“All things manifesting in the lower worlds exist first in
the intangible rings of the upper spheres,
so that creation is, in truth,
the process of making tangible the intangible
by extending the intangible into various vibratory rates.”

― Manly P. Hall

The Qabbalah, the Secret Doctrine of Israel

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Welcome Traveler to My Little Occultshop

Welcome Traveler,


It's been a whirlwind of a month, I can't say thank you enough for your support, starting next month I'll be putting out a monthly magazine about topics related to that month.


So what's new

I've added a new section that covers meals of the ancient world and a section about herbal remedies will be coming soon.


As always may your travels be light and your path be pleasant to you and your family, blessings.


Magus

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Yeah I know its been 3 years since I've posted anything new. I burnt out from everything I was putting into this. and tbh what made me come back was the fact that even after 3 years this is still popular. I can't thank you enough for your continued support.

So what's new well I have a new address and with covid I've had a bit of free time. so maybe its time I got back into the captains chair and got to setting a course to places undiscovered. A part of me is happy while a part isn't because he know what's up and he doesn't like doing the hard long hours of labor.

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  Its been what 2 possibly 3 years since I last posted. Burn out is what happened. I got so overwhelmed with everything that it just got to ...

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Witchcraft Terms and Tools - Familiar

A familiar (or familiar spirit or familiar animal) is an animal-shaped spirit or minor demon believed to serve a witch or magician as domestic servant, spy and companion, in addition to helping to bewitch enemies or to divine information. The animal was often believed to be possessed of magic powers, such as the ability to change its shape. They were an identifying characteristic of English witchcraft in the Early Modern period, largely setting it apart from continental or New World witchcraft, and they featured prominently in many British witch trials of the period.

Margaret Murray was responsible for much of the modern scholarship on the witch's familiar, especially as part of her in-depth analysis of the culture and folklore surrounding witchcraft published in her 1921 book “The Witch Cult in Western Europe”. Most of the evidence for familiars comes from the English and Scottish witch trials of the 16th and 17th Century, such as the Witches of Belvoir trials and North Berwick trials. The lore surrounding the familiar spirit suggested that a witch received one following her initiation into the coven or sect.

The traditional vessels for such spirits were the cat, mouse, ferret, hare, bat, snake, dog or bird (particularly the raven or owl), by far the most common form being a black cat or a black dog. They often had strange names like Pyewacket or Dandiprat, or semi-descriptives such as Buzz, Digger, Tit, Bonecracker, Little Rat, Thistlepurr or Hop-Moon. As witches and cunning women in the Middle Ages were almost always marginalized and lonely, they would often have small animals as pets and, at one point during the witch hysteria of Early ModernEurope, the mere possession of a black cat (or of an unusual pet like a frog, lizard or rat), was sufficient cause for investigation as a witch.

Technically, a familiar could also be a person, not an animal, and there are reports of human familiars throughout Western Europe in the Middle Ages, usually referring to a demon which had taken possession of the body of a human. In the 20th Century, the so-called “King of the Witches”, Alex Sanders, boasted of the creation of a “spiritual baby”, Michael, who became one of his familiars, as later did another entity called Nick Demdike.

The witches' teat, the finding of which was considered a fail-safe method of identifying a witch at the height of the witch-craze, was associated with the feeding of their familiars (or even of the Devil himself). A familiar supposedly aided the witch in her magic in exchange for nourishment (blood) from sacrificial animals or from the witch's teat.

Familiars are usually portrayed as mischievous and lively, rather than seriously threatening, similar to the imp of folklore and superstition (indeed, they were often referred to as imps). They feature prominently in many modern fantasy stories, usually as magical creatures and animal companions. For example, the "dæmons" in the popular “His Dark Materials” trilogy of novels by Philip Pullman fulfill several of the roles and traits of the traditional concept of familiar spirits.

A variation of the familiar is the Medieval conception of the incubus (a demon in male form supposed to lie upon sleepers, especially women, in order to have sexual intercourse with them, often with a view to fathering a child), and the succubus (a demon which takes the form of a beautiful woman to seduce men, especially monks and especially in dreams, to have sexual intercourse). Both types of demon draw energy from their hosts to sustain themselves, often until the point of exhaustion or death of the victim.

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