A Brief History of Wicca
A Brief History of Wicca
A Brief History of Wicca
Images of a male consort or "husband" to the Goddess have been found dating back a similar age,
complete with horns or antlers on his head as a sign that he represents not only human beings but
also the entire natural and animal world. There is an example of this on a wall of Les Trois
Freres cavern in France. This cave painting, thought to be about 20 thousand years old, has been
nicknamed "The Sorcerer" and shows an upright human figure with a horse-like tail, a beard and
large antlers on his head. When farming arrived, these ancient gods were expanded into this new
domain and became deities of the crops and harvest, the rain and sun, the flocks and pastures, the
fruits of the earth and the seasons.
The Anglo-Saxons, whose language was a form of German rather than what we would now
recognise as English, had a name for such followers of the Old Religion, part of whose belief
were the practices of healing and natural magic. This name was wicca, pronounced today as
"wikka" (the masculine form is wicca, the feminine wicce) but in Anglo-Saxon correctly
pronounced as "witcha". From this word came a more modern version, witch.
This confirms that the practice of herbalism and healing by the cunning folk(witches, heathens,
pagans and shamen) was still acceptable during his sovereignty, although during his reign he also
introduced the first Witchcraft Act (1542). In those days witchcraft was not classified as it is
today. The term witch was intended to be derogatory and literally anyone could be branded a
witchjust because a neighbour didnt like them, or because they had a physical affliction, or
perhaps the local cattle had just been struck down with a disease. The blame nearly always fell on
a nearby innocentwho had nothing to do with witchcraft at all. The increasing suspicion aimed
at anyone who was in any way different from the norm led in part to the atrocities committed
during the witch-mania.
It was not really until the reign of Elizabeth I, however, that serious witch hunting began in
England. The sudden dramatic increase in witchcraft phobia at this time was brought about by
the return to England of the "Marian exiles." These were large numbers of extremist Protestants
who had been forced to flee from England when the Roman Catholic Mary Tudor, Elizabeth's
predecessor, came to the throne. These religious fanatics had sought refuge in the Calvinistic
towns of Europe, such as Geneva and Zurich, where fierce witch persecutions and burnings were
already raging. When Protestant Elizabeth was crowned, it became safe for the exiles to return
home again, bringing with them extremist continental notions about the nature of witchcraft and
the way in which it should be eliminated.
In Europe and Scotland, witchcraft was defined as a heresy; a crime against the church, and the
punishment for such a crime was to be burned at the stake. In England, though, it was defined as
a crime against the state, and the punishment was hanging. English Christians who found
themselves to be on the wrong side, such as archbishop Cranmer, were burned; English witches
were hanged.
The Witchcraft Act of 1563 was replaced in 1604 by another Act that was even more severe and
which remained in force until 1736 when it was replaced by a new law that actually forbade the
prosecution of anyone performing witchcraft, stating that there was no such thing, and instead
making it an offence for someone to pretend or claim that they were witches. This enlightenment
was a result of the flowering of the "Age of Reason" in which learned people became more
interested in the developing world of science. Charles II took a tolerant view of witchcraft and
was far more interested in the scientific proceedings of the Royal Society, of which he was the
patron.
The last English execution for alleged witchcraft was that of Alice Molland who was hanged at
Exeter in 1684, and the last witch to be condemned to death - although the sentence was never
carried out - was Jane Wenham of Walkern in Hertfordshire who was tried in 1712. Under the
existing law at that time the judge, one John Powell, had no alternative but to condemn her to
death, since statutes had to be obeyed, but he managed to delay the execution until by his own
efforts he was able to secure a royal pardon for her.
The propaganda campaign of the Christian Church against witchcraft was so successful, so
merciless and was applied for so many centuries, that it forms a distinct undercurrent in society to
this day, It is this legacy that forms the root of so many of the misconceptions of witchcraft that
are still accepted as true by large sections of the population - for example, that witches are
Satanists; that witches worship the Devil; that witches perform human or animal sacrifices; that
witchcraft is evil; and that witchcraft is a blasphemous parody of Christianity. Witchcraft is none
of these things, although the accusations have remained firmly planted in the depths of public
consciousness, fertilized by the Church and the media, and from time to time the old hysteria
bubbles to the surface again.
The Emergence of Wicca
While the law of 1736 forbade prosecution for witchcraft in England, it did not altogether remove
it from the statute books. What it did was to abolish it as a religious offence and officially
disclaim the supernatural or occult powers of witches in the light of the increasing scientific
reasoning of the period. Instead, the law punished those accused of witchcraft (far less severely
than before) for maintaining the pretence that they were witches at all, thereby reducing the
"crime" of witchcraft to one of fraud if a person claimed any kind of special magical powers. The
proper definition of a real witch is a person, male or female, who observes the Old Religion of
the Earth Mother as goddess and the Sky Father as god, anciently envisioned as the Horned God,
the Old Religion being that which was practised and believed in prior to Christianity.
However, regardless of the true nature of witchcraft, no parliamentary law could eliminate the
negative beliefs about its practices that had been drummed into the average person for so many
centuries by the Christian church. Sporadic incidents of "witches" being hounded and sometimes
killed continued to occur for a long time after 1736.
Across America in the 1800s the regularor acceptable doctors were getting increasingly
annoyed at the popularity of herbalists and other healers, so much so that in 1847 the American
Medical Association was established, which effectively eliminated any non-regular practitioner
from performing any form of medicine. In this way alternative medicine virtually disappeared
from the United States for the next 60 years, held only in existence by the Native Americans and
other folk traditions.
In the United Kingdom the picture was largely the same. In 1854 the Medical Reform Bill put
before parliament was intended to ban the practice of herbal medicine unless individuals were
registered with the British Medical Association. There was a united uprising against the Bill and
it was dropped, thus allowing the continuance of the practice of herbal medicine up to the present
day.
On some levels this was a good idea, because it stopped any misuse of power by dubious
practitioners, but on the other hand meant an insidious erosion of the witchs healing status within
society, so much so that secrecy had to shroud witchcrafts practices for hundreds of years. From
these horrendously dark times of persecution, there gradually rose the phoenix of Wicca as we
know it and practice it in the present day. However, the negatively biased title of "witch" is
almost automatically bestowed upon witches, even today. The proper definition of a real witch,
however, is a person, male or female, who observes the Old Religion of the Earth Mother as
goddess and the Sky Father as god, anciently envisioned as the Horned God, the Old Religion
being that which was practised and believed in prior to Christianity.
The Wiccan Revivalists
This modern emergence of witchcraft was driven essentially by two people; Dr. Margaret Murray
whose popular books we have already mentioned and Gerald Gardner. Many others made
significant contributions to the spread of knowledge and interest in the subject, but these two
individuals remain paramount.
Gerald Brosseau Gardner (1884-1964) had a deep interest in the religious customs of the tribes he
had encountered in the Orient. It is believed that Gardner was a member of a witchcraft coven
based in the area of the New Forest in Hampshire. This would have been a "Traditional" Wiccan
coven, one of those groups following the Old Religion that had survived throughout the centuries
down to the present day. It is thought that Gardner was initiated into witchcraft in 1939, by a
woman named Dorothy Clutterbuck.
Gardner was also associated with another existing coven located at Bricket Wood near St.Albans
of which the High Priest was a man called Charles ("Charlie") Cardell. During the 1940s
Gardner published a book about witchcraft called High Magic's Aid, but because claiming to be a
witch was still a criminal offence, this highly accurate book was written in the form of a novel.
After the Second World War in order to comply with the newly formed United Nations
Organisation and its Universal Charter of Human Rights, Britain was obliged to repeal the last
Witchcraft Act of 1736. This disposed of the legal restriction on openly publishing books on
witchcraft written by witches themselves.
In 1954 Gerald Gardner published what was to become his most influential book, Witchcraft
Today in which he affirmed that, despite centuries of persecution, groups of witches were still
thriving throughout the country. He immediately received floods of letters from interested
people, and many were initiated into witchcraft by Gardner and his High Priestess the late
Doreen Valiente - and later went on to start up covens of their own. Within a few years there
were groups of witches all around the country.
Gardner, however, did not teach the identical kind of witchcraft that was being observed until his
time. One theory holds that his parent coven in the New Forest had told him he must keep some
of their rites and customs secret. This cannot be proved. However, Gardner fashioned for
himself and his followers a newly formed variety of witchcraft, drawing from old pagan sources
including many aspects of Traditional witchcraft, for which he made use of the ancient AngloSaxon word for "witchcraft", Wicca.
It is perfectly possible that traditional covens prior to Gardner called what they were doing
Wicca, but it was Gardner who proliferated the term and who became the greatest influence on
the growing spread of witchcraft during the 1950s. This led to an explosive flowering of Wicca
during the 1960s when people were searching for new values and beliefs after the imposed
austerity of the post-war era. The type of witchcraft that Gerald Gardner promulgated soon came
to be called Gardnerian Wicca, and today this is probably the most commonly encountered
variety of witchcraft.
Other forms of Wicca were soon branching off the main stem established by Gardner. During the
1960s Alex Sanders with his wife Maxine founded what was to be named after him as
Alexandrian Witchcraft. Sanders incorporated into his system many elements drawn from
branches of the occult, such as the Qabbalah (an ancient Hebrew occult system) and the inclusion
of Judeo-Christian "words of power" written around the edge of the working circle. There are
also Dianic Wiccans who, taking their name from Diana, one of the many ancient names for the
witch's goddess, are female-oriented covens in which few or no men are admitted. There are,
however, no vast divisions within the general religion of witchcraft, or Wicca, as there are for
example between Catholics and Protestants in Christianity. All witches regard their individual
varieties of the Craft as being branches and twigs upon the main family tree of witchcraft that has
its main trunk rising throughout recorded history and its roots buried deep within the earth of our
prehistoric past.