric of Eynsham:[49][50][51] "Witches still go to cross-roads and to heathen burials with their delusive magic and call to the devil; and he comes to them in the likeness of the man that is buried there, as if he arises from death."
Witchcraft and folk healers
Most societies that have believed in harmful or black magic have also believed in helpful or white magic.[53] Where belief in harmful magic is common, it is typically forbidden by law as well as hated and feared by the general populace, while helpful or apotropaic (protective) magic is tolerated or accepted by the population, even if the orthodox establishment opposes it.[54]
In these societies, practitioners of helpful magic provide (or provided) services such as breaking the effects of witchcraft, healing, divincation, finding lost or stolen goods, and love magic.[55] In Britain, and some other parts of Europe, they were commonly known as 'cunning folk' or 'wise people'.[55] Alan Macfarlane wrote that while cunning folk is the usual name, some are also known as 'blessers' or 'wizards', but might also be known as 'white', 'good', or 'unbinding witches'.[56] Historian Owen Davies says the term "white witch" was rarely used before the 20th century.[57] Ronald Hutton uses the general term "service magicians".[55] Often these people were involved in identifying alleged witches.[53]
Such helpful magic-workers "were normally contrasted with the witch who practiced maleficium—that is, magic used for harmful ends".[58] In the early years of the European witch hunts "the cunning folk were widely tolerated by church, state and general populace".[58] Some of the more hostile churchmen and secular authorities tried to smear folk-healers and magic-workers by falsely branding them 'witches' and associating them with harmful 'witchcraft',[55] but generally the masses did not accept this and continued to make use of their services.[59] The English MP and skeptic Reginald Scot sought to disprove magic and witchcraft altogether, writing in The Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584), "At this day, it is indifferent to say in the English tongue, 'she is a witch' or 'she is a wise woman'".[60] Historian Keith Thomas adds "Nevertheless, it is possible to isolate that kind of 'witchcraft' which involved the employment (or presumed employment) of some occult means of doing harm to other people in a way which was generally disapproved of. In this sense the belief in witchcraft can be defined as the attribution of misfortune to occult human agency".[4]
Emma Wilby says folk magicians in Europe were viewed ambivalently by communities, and were considered as capable of harming as of healing,[61] which could lead to their being accused as malevolent witches. She suggests some English "witches" convicted of consorting with demons may have been cunning folk whose supposed fairy familiars had been demonised.[62]
Hutton says that magical healers "were sometimes denounced as witches, but seem to have made up a minority of the accused in any area studied".[53] Likewise, Davies says "relatively few cunning-folk were prosecuted under secular statutes for witchcraft" and were dealt with more leniently than alleged witches. The Constitutio Criminalis Carolina (1532) of the Holy Roman Empire, and the Danish Witchcraft Act of 1617, stated that workers of folk magic should be dealt with differently from witches.[63] It was suggested by Richard Horsley that 'diviner-healers' (devins-guerisseurs) made up a significant proportion of those tried for witchcraft in France and Switzerland, but more recent surveys conclude that they made up less than 2% of the accused.[64] However, Éva Pócs says that half the accused witches in Hungary seem to have been healers,[65] and Kathleen Stokker says the "vast majority" of Norway's accused witches were folk healers.
Witch-hunts and thwarting witchcraft
Societies that believe (or believed) in witchcraft may also believe that it can be thwarted in various ways. One common way is to use protective magic or counter-magic, often with the help of magical healers such as cunning folk or witch-doctors.[53] This includes performing rituals, reciting charms, or the use of talismans, amulets, anti-witch marks, witch bottles, witch balls, and burying objects such as horse skulls inside the walls of buildings.[67] Another believed cure for bewitchment is to persuade or force the alleged witch to lift their spell.[53] Often, people have attempted to thwart the witchcraft by physically punishing the alleged witch, such as by banishing, wounding, torturing or killing them. Hutton wrote that "In most societies, however, a formal and legal remedy was preferred to this sort of private action", whereby the alleged witch would be prosecuted and then formally punished if found guilty.[53]
Accusations of witchcraft
Throughout the world, accusations of witchcraft are often linked to social and economic tensions. Females are most often accused, but in some cultures it was mostly males, such as in 17th-century Iceland.[68] In many societies, accusations are directed mainly against the elderly, but in others age is not a factor, and in some cultures it is mainly adolescents who are accused.[69]
Éva Pócs writes that reasons for accusations of witchcraft fall into four general categories. The first three of which were proposed by Richard Kieckhefer, and the fourth added by Christina Larner:[70]
A person was caught in the act of positive or negative sorcery
A well-meaning sorcerer or healer lost their clients' or the authorities' trust
A person did nothing more than gain the enmity of their neighbors
A person was reputed to be a witch and surrounded with an aura of witch-beliefs or occultism....
Americas
North America
North America hosts a diverse array of beliefs about witchcraft, some of which have evolved through interactions between cultures.[135][136]
Native American peoples such as the Cherokee,[137] Hopi,[138] the Navajo[5] among others,[139] believed in malevolent "witch" figures who could harm their communities by supernatural means; this was often punished harshly, including by execution.[140] In these communities, ... people were healers and protectors against witchcraft.[137][138]
The term "witchcraft" arrived with European colonists, along with European views on witchcraft.[135] This term would be adopted by many Indigenous communities for their own beliefs about harmful magic and harmful supernatural powers. Witch hunts took place among Christian European settlers in colonial America and the United States, most infamously the Salem witch trials in Massachusetts. These trials led to the execution of numerous individuals accused of practicing witchcraft. Despite changes in laws and perspectives over time, accusations of witchcraft persisted into the 19th century in some regions, such as Tennessee, where prosecutions occurred as late as 1833.
Some North American witchcraft beliefs were influenced by beliefs about witchcraft in Latin America, and by African witchcraft beliefs through the slave trade.[141][142][136] Native American cultures adopted the term for their own witchcraft beliefs.[143] Neopagan witchcraft practices such as Wicca then emerged in the mid-20th century....
Europe
Ancient Roman world
European belief in witchcraft can be traced back to classical antiquity, when concepts of magic and religion were closely related. During the pagan era of ancient Rome, there were laws against harmful magic.[154] According to Pliny, the 5th century BCE laws of the Twelve Tables laid down penalties for uttering harmful incantations and for stealing the fruitfulness of someone else's crops by magic.[154] The only recorded trial involving this law was that of Gaius Furius Cresimus.[154]
The Classical Latin word veneficium meant both poisoning and causing harm by magic (such as magic potions), although ancient people would not have distinguished between the two.[155] In 331 BCE, a deadly epidemic hit Rome and at least 170 women were executed for causing it by veneficium. In 184–180 BCE, another epidemic hit Italy, and about 5,000 were executed for veneficium.[155] If the reports are accurate, writes Hutton, "then the Republican Romans hunted witches on a scale unknown anywhere else in the ancient world".[155]
Under the Lex Cornelia de sicariis et veneficis of 81 BCE, killing by veneficium carried the death penalty. During the early Imperial era, the Lex Cornelia began to be used more broadly against other kinds of magic,[155] including sacrifices made for evil purposes. The magicians were to be burnt at the stake.[154]
Witch characters—women who work powerful evil magic—appear in ancient Roman literature from the first century BCE onward. They are typically hags who chant harmful incantations; make ...potions from ... and the body parts of animals and humans; sacrifice children; raise the dead; can control the natural world; can shapeshift themselves and others into animals; and invoke underworld deities and spirits. They include Lucan's Erichtho, Horace's Canidia, Ovid's Dipsas, and Apuleius's Meroe.
Early modern and contemporary Europe
By the early modern period, major witch hunts and witch trials began to take place in Europe, partly fueled by religious tensions, societal anxieties, and economic upheaval. One influential text was the Malleus Maleficarum, a 1486 treatise that provided a framework for identifying, prosecuting, and punishing witches. Witches were typically seen as people who caused harm or misfortune through black magic, and were sometimes believed to have made a pact with the Devil.[156] Usually, accusations of witchcraft were made by neighbors and followed from social tensions. Accusations were often made against marginalized individuals, women, the elderly, and those who did not conform to societal norms. Women made accusations as often as men. The common people believed that magical healers (called 'cunning folk' or 'wise people') could undo bewitchment. Hutton says that magical healers were sometimes denounced as witches themselves, "but seem to have made up a minority of the accused in any area studied".[53] The witch-craze reached its peak between the 16th and 17th centuries, resulting in the execution of tens of thousands of people. This dark period of history reflects the confluence of superstition, fear, and authority, as well as the societal tendency to find scapegoats for complex problems. A feminist interpretation of the witch trials is that misogynist views led to the association of women and malevolent witchcraft.[156]
During the 16th century and mid 18th century Scotland had 4000-6000 prosecutions against accused witches, a much higher rate then the European average.[157][158]
Russia also experienced its own iteration of witchcraft trials during the 17th century. Witches were often accused of sorcery and engaging in supernatural activities, leading to their excommunication and execution. The blending of ecclesiastical and secular jurisdictions in Russia's approach to witchcraft trials highlighted the intertwined nature of religious and political power during that time. As the 17th century progressed, the fear of witches shifted from mere superstition to a tool for political manipulation, with accusations used to target individuals who posed threats to the ruling elite.[159]
Since the 1940s, neopagan witchcraft movements have emerged in Europe, seeking to revive and reinterpret ancient pagan and mystical practices. Wicca, pioneered by Gerald Gardner, is the most influential. Drawing inspiration from ceremonial magic, historical paganism, and the now-discredited witch-cult theory, Wicca emphasizes a connection to nature, the divine, and personal growth. Similarly, Stregheria in Italy reflects a desire to reconnect with the country's pagan past. Many of these neopagans self-identify as "witches". Neopagan witchcraft in Europe encompasses a wide range of traditions....
Witches in art and literature
Witches have a long history of being depicted in art, although most of their earliest artistic depictions seem to originate in Early Modern Europe, particularly the Medieval and Renaissance periods. Many scholars attribute their manifestation in art as inspired by texts such as Canon Episcopi, a demonology-centered work of literature, and Malleus Maleficarum, a "witch-craze" manual published in 1487, by Heinrich Kramer and Jacob Sprenger.[165] Witches in fiction span a wide array of characterizations. They are typically, but not always, female, and generally depicted as either villains or heroines." (wikipedia)
"The bogeyman (/ˈboʊɡimæn/; also spelled or known as bogyman,[1] bogy,[1] bogey,[1] and, in US English, also boogeyman)[1] is a mythical creature typically used to frighten children into good behavior. Bogeymen have no specific appearances, and conceptions vary drastically by household and culture, but they are most commonly depicted as masculine, androgynous or even feminine monsters that punish children for misbehavior.[2] The bogeyman, and conceptually similar monsters, can be found in many cultures around the world. Bogeymen may target a specific act or general misbehavior, depending on the purpose of invoking the figure, often on the basis of a warning from an authority figure to a child. The term is sometimes used as a non-specific personification of, or metonym for, terror – and sometimes the Devil.[3]
Etymology
The word bogeyman, used to describe a monster in English, may have derived from Middle English bugge or bogge, which means 'frightening specter', 'terror', or 'scarecrow'. It relates to boggart, bugbear (from bug, meaning 'goblin' or 'scarecrow' and bear) an imaginary demon in the form of a bear that ate small children. It was also used to mean a general object of dread. The word bugaboo, with a similar pair of meanings, may have arisen as an alteration of bugbear.[4] Bogeyman itself is known from the 15th century, though bogeyman stories are likely to be much older.[5]
The word has equivalents in many European languages as bogle (Scots), púca, pooka or pookha (Irish), pwca, bwga or bwgan (Welsh), bucca (Cornish), buse or busemann (Norwegian), puki (Old Norse), bøhmand or bussemand (Danish), bûzeman (Western Frisian), boeman (Dutch), boeboelaas (Surinamese Dutch), Butzemann (German), Böölimaa (Swiss German), Babay/Babayka, búka (Russian), bauk (Serbian), bubulis (Latvian), baubas (Lithuanian), bobo (babok, bebok) (Polish), buba/gogol (Albanian), bubák (Czech), bubák (Slovak), bebok (Silesian),[6] papão (Portuguese), bampoúlas (Greek), babau (also uomo nero, meaning black man) (Italian), babáj (Ukrainian),[citation needed] baubau (Romanian), papu (Catalan), and mumus (Hungarian).
Physical description
It is often described as a dark, formless creature with shapeshifting abilities. The bogeyman is known to satiate its appetite by snatching and consuming children.[7] Descriptions of the bogeyman vary across cultures, yet there are often commonalities between them including claws/talons, or sharp teeth. The nature of the creature also varies from culture to culture, although most examples are said to be a kind of spirit, with demons, witches, and other legendary creatures being less common variants. Some are described as having animal features such as horns, hooves, or a bug-like appearance.[8][unreliable source?]
Other putative origins
Because of the myth's global prevalence, it is difficult to find the original source of the legends. The Bogeyman was first referenced for the hobgoblins described in the 16th century England. Many believed that they were made to torment humans, and while some only played simple pranks, others were more foul in nature.[8][unreliable source?]
Cultural variants
Bogeymen, or bogeyman-like beings, are common to the folklore of many cultures, with numerous variations and equivalents." (wikipedia)
"A punch bowl or punchbowl is a bowl, often large and wide, for serving mixed drinks such as hippocras, punch or mulled wine, with a ladle.[2] A monteith (seau crennelé in French) is a similar bowl, usually of silver or pottery, scalloped around the edge. It was mainly a wine cooler, designed for cooling glasses in icy water, the feet of the glasses held in the notches, but could be used as a punchbowl.[3] Monteiths appear in Britain around 1680, and were popular until the 1720s or so.[4]
Very large examples, like the Jerningham wine cooler, are usually called a wine cistern. These were more often used as wine coolers, for cooling wine bottles with icy water, but for a large party might be used as punchbowls.[5] Tureens normally used for soup or other food might also be used." (wikipedia)