The Pickingill Papers - George - Liddell, E. W
The Pickingill Papers - George - Liddell, E. W
The Pickingill Papers - George - Liddell, E. W
W. E. Liddell
vate MAY, Brelatels) Mls LOny\ecbael
CLAREMONT
SCHOOL OF THEOLOGY
LIBRARY
Given by
Rev. Janet (Brigit) Baernstein
THE PICKINGILL
PAPERS
George Pickingill & the Origins of
Modern Wicca
Published by:
In 1974 John Score, the late editor of The Wiccan newsletter of the
Pagan Front (now the Pagan Federation), was in correspondence
with a member of the Hereditary Craft called E.W. ’Bill’ Liddell,
who was then living in Auckland, New Zealand. Liddell had
relatives in England who organised covens in Sussex, East Anglia
and the West Country and he later revealed that he had been
initiated in the 1950s into the Craft tradition founded by ’Old
George’ Pickingill (1816-1909), an Hereditary magister or ‘witch
master’ from the village of Canewdon in Essex.
The articles further claimed that the coven in the New Forest into
which Gerald Gardner (1884-1964), the father of modern
witchcraft, was initiated into in 1939 was connected with the
network of Nine Covens founded by Pickingill in the 19th century.
Allegedly when Crowley and Gardner met in 1946 the two men
exchanged notes on their common background in the Craft.
Crowley supported Gardner’s idea to promote a popular nature
religion. How and why these articles were written and submitted is
explained in the Preface that follows.
In his old age Maple says visitors came from vast distances to see
him and they gave him gifts of money. Brave souls who dared to
peep through the cobwebbed windows of his old cottage say they
saw the wizard dancing with his familiars while, like a scene from
The Sorcerer’s Apprentice sequence in Walt Disney’s film Fantasia,
the clock, ornaments and furniture in the room joined in the merry
dance. Before his death at the age of ninety three, Pickingill
became too ill to live alone and, against his will, was sent to the
infirmary. A woman who visited Pickingill shortly before his
death, says Maple, saw him laying on the bed like a skeleton and
sucking at his dry nipples were his imps in the form of white mice.
The old cunning man was buried in the old part of the churchyard,
but as a last act of defiance it is said he told the village that he
would perform his magical powers at his own funeral. Allegedly as
the hearse drew up the church gate the horses stepped out of the
shafts and trotted away. ®)
Eric Maple’s chief informant in the village was an old lady called
’Granny’ Garner, who he represented as the last of Canewdon’s
’white witches’. I met Lillian Garner in 1977, when she was
eighty-seven, and she told me she remembered Pickingill from her
childhood as the village character and eccentric. She recollected
him having his photograph taken beside the first car to arrive in the
village. Granny Garner gave me a signed copy of Philip Benton’s
The History of the Rochford Hundred and the original of the
famous photograph of George Pickingill that has been published in
several books since. She also told me that her mother had informed
her that Pickingill was the leader of the Canewdon witches and that
he had “many visitors’ who came seeking his knowledge of occult
arts. A photograph of Granny Garner outside her home at Vicarage
Cottage in Canewdon is reproduced with Maple’s article on the
village in Man, Myth & Magic.
_ St Nicholas’ church at the end of the lane to the west of the village
strangely features in many of the witch stories. As we saw earlier,
Pickingill and his Romany clan are said to have danced in the
graveyard. It was also said that there would always be witches in
Canewdon while the church tower stands. Every time a stone falls
from the tower a witch is said to die and another takes her place.
Anyone who walks three times around the tower at midnight will
summon up the Devil. The tower is 15th century and was erected
to commemorate the English victory at Agincourt.
On the outside of the tower are carved the heraldic arms of England
and France. The Lugh articles claim that the original Coven of
Canewdon was founded in the 15th century by a local landowner
who had fought in France and been initiated into witchcraft there.
This is apparently the real occult (hidden) significance of the
church and its environs to local witches and in the folk traditions of
the village.
Canewdon has changed considerably in the last few years with new
housing estates springing up around the old cottages. However
when J visited it on a grey winter’s day in 1977 it still had a certain
atmosphere. A local pointed out to me the cottage where an old
man lived who was said to possess the power of the Evil Eye and
even today the vicar locks the churchyard gate on Hallowe’en to
stop sightseers.
10
Implicit in the material gathered here and the description of
Pickingill is that the Hereditary Craft, or at least one branch of it in
East Anglia for we cannot be dogmatic about branches elsewhere,
was male dominated, dedicated exclusively to the worship of the
_Horned God and consisted of a line of hereditary druidic and Saxon
wizards or cunning men who had been working in the area since
pre-Christian times. This idea of historical continuity and the
nature of historical witchcraft allegedly practised in East Anglia,
and indeed elsewhere, contradicts with the views of sceptics who
believe modern witchcraft originated with Gardner and also,
paradoxically with contemporary neo-pagan and feminist ideas and
ideals. The Lugh material suggests that modern perceptions of the
historical Craft have been adversely coloured by neo-pagan and
Wiccan concepts which are recent innovations.
Bill has also been very open about his later contacts with and his
membership of the Gardnerian and Alexandrian branches of the
Revivalist Craft, even though this has caused even more
controversy in some circles. He certainly has no illusions about
either of these branches and an associate of his was present when
Alex Sanders received the first degree initiation of the Gardnerian
Craft in the early 1960s.
When in 1977 the Lugh articles transferred to TC, Bill justified this
action by saying that his Elders had done this because (allegedly) I
11
nis, Canewdon Parish Chure
HGelconnantononncer
Ek wore ce
12
was more sympathetic to the Traditional Craft and less pro-
Gardnerian then the late editor of TW. To clarify my own position,
I was initiated into the three degrees of Gardnerian Wicca in the
late Sixties, but since then I have followed a more ‘traditional’
path. My own interest in these matters is as an amateur Craft
historian who is keen to bring together the Traditional and
Revivalist Craft traditions and, as far as anyone can claim to be, has
no particular personal axe to grind.
The possibility has always existed in some peoples minds that Lugh
was and is the front person for some kind of disinformation
campaign either by the Old Craft, to discredit Gardnerianism by
creating a pseudo-history for it which turns out to be romantic
fantasy, or by certain Gardnerian factions to provide their tradition
with a historical legitimacy that is otherwise sadly lacking. The last
suggestion has recently surfaced in the book written by Aidan
Kelly. 2 In this book Bill Liddell faces down the allegations made
by Kelly that he is part of some widespread conspiracy spanning
the last fifty years and involving nearly everyone who ever met
Gardner. He reveals Gardner’s contacts with the Hereditary Craft
in the 1940s and the origin and practices of the New Forest coven.
These revelations will come as a surprise to most modern Wiccans.
13
This is the first time that all the Lugh articles from TW and TC
have been published in one format. I will not deny that they
represent a challenge to modern Wiccans and neo-pagans and that
they represent a controversial and alternative version of the
historical Craft and the development of the old Religion in these
islands. For this reason much of what follows may be difficult for
some to accept. Ultimately you, the reader, must decide for
yourself how factual this material is despite the lack of
documentary and collaborative evidence to support it at the time of
writing. For my own part I have always tried to keep an open mind
about its origins and authenticity and, as with its previous
publication, I personally welcome serious and informed comment
on its contents from genuine sources.
(1) In her research into the Pickingill family history Leonara James
identified several different names used by the family. they included
Pickingill, Pickingale, Pettingale and Pittengale. James speculates that
the daughter of the famous Essex wizard Cunning Murrell, Ann Pett,
may have married into the Pickingills. (1982). Murrell, like Pickingill,
was renowned as a ‘Master of Witches’. The name Pickingill would
seem to come from the Old English/Old Norse ‘picing’ or ‘people of
the hill’ and ‘gille’ meaning ‘dweller in the valley’, suggesting
marriage between two tribes or clans in the ancient past. Pett
(coincidentally) means ’dweller in the hollow’, while Pettingale is
someone whose ancestors came from Portugal.
14
Canewdon records the burial of a George Pettingale (sic) on 14th April
1909 at the age of 103/ James suggests there may be some confusion
between ‘Old George’ and his son also called George. However, I
think we are dealing with the same person and the apparent
discrepancies can be explained by the use of different family names
and the sloppiness of rural records at the time.
15
PREFACE
A brief explanation of how the material in this book was written is
required. Between 1950 and 1961 I was inducted into a number of
Old Style Craft ‘covens’. In the early 1960s I settled permanently
in New Zealand. The ‘headline grabbing’ tactics of Gerald Gardner
and Alex Sanders had antagonised both the Hereditary and
Traditional segments of British witchcraft. My own immediate
Brethren sought a public platform to disseminate certain
information. They were primarily concerned with countering the
claims of modern Wicca by showing that it bore no relationship to
traditional British witchcraft. A secondary consideration was to
stress the baleful influence of both Aleister Crowley and George
Pickingill.
A careful reading of the Lugh corpus in this book will reveal both
inconsistencies and conflicting views. Brethren from at least four
affiliated ‘covens’ forwarded me basic information which they
wanted presented to a Craft audience. Almost a dozen of my
Elders from such disparate factions as a cunning lodge, Pickingill
covens and Hereditary ‘companies’ used me as a letter box.
16
Many of my Elders were alarmed by inner plane advice that Gerald
Gardner was an instrument to restore the Old Religion. The
Hereditary faction wanted to record their East Anglian rites as a
counter-balance to the heresy of modern Wicca. The Pickingill
-Elders wanted to encourage Goddess worship and female
leadership. They were not trying to combat Gardnerian Wicca.
Their inner plane contacts had convinced them that Gardner’s new
nature religion was the channel for the Goddess worship which
would predominate in the Aquarian Age.
17
phraseology. One such oversight was to refer to the Book of
Shadows (the book of rituals of Gardnerian Wicca) or BoS when
Gardner had not yet invented the term or the concept. Crowley and
Gardner in 1946 simply compared their respective rituals.
E.W.Liddell
18
Chapter One
Gerald Gardner and his detractors
19
Gerald Gardner
(1884 - 1964)
20
dire!) ©
Crowley did have a fleeting acquaintance with the Craft. He was
admitted into one of Pickingill’s Nine Covens in Norfolk in either
-1899 or 1900. He did not last long in the Craft. He had been
introduced by Allan Bennett, his magical tutor in the Hermetic
Order of the Golden Dawn or GD. ® Bennett is rumoured to have
been Pickingill’s star pupil. One remembers the weird stories which
still circulate about Bennet’s supernatural powers - and his ‘blasting
rod’. Bennett did not come by this from his association with the
GD or the Esoteric Section of the Theosophical Society.
21
It is also excellent testimony to the efficient suppression by East
Anglian crafters of Pickingill’s true magical status. Maple contents
himself with repeating only one of Pickingill’s incredible feats in a
favourite anecdote which still circulates among the Essex
peasantry. It is alleged that Pickingill could make his imps harvest
a field in half an hour while he smoked his pipe. One can imagine
why Crowley was attracted to ‘England’s most notorious witch’.
This does not square with Crowley’s public image. One refers to
his claim that he was introduced to a coven of witches when a
young man, but refused to join because he could not bear to be
bossed around by women. (King 1970) This extraordinary
statement was prompted by his shame at being expelled. Crowley
was a pervert. He enjoyed being ‘punished’ by the High Priestess
of his parent coven and she denounced him as ‘a dirty minded,
evilly disposed, vicious little monster’. Crafters will consider this
an apt summation.
My Brethren confirm that Crowley had been out of the Craft for
over forty years when he was introduced to Gardner. My own
people are unable to confirm that Arnold Crowther first introduced
the two. However I see no reason to doubt his word. My Brethren
are adamant that they first met in either 1945 or 46. This confident
assertion appears to vindicate Crowther’s testimony. ©
22
Unfortunately there was a tenuous Craft association between
Gardner and Crowley, although neither man had ever convened
with the other. Both were technically brethren of the same Craft
persuasion. Crowley had been admitted into one of the Nine
personally founded by Pickingill and Old George was a renegade
Hereditary magister, so the Nine could claim to derive their ’Craft
authority’ from the Hereditary persuasion. Almost forty years later
Gardner was admitted into yet another coven which was numbered
among the Nine. He was subsequently accepted into another sister
coven and could claim to have been affiliated with two of the Nine
professing the Pickingill variant of the Hereditary persuasion.
23
Crafters who preserve absolute silence recognise the base format of
the rituals adopted by the Nine. It is pertinent to observe that
Pickingill imparted both his ‘Craft authority’ and his family rituals
to the leaders of the Nine. These respective leaders were personally
initiated by him and each of the covens could thus boast a
continuous and unbroken Craft association of eight centuries.
24
propitiate the Goddess. The fertility religion of Scandinavia
deemed that the priestess was the wife and consort of the God.
Only the priestess approved by the God could call him to descend
into the body of a man chosen as his living representative. Only a
-priest consecrated to the Goddess could call upon her to descend
into the body of a woman chosen asher living representative. I need
hardly add that the priest was deemed the husband and consort of
the Goddess.
25
Craft or the Canewdon coven, instead it discusses his ancestry and
relates his incredible ‘Satanic’ powers. (2). Hereditary Crafters
understandably view this renegade magister with horror. He was
more famous in his heyday then Crowley was in his. Old George
-was acknowledged as the world’s greatest living authority on
witchcraft, Satanism and black magic. He was consulted by
occultists of every hue and tradition who came from all over
Europe, England and even America.
26
coincidence.
Gardner and Crowley were both delighted (in 1946) to learn that
each was a brother in the same Craft persuasion. They became firm
friends and each man genuinely liked and respected the other.
They corresponded quite regularly and it was their correspondence
which ultimately led to the ridiculous charge that Gardner was
expressly commissioned to write the Gardnerian BoS (4). Crowley
was naturally interested in Gardner’s determined effort to restore
the Old Religion. They were poles apart, but both men were
anxious to revive the worship of the ancient gods (5), Gardner saw
no incongruity in citing Crowley’s poetry in his rituals. He was not
averse to discussing the best magical means of launching Wicca
and was acutely aware that the collusion of Hereditary crafters had
deprived him of his ‘Craft authority’. Crowley was delighted to be
consulted on the Wicca project. After all he had been a Crafter forty
years earlier and saw himself as the magical advisor.
Crowley was unable to produce the BoS received from his parent
27
coven. It had been destroyed forty years earlier. However, his
magical papers contained many rites and passages borrowed from
the Pickingill rituals. He volunteered to use ‘magical recall’ in an
attempt to remember the exact rites. Gardner gratefully assented.
. He had two source references from his own Craft affiliations and
was quite anxious to determine whether Crowley’s BoS differed
radically from his own rituals. It must be stressed that Pickingill
launched the Nine at various intervals over a period of sixty years.
He had a basic format, but was invariably amending the wording
and introducing different concepts. Gardner had noted startling
differences in each BoS received from the sister covens to which he
was affiliated. He was most anxious to see whether crowley’s
parent coven used an entirely different BoS.
28
rituals, to draft his own new magical rituals. You may not be aware
that Crowley drew heavily from Pickingill’s magical rituals when
compiling his own OTO (Ordo Templis Orientis) rituals. They
speak of a volume of secret lore, a magic dagger, garters etc. A
_ dagger is immersed in a sacred chalice as a substitute for the Great
Rite (sexual intercourse between the High Priest and Priestess as
human representatives of the God and Goddess MH).
29
formerly exhibited on the Isle of Man. It is impossible to determine
which of the two Crowley Mss it was. It is possible that Gardner
exhibited the BoS which Crowley claimed was ‘an authentic
portrayal’. However he may have displayed the present Gardnerian
_BoS, which Crowley copied out. Gardner’s detractors have claimed
that Crowley’s handwriting was certain proof that he copied out the
BoS at an advanced age. Various reports have confirmed that the
handwriting in the BoS on the Isle of Man was that of an aged and
sick man. It certainly does not correspond with specimens of
longhand when Crowley was in his prime.
30
NOTES & REFERENCES
31
(Personal correspondence December 1975).
(4) Critics of the Lugh material point out that the publication of this
historical photograph would provide proof of the connection
between Crowley and Pickingill. When I enquired in 1977 as to its
whereabouts Bill Liddell told me it was ‘not available’. When
Leonara James posed the same question in 1983, he replied: ‘It is
highly unlikely that the photograph...will ever be exhibited for
view. Its custodian was an old lady who died a few years ago.
Several interested parties have purloined this photograph.’
32
interest in naturism.
When William was ready to launch his attack he installed the Witch
of Brandon on top of a high wooden tower from which she began to
cast her spells. Hereward however was prepared and ordered his
men to set light to the dry reeds. A strong wind was blowing and
the Normans were engulfed in flames. The witch also died in the
fire for ‘that woman of infamous Art in the great alarm fell down
head first from her exalted position and broke her neck’. (Hole
1977).
33
called Veleda of the Bructei tribe of the Rhineland who was widely
consulted, even by Roman generals. When her tribe were
negotiating with the Romans Veleda remained in ‘a high tower
while one of her relatives carried questions to her and brought back
_ answers.’ (Davidson 1988). Kightly (1980) quotes a description of
the Witch of Brandon as ‘a pythoness’ and says she was ‘raised on
a high place’, ‘a kind of wooden tower' so she could by protected
by the Norman troops and be better able to practice her magical
arts.
34
even though this is not the place to discuss them, that differences of
Opinion exist between traditional and neo- pagan Crafters on the
role of gays and this is highlighted by these comments.
(12) The existence of this article has been the subject of some
controversy and is further discussed in Chapter Twenty-five.
(16) This claim, predictably, has caused the most controversy and
scepticism about the Lugh material. The foundation of the GD in
1888 is already surrounded by myth and mystery, to which this
claim adds another sensational ingredient. The generally accepted
version is that it originated with a Dr William Westcott, who was a
Rosicrucian and Freemason, and allegedly acquired a manuscript
written in cipher which gave the basic details of several Masonic
type rituals and material relating to the Cabbala and the Tarot.
Among the papers was an address in Germany and when Westcott
wrote to it he was given permission to found an English branch of a
German Masonic-Rosicrucian Order known as the The Golden
Dawn. This he did with the assistance of Dr W.R.Woodman and
35
Samuel (McGregor) Mathers, who were both high ranking Masons.
36
Chapter Two
Old George Pickingill - the Grandfather
of Gardnerian Wicca
37
ve
So)Ss}9 © AY icking ill
the Golden Dawn by R.G.Torrens): ‘This body was calculated to
meet the requirements of those worthy Masons who wish to study
the science and antiquities of the Craft and trace it through its
successive developments to the present time; also to cull any
information, from all the records extant, of those mysterious
societies which had their existence in the dark ages of the world
when might meant right, when every man’s hand was against his
brother and when such combinations were necessary to protect the
weak against the strong.’ @)
39
Fortunately for Rogan’s well merited reputation he was a
posthumous ‘collaborator’. One of Jenning’s many Continental
friends secured a number of ‘authentic Rosicrucian manuscripts’
from the estate of the recently deceased Rogan (circa 1866).
_Jennings purchased these documents and obtained a bill of sale
from his friend which stated that Rogan had formerly owned the
Mss. Jennings was thrilled with the purchase and he and Pickingill
revised their original craft rituals to conform to the degree structure
and archaic terminology of Rogan’s supposedly authentic Mss.
One concedes that Rogan’s source documents may have been
authentic.
Crafters may not be aware that the GD was an offshoot of the SRA.
It is now known many of the GD rituals were expressly written by
Mathers, after he had carefully perused the Craft rites compiled by
Jennings and Pickingill. The GD was also founded on a series of
ingenious fabrications. Crafters will be interested to learn that
40
Westcott held a charter from the Palladist Co-Masons to found an
English lodge of this infamous Order. I cite A Manual of Sexual
Magick by Louis T. Culling. A photographic reproduction of this
charter collaborates this statement by Culling. ™
(1) It should be noted that the SRA was founded in 1865 by Robert
Wentworth Little and he allegedly founded the Society on the basis
of ancient Mss he found in Freemasons Hall. These rituals
allegedly bore a resemblance to those of an 18th century German
Rosicrucian group called the Fratres of the Golden & Rosy Cross.
Membership of the SRA was restricted to Master Masons. Little
also claimed that he was provided with information by Kenneth
McKenzie, who had contacted some hereditary Rosicrucians while
visiting Germany and been encouraged by them to form a group in
England.
41
Society had been founded by Sir Francis Dashwood of the ‘Hellfire
Club’(aka The Order of Monks of St Francis of Wycombe), who
will feature later in The Pickingill Papers. Knight’s interest in
phallicism was inspired by a fellow member of the Society, Sir
William Hamilton,husband of Lord Nelson’s mistress, who had
encountered a surviving cultus of Priapius worship while
ambassador to Naples. Jennings subsequently published the results
of his research in a curious tome called The Rosicrucians; Their
Rites & Mysteries linking Rosicrucianism with druidism, the
Templars, the Fellowship of the Round Table, the Order of the
Garter and sex worship in ancient cultures.
(6) It should be noted that King says the SRA was founded in 1865
and Rogan did not die until 1866.
(7) The Order of Palladium was founded in 1637 and was the first
Masonic Order to admit women. McKenzie says the Paris lodge
was broken up by the police in 1737. Its name later featured in
42
sensational allegations made by a French journalist, who was an
undercover agent for the Vatican, in 1885. He claimed the Order
was a Masonic group which worshipped Baphomet, the deity of the
Templars. These allegations also linked the Order with the SRA
and claimed William Westcott was the leader of the ‘English
Luciferians’. The journalist later claimed he had invented the story
and it has been suggested it was a Popish plot to discredit
Freemasonry and the Rosicrucian movement in France and
England. (Howard 1989).
43
Chapter Three
Ritual Nudity
44
of The Bog People: ‘The dead man had been brought to the bog
naked except for the rope around his neck.’
Many women wore neck collars or hide collars when they were
. sacrificed to the Goddess. Page 84 describes how the Windleby
Girl was found ‘naked and hoodwinked’: ‘The girl lay naked in the
hole in the peat, a bandage over her eyes and a collar around her
neck.’ The body lay stretched on its back with both arms crossed
behind the back, as if they had been tied together, although there
was no trace of bindings.
45
First published in TW 47, April 1976.
46
Chapter Four
Medieval French Witchcraft
47
The 15th century French miniature
allegory depicting a witch’s initiation
48
initiation. Internal evidence in the miniature suggests that this
ostensibly God-oriented coven honours both the God and Goddess.
The upright triangle and the pentagram dominate the foreground.
The God is the apex of both sigils. This is clearly a ‘right hand’
(male) coven.
The upright triangle links the God with the female leader and the
male candidate. This is the ‘male’ sigil par excellence. Medieval
Crafters associated both the upright triangle and the square with the
Craft. One notes that these French Crafters are protected by the
Saracen Square! 2. The northern boundary of this square is not
delineated because the God cannot be limited or qualified. The
Saracen Square was used by both Crafters and Freemasons to
delineate their “holy ground’. One notes that the stave marks the
eastern boundary, a broom the southern boundary and a winnowing
implement the western boundary. The square is delineated by
wooden implements.)
49
tracing boards to delineate the form of the lodge. Chalk, charcoal
and tape were formerly used to mark out on the floor the detail
from the lodge. Bro. B.E. Jones states on pp 396-397 of the
Freemason’s Guide & Compendium: ‘The floor lines in chalk, tape
etc. delineated ‘the form of the lodge’, which seems to suggest that
to our Brethren the lodge was not so much the room in which they
met, but the space -’the holy ground’ - enclosed within the outlines
drawn on the floor...There is reason to suppose that at one time the
circumbulation of the lodge meant merely walking around the lines
drawn on the floor.’
The miniature reveals the origin of the Masonic phrase ‘to square
the circle’. The Crafters are grouped in a circle within an oblong-
square. Medieval Crafters were taught the most abstruse mysteries
by simple physical analogies. The square represents the Life aspect
and is ascribed to the God. The circle represents the Form aspect
and is ascribed to the Goddess. The initiate ‘squares the circle’ by
reconciling the male and female currents within his own being. He
is then a self-conscious and self-perfected god.
The God and the three Crafters form the diamond lozenge by
manning the cardinal points. The lozenge can be divided into two
triangles with the upright triangle linking the God with the Crafters
50
in the east and west. The inverted triangle links the female leader
with the two Crafters. The sexual polarity which was observed by
the French Crafters is implicit in the miniature. The female leader
in the south adored the God in the north. The male officer in the
-east adored the Maiden in the west. A male always ‘opposed’ a
female in the French Craft. This perpetuated the injunction that the
‘Power’ must pass from a man to a woman and from a woman to a
man @), The initiate was also reminded that ‘the Great Work’
entailed balancing the opposites within himself.
The pentagram links the God with the three Crafters and the male
candidate. The God and Goddess are dual in nature, but always
One in essence. Distinctions between the male and the female
elements are obvious in the details of the individual Crafters. The
three women are depicted as comely wenches. The female leader
wears a long red gown to denote she represents the God. She
sports long green sleeves to indicate that the Goddess is relegated
to a secondary role in this coven. Her rustic head-dress proclaims
that she is a peasant. The leader has a cord tied around her waist.
The Maiden wears a long blue gown. Blue was worn by all female
Crafters, except the leader. Red was reserved for male Crafters, the
God and the ‘wife’ of the God. The Maiden has a cord draped
across her pregnant belly. Her head-dress indicates she belongs to a
different social strata to the leader. The Maiden personifies the
Goddess when stationed in the west. The glimpse of red petticoat
denotes that (in this coven) the Goddess is subservient to the will of
the God.
The young widow in the east has a cord tied around her waist. (The
white barbe on her head indicates she is a widow). Her transvestite
appearance is symbolic. She is a female impersonating a male.
The blue gown which is rolled up to the waist indicates her sex.
The red petticoat is displayed in full because the widow represents
the male element. The hapless widow usurps the station always
51
manned by a male Crafter. One may assume that the male officer
of the coven is dead. Hence the necessity to ‘bend the rules’ to
initiate a successor.
The division of the circle into the ‘right hand’ and the ‘left hand’
segments corroborates that the candidate will be challenged at the
cardinal points during a clockwise circumambulation of the *holy
ground’. Both the leader and the substitute male officer occupy
the ‘right hand’ segment of the circle. These representations of the
God and Goddess are physically identified with a clockwise
procession. They both hold a candle in the elevated right hand.
Both the candidate and the Maiden occupy the ‘left hand’ sector.
They both hold a candle in the elevated left hand.
52
indwelling god. The anti-clockwise (widdershins) orientation is
associated with the ‘left hand’ stream of energy which rotates
around the central sun of our solar system. This anti-clockwise
current affords the impetus for the material expression of the
universe. Birth, death, karma (fate) and rebirth are the natural
providence of the ‘left hand’ activity.
The Craft has always enjoined harmony with Nature. The leader is
the right pillar and signifies ‘divine love’. The Maiden is the left
pillar and signifies ‘human love’. The symbolism is explicit. The
God is depicted in the goat guise which obtained in medieval
France. His head is inclined towards the left. The God leers at both
the candidate and the Maiden. The act of physical generation is
implied whenever the God form is inclined to the left. The Maiden
53
is pregnant. The candidate is enjoined to seek the Goddess in a
consecrated Crafter.
(1) Gardner (1954) mentions that in ‘the old days’, when there was
nobody of sufficient rank to take the position of the ‘Devil’, or
male leader of the coven, the High Priestess belted on the sword
and ‘acts as a man’. It has been suggested that this procedure was
adopted in the Middle Ages when the rural population was
decimated of males through war and the Black Death.
(2) It is hinted here that the so-called ‘Saracen Square’ was a fairly
‘recent’ innovation in the medieval Craft. The influence of the
Saracens on the medieval witch cult will be discussed later in the
book.
(3) In fact the Lugh material suggests that the use of metal ‘tools’
by the medieval Craft was unknown.
54
although this also suggests the rules could be bent and broken in
emergencies.
(5) & (6) These comments suggest that ‘Masonic initiation rituals’
. existed in the 1400s. Critics have pointed out that the earliest
lodges of Speculative Masonry were not recorded until the late
1500s.
(7) Masons trace the Twin Pillars back to the entrance pillars of
King Solomon’s temple in Jerusalem. In the GD rituals the Pillars
are symbols of the masculine and feminine principles, the pillars of
the Cabbalistic Tree of Life, Adam and Eve, the Kerubim or
archangels who guard the Ark of the Covenant. (Regardie 1989).
55
Chapter Five
Craft Grades
The English Craft was ostensibly bi-gradal until the end of the 17th
century. Two rites were observed, but only one actual initiation
was recognised. The First Rite entailed ritual copulation with a
representative of the God. The magister ’brought in’ female
recruits, the Lady brought in male recruits. This is the historical
claim that a candidate must be initiated by a person of the opposite
sex. The magister ‘passed the power’ to women and the Lady
passed the power to men. This sexual indiction was mandatory. It
was also remarkably expedient. The newest recruit was often the
sole survivor of a coven which was decimated in the era of the
witch persecutions.
The First Rite conferred no Craft status. The recruit was not
competent to initiate. Entered Brethren were enjoined to pass the
*power’ only once in their lifetimes. This extraordinary anomaly
explains the prevalence of ‘witches alone’. Entered Brethren who
had survived the decimation of their parent coven were permitted to
pass the ‘power’ to only one person of the opposite sex. The
power’ could only be passed during the act of copulation ©.
36
The magister passed the Craft authority to candidates of both sexes.
The Historical Craft was a citadel of male chauvinism. It was long
believed only a male body could transmit the ’authority’ of the
Brotherhood. This empowered the Crafter to initiate in the name of
. the Brotherhood and to found covens. The Second Rite conferred
the status of full Crafter. This is the historical basis for the claim
that only the magister may induct candidates. It also explains why
so many Hereditary and Traditionalist covens are adamant that the
Historical Craft recognises only one actual initiation.
The Revived Craft has derived its tri-gradal structure from the
medieval witch cult. One looks in vain for tri-gradal precedents in
England. However the French Craft has always observed Three
Rites. Gardner, the founder of the revived Craft, was trained in
57
several covens which had been influenced by the French Craft ©. It
is not surprising that Old George Pickingill should introduce the
French tri-gradal structure when attempting to revive the English
Craft. |
58
Wiccans say, by existing partnered couples.
59
Chapter Six
Hereditary Witch Lore
60
claim is belied unless they observe sexual induction as a
prerequisite for entrance into the Brotherhood. The Hereditary
covens insist that only the magister can transfer the ‘authority’ of
the Brotherhood. Recruits of both sexes are formally admitted by
. the magister. This Second Rite confers the status of full Crafter and
is the only ‘initiation’ recognised by the Hereditary Craft proper.
However, a handful of East Anglian and Scottish covens observe
the French concept of Three Rites. One stresses the tri-gradal
structure never obtained throughout England.
61
Shadows’. One suggests that the Revived Craft is responsible for
foisting this spurious concept on an unsuspecting public. The
quaint notion that historical witches copied a book in their ’own
hand of write’ has no foundation in fact. A coven Rule Book was
_ kept by Hereditary Crafters. Only one copy was extant at any one
time. It was held in custody by either the magister or his male
lieutenant. No woman was ever permitted to read it, let alone hold
it for safe keeping. This was actually a wise precaution for a
woman could well reveal the whereabouts of the Book if her
children were tortured before her very eyes. 2)
62
Chapter Seven
Druidism, Freemasonry & the French
Craft Connection
63
Junior Warden parallel those of the historical Summoner in the
Craft.
Crafters will note that the quartz spheres are aligned with the
church nestling at the bottom of the hill. The crossroads in the
foreground confirms that this is a ‘ley’ centre. The candidate for
initiation has been positioned so that the church is sited in the
north-east. It is flanked by two ‘pillars’ - the bodies of the female
leader on his right and the Maid on his left. This also appears to
have a druidic origin. Candidates of the dmidic Mysteries were
required to pass between two ‘doors’. The French Craft modified
this to a symbolic passage between two human bodies.
64
Wright has unwittingly explained the phenomenon of female
leaders in the French Craft. Gerald Gardner’s detractors would do
well to ponder on Wright’s comments about the unique status of the
Gallic druidess. His comments may also explain why some Cathar
sects ordained women as priests. He states: ‘Although there (in
Gaul), as in Britain, they were dependents and subordinates of the
druids they in fact superintended entirely the divine mysteries and
sacrifices, entrance to certain parts of the temple being interdicted
to men’. 6) Wright should have elaborated on this theme. The
southern and western portals of Gallic temples were interdicted to
men. It is surely no coincidence that women manned the south and
west in female-oriented French covens?
65
lack in Scotland.’
One adds that the Scottish archers who served Louis XI brought
many variants of the French Craft back to Scotland.
66
Solomon’s temple.
(6) Knoop & Jones (1949) pp 90-91 and presumably written before
the publication of High Magic’s Aid.
(7) In Gardnerian Wicca the five fold kiss is applied on the feet,
knees, phallus/yoni, breasts/nipples and mouth of the candidate.
Writing in TC 70 (November 1993) Aleister Clay-Egerton,
describing his initiation into a pre-Gardnerian traditional coven in
Cheshire in 1943, says it used a nine fold kiss. In an associated
coven in North Wales he says a seven fold kiss was used.
67
Chapter Eight
Leys, Stone Circles & Serpent Power
68
Llwyd the antiquarian was as follows: ‘The druid doctrine about
the Glain Neidr obtains very much through Scotland, as well as the
Lowlands and Highlands, but there is not a word of it in this
kingdom, where there are no snakes they could not propagate it.
Besides snake stones, the Highlanders have their small snail stones,
paddock stones etc. to which they attribute their special virtues and
wear them as amulets.’ “
The 15th century miniature suggests the medieval French Craft was
influenced by the tenets of druidism. Patrick Kennedy relates how
the Chief Druid of Ireland went to investigate a sacred fire kindled
by the first Christian monks (at Tara by St Patrick MH): ‘ ”What
mean these incantations?“ cried the druid curiously looking at the
books, so unlike their wooden staves and tablets’ ©). Traditional
covens still delineate their boundaries with wooden staves.
The miniature also suggests the French Crafters still knew the
secret of the ‘serpent’s egg’. The quartz spheres near the feet of the
candidate were intended to boost the ‘ley’ energy available. The
French clergy brutally attempted to discourage the peasantry from
convening at the traditional ley centres and many stone circles were
demolished and villages built on the sacred site. The terrain in the
illustration clearly indicates that the Crafters were convening at an
old ley centre. The spheres replace the quartz in the old standing
stones. The admission ceremony is conducted at night and one
suggests the consciousness of the candidate would have been
transfigured by the ‘serpent’s egg’.
Even the eminent Dudley Wright fails to understand the true import
of the ‘serpent’s egg’. He states: ‘the druids themselves were called
Nadredd, or ‘snakes’, by the Welsh bards and the whole of the tale
mentioned by Pliny was a mystical reference to the difficulties of
attaining druidical secrets and the danger of disclosing them. There
is, of course, no doubt that the object of the druidic superstition was
merely artificial.’ ©
69
The druids were rightly termed ‘snakes’, because they were priests
of the solar force. The coiled serpent was the symbol for both the
solar force and what is termed today ‘ley energy’. The ‘serpent’s
egg” was prized as the supreme knowledge of the druidic
Mysteries. The worthiest candidate for the Mysteries became
‘more than human’ when the outpouring coincided with a specific
phase of the moon and imparted the ultimate initiation.
(2) It should be noted that the use of the term ‘ley energy’ is not so
politically correct nowadays among the EM establishment.
However, this article offers evidence of the use of such energies in
historical times by witches and in ancient times by the druids and
pre-Celtic Old People.
(3) Pliny seems to have thought the ‘serpent’s egg’ was just that
and came from a snake. Interestingly Pliny claimed that any druid
who acquired such an egg at the correct lunar phase had to quickly
flee the scene or be chased by snakes. Significantly he could only
escape these by crossing a stream or running water. Spence (1949)
claims these amulets (sic) were made of glass and could be found
70
in Wales, Comwall and Scotland. He suggests the ’serpent eggs’
might have been echinites, or fossilised sea urchins, or an
ammonite. In the Scottish Highland these were known as ‘adder
stones’ and were used to protect from snake bite.
(4) Cornish witches held the snail in high esteem and Straffon
(1993) suggests this was because their spiral shell was a symbol of
the Goddess.
71
Chapter Nine
Masonic Symbolism & the Hereditary
Craft
72
Both the Compagnonnage and Crafters understood the principal
tenets of the Saracen mystery schools. Lucifer was deemed to be
‘the indwelling spirit’ in the human mechanism. The Fall of the
angels was correctly understood to represent the incarnation of
Divinity in carnal flesh. The allegory concerning the Sons of God
and the ‘daughters of men’ (in Genesis MH) is yet another attempt
to explain the mystery whereby Divinity became associated with
flesh. 7
73
Clerical pressure decreed that King Solomon be substituted for
King Nimrod. Freemasons could not publically attribute their Craft
to the Biblical personage who rebelled against God and tried to
overthrow Heaven. Nimrod was certainly an excellent substitute
for Lucifer. However, one wonders whether our Masonic brethren
appreciate the delicious irony in the choice of Solomon for Nimrod.
He displeased God and was a ‘wise man’ with one thousand wives
and certainly typifies the generative energy of Lucifer, the solar
force. ())
Sex was the cause of the destruction of the ‘first temple’. Both
Crafters and Freemasons agree that right control of sexual energy is
the means of building the ‘second temple’. Our Masonic brethren
74
enjoin sublimation of the sex instinct, but Crafters rightly eschew
this method. They seek to use an alternative method which was
also known to Saracen initiates. Gerald Gardner’s detractors
appear to be ignorant of the fact he spent many years studying the
beliefs of the Berbers and Sufis.
75
not refer to the Christian concept of Satan. To quote the teachings
of a modern esoteric school, Lucifer is ‘charged with the task of re-
directing cosmic evil, and so transmuting it into cosmic good.’ In
this context his ‘fall from Heaven’ was a supreme sacrifice on
-behalf of developing humankind to aid our spiritual evolution.
(7) Some witch traditions believe the mating of the ‘fallen angels’
and the ‘daughters of men' created a race of witches and magicians.
Other versions suggest the ‘fallen angels’ or Watchers taught
humankind the secrets of the magical arts. (see Huson 1970)
(8) Hiram Abiff was the master architect sent by the King of Tyre
with a group of masons to build Solomon’s temple. The ritualistic
murder and rebirth of Hiram forms the symbolic focus of Masonic
initiation. In ancient times Tyre was the centre of Goddess worship
in the Middle East.
76
century Italy (see Leland 1968)
77
Chapter Ten
The Saracen Mystery Schools & the
Medieval Witch Cult
One cannot determine the period when the Saracen Mysteries first
impinged on European witchcraft. Arab invaders who conquered
most of Spain and southern France were probably responsible for
introducing Saracen concepts, beliefs and practices into Europe.)
One realises that the founder of the Knights Templar was born in
that very centre in southern France which boasted the most
illustrious of the Saracen mystery schools.®
78
comprehend the correct relationship between the sexual techniques
and the ‘temple not made with hands’.
There were several variants of the five fold kiss, which was long
termed the ‘Saracen kiss’. The Arab adepts activated various
centres in the initiate’s body by breathing in a peculiar way on
specific regions. Many Crafters misunderstood the ‘magical
breath’ of the Arab masters and instigated the practice of kissing
certain parts of the candidate’s body.
The Arab masters also breathed on the feet to facilitate the flow of
‘ley’ energy, which passes upward from the earth into the soles of
the feet. The Saracen adepts breathed on the phallus to quicken the
solar force in the male’s body. The correct application of sexual
energy enabled the aspirant to build the ’second temple’. That
region from the groin to the throat was deemed to represent the
middle self, or conscious mind. The inference being that the
reproductive organs of both sexes had to be controlled consciously.
The Arab masters breathed on the mouth to activate the head
centres. The throat, brow and head chakras were allegedly
quickened by a ‘hot’ and ‘cold’ breath technique of the Saracen
adepts.
It is tragic that the magical breath applied to the anal or root chakra
has been so lamentably misinterpreted, for the Arab masters
breathed there to quicken the initiates psychic faculties.“ It is
associated with clairvoyant ability and karmic memories. The
charge that unprincipled Arab adepts used homosexual practices to
79
‘force’ clairvoyance and regress their memories to a pre-human
state of consciousness is not without foundation ©). Herein lies the
true danger for those male homosexuals who have magical
expertise.
(1) This idea was first introduced into the public arena by Sufi
writer and ‘Master’ Idries Shah. He claimed that the practices of
the medieval witch cult could be traced back to the Aniza cult of
Arabia and the ‘Two Horned’ cultus followed by the Berbers in
North Africa. (see Shah 1962 & 1964). Shah was employed as
Gerald Gardner’s secretary on the Isle of Man in the 1950s and
ghost wrote his biography.
(4) One of the accusations against the Templars was that initiates
to the Order were kissed on the lips, navel and anus during their
admission. In the later witch trials coven members were said to
give the Devil (the coven leader) the oscalum infame or ‘obscene
80
kiss’ on the buttocks as a sign of allegiance.
81
Chapter Eleven
Gerald Gardner & the Hereditary Craft
The only responsible thing Gardner ever did was to keep his mouth
shut about his genuine Hereditary contacts. This has caused
endless confusion and misunderstandings for Gardner did not
derive his undoubted abilities from any so-called ‘Hereditary’
coven in the New Forest. A story has been put about that Gardner
82
received only one grade in the Hampshire coven. Other,
supposedly authentic sources, offer different interpretations. The
simple truth is that Gardner was a prattling nuisance in some
respects. He did not advance far with the reputed New Forest
coven, but he did contact a genuine Hereditary coven in
Hertfordshire, which was a remnant of one of the Nine.
The forerunner of the wicca was the shaman in the oak forests of
Northern Europe, who saw visions, interpreted the wishes of the
Gods and generally ‘turned’ or ‘bent’ forces of Nature for
communal benefit. Wicca was thus an honoured and useful role as
far as the Saxons were concerned. This male priest was invested
83
with awesome powers by the superstitious Teutons, who believed a
wicca could turn back the forces of evil. Gradually the notion
evolved that each wicca was an integral member of a Brotherhood
pledged to fight evil and save the community. The Brotherhood
was simply termed Wicca.
84
convince the faithful that the witches openly proclaimed
themselves as ‘wicked people’. It was unforgivable of Crowley and
Gardner to borrow the term ‘Wicca’, for this has always been the
blanket term for the Brotherhood.
I would seriously question any claim that the Craft tradition has
been unmodified by transmission for several millennia. My
maternal forebears modified and adopted rites and beliefs as the
French Craft impinged on Saxon and Danish customs. Romany
customs and rules were subsequently adopted by some of my
forebears who sought refuge in Romany camps.
85
rites are only the means of realising that the forces of Nature are
inside us. We ourselves are the God and Goddess. If time
honoured rites cannot enable us to grasp this spiritual insight then
the Hereditary Craft can serve no useful purpose.
86
the latter sent him down to Canewdon to check out the Pickingill
legends.
87
Chapter Twelve
The Pickingill Craft
This gypsy farm labourer was reviled and bused by the gorgio
yokels and he reacted in the only way he knew how. Pickingill set
out to terrify the locals. His remarkable powers have not been
satisfactorily explained. Many commentators have pointed out that
Wicca incorporates elements of Romany magic. Gardner’s
detractors erroneously presume that Old Gerald borrowed as freely
from Charles Leland’s book Gypsy Sorcery as he, allegedly, did
from Aradia: The Gospel of the Witches.
88
kako before he was admitted to the Craft. He eventually became
the most famous gypsy kako in England and was consulted by the
Romany families of East Anglia.
One stresses that Pickingill was inducted into several covens which
had perpetuated many of the rites which were peculiar to the
medieval French Craft. It was because of his specialised
knowledge of French witchcraft that he was subsequently invited to
lead the Canewdon coven. Tradition avers that this coven was
founded in the middle of the 15th century by a local landowner
who had fought in the Hundred Years War between England and
France. He had allegedly been inducted into the Craft after a long
sojourn in France.)
(2) In 1974, when the first Lugh articles appeared in The Wiccan,
89
an American-Sicilian strega called Dr Leo Martello, who claimed
that the articles had been written by Doreen Valiente (!?), said he
was in contact with several Hereditary covens in Herefordshire and
Radnorshire. According to Martello these groups considered
Pickingill to have been ‘an evil old man who was a Satanist.’
Martello’s belief that the Lugh material originated from Valiente,
using a male nom-de-plume, is very strange - especially as
Martello had briefly been in correspondence with Bill Liddell and
also had some contact with John Score, the then editor of The
Wiccan!
90
Chapter Thirteen
Aleister Crowley & Wicca
One can hardly blame Francis King for insisting that Crowley was
commissioned by Gardner to concoct the so-called Book of
Shadows of modern Wicca. “) King had compiled a formidable
array of circumstantial evidence to collaborate this erroneous
conclusion. Louis Wilkinson was Crowley’s literary executor (with
John Symonds) and his closest friend ®. He confided in King that
- Crowley’s private papers include many draft rituals for witchcraft
rites. Also there was correspondence from Gardner querying how
the Craft rituals were coming along. King naturally placed the
wrong interpretation on these facts.
91
Aleister Crowley
(1875 - 1947)
92
years before his meeting with Gardner. King noted that the so-
called ‘three degrees’ of initiation popularised by Gardnerian
Wicca were contained in all of Crowley’s draft rituals. Indeed the
Great Brotherhood of God, founded by Crowley’s most flourishing
disciple, incorporated these three degrees or grades. Sexual
abstinence was stressed in the first and second degrees, but the
Great Rite was performed in the third.
93
used a Craft ‘code’ to apprise the established witchcraft traditions
of his connection with ‘the true persuasion’. He said that Crowley
was the only man he could think of who could have invented the
rites, and this has been seized on by King. Gardner was actually
citing Crowley because the established Craft world was aware that
the Great Beast was one of Pickingill’s disciples.
(4) ‘Lady Olwen’ was Monique Wilson, who was left the museum
by Gardner in 1964 and sold it to the Canadian Ripley ‘Believe it or
Not’ Organisation in the 1970s. Wilson is sometimes referred to as
Gardner’s niece, but in fact she was one of his many priestesses.
(5) An American source who has seen this OTO charter claims it
grants him IV Degree status with the authority to found a lodge.
Bracelin’s biography mentions this fact but says that Gardner never
practised the rites of the OTO because he had ‘...neither the money,
time or energy.’ (p171). However, Gardner did visit one of
94
Crowley’s successors in New York after the Great Beast’s death
and they discussed setting up a Crowleyan museum (p174). On the
title page of High Magic’s Aid Gardner describes himself as ‘Scire
OTO 4=7’.
95
Chapter Fourteen
The Cambridge Coven
He was inducted into three covens. His parent coven was the New
Forest group and he was subsequently inducted into the
Hertfordshire remnant of one of the infamous Nine. Only two of
the original Nine still convene today. One is in Hertfordshire and
the other is in Norfolk. The Hertfordshire coven must not be
confused with the St Albans (Brickett Wood) with which Gardner
was also associated “). He was vexed to discover that the
Hertfordshire coven repudiated many of the tenets espoused by his
parent coven in the New Forest. He was astute enough to realise
that the Fellowship of Crotona had influenced its structure and
concepts ©.
Gardner received the Second Rite of the Hereditary Craft from the
leader of the Hertfordshire coven. He was thus a full Crafter. It was
this circumstance which led to the erroneous belief that Gardner
was a first grade Crafter. There is much controversy as to
Gardner’s actual standing in his parent coven. To counter any
doubts, Gardner foolishly admitted to several associates that he had
received the first initiation of the Hereditary branch of the Craft.
His detractors have seized on this fact and ignorantly assumed that
96
he was only a first degree Crafter. Gardner was disturbed to learn
that the Third Rite could only be awarded by a magister, however
he submitted to his authority.
When writing about the Craft Gardner was less than truthful. He
deliberately sought to popularise the tenets which he espoused by
pretending that Gardnerian Wicca was representative of the Craft
per se. He turned his back on the ‘true persuasion’ and it is hardly
surprising that the Hereditaries reciprocated in kind. He attempted
to curry favour with the Brethren by spelling out his Craft
affiliation by means of an ingenuous code. His ‘confession’ in
Witchcraft Today (pp52-53) had a twofold purpose; he was
appraising Crafters of his own background and also attempting to
anticipate charges of plagiarism.
He states that ‘the only man I can think of who could have invented
the rites was the late Aleister Crowley.’ This extraordinary
97
statement alienated established Crafters. The Hereditary Craft
execrates both Pickingill and his most erratic disciple, Crowley. It
was Crowley who misused the sexual and magical techniques of
the Old Style Craft. Gardner was simply warning Crafters that he
espoused the innovations instigated by Pickingill and perfected by
Crowley, and also cloaking his own plagiarism of Crowley’s poetry.
The suggestion that Rudyard Kipling might have written the Craft
rituals is another attempt to explain away direct plagiarism.
Gardner states that there is much evidence that in their present form
the rites were worked long before Kipling and Crowley were born.
Pickingill had evolved the format of the Wicca rites before either
Kipling or Crowley were born “). Indeed the Cambridge
academics, who appear to have initiated the concept of drawing
inspiration from classical literature, had formed a pseudo-coven in
the first decade of the 19th century. It appears that Montague
Summers also received a garbled report of these academics. He
states that the author of The Magus, Francis Barratt, founded a
coven at Cambridge University ©). The publication of The Magus
in 1801 inspired certain Cambridge dons to revive witchcraft and
the Ancient Mysteries.
The key words are ‘a hundred and forty years ago’. The Cambridge
Coven was operative by 1810 and based their rites largely on the
classical writings of Greece and Rome. They adapted the visitation
of Isis from Apuleius and this was further modified by Pickingill
98
and Crowley, interpolated with direct quotes from Leland’s Aradia
and this created the Charge as used by the Gardnerian Craft. This
coded reference enabled the Hereditaries to see that Gardner could
claim some continuity of tradition.
99
Notes & References
(5) Summers says:’I have been told that Francis Barratt actually
founded a small sodality of students of these dark and deep
mysteries and that under his tuition - for he was profoundly leamed
in these things - some advanced far upon the path of transcendental
wisdom. One at least was a Cambridge man, of what status -
whether an undergraduate or a fellow of the college - I do not
know, but there is every reason to believe that he initiated others,
and until quite recent years - it perhaps persists even today - the
Barratt tradition was maintained at Cambridge, but very privately,
and his teaching has been handed on to promising subjects.’
(Summers 1946)
100
Barratt himself had Rosicrucian pretensions and two of his pupils
were Kenneth McKenzie and Hargrave Jennings. His own teacher
is believed to have been the magician, astrologer and fortune-teller
Ebenezer Sibly. King (1992) tells us that a pupil of both Barratt
and Sibly was the Lincolnshire cunning man John Parkin, who in
1810 was prosecuted under the 1735 Witchcraft Act. King says that
Parkin was an intellectual magician whose clients were recruited
from the rural poor. He is supposed to have used a geomantic
system identical to one contained in a GD manuscript dated
1890(p43). King says Parkin ‘was already a villager sorcerer
practising the traditional techniques of witchcraft well before he
met Sibly.’ (p48) Barratt also has a following among modern
occultists, including the late Madeline Montalban who will feature
later in the Lugh material and created a magical system largely
inspired by his tome The Magus.
(6) Dashwood may have played at being a ‘Satanist’, but the inner
circle of the Order he founded was concerned with reviving the
pagan Eleusian Mysteries. Dashwood was also a Freemason,
Rosicrucian and neo-druid.
(7) The School of Night was the 16th century occult group centred
around Sir Walter Raleigh and Edmund Spencer, which venerated
Elizabeth I as the personification of the moon goddess Diana.
There is also the suggestion that this group venerated the black-
faced Dark Goddess. (See Yates 1979).
101
Chapter Fifteen
The Gardnerian Charge
I have never sighted the rituals used by the much publicised New
102
Forest coven. My Brethren know next to nothing about them.
However, I have in my possession the rituals used by both the
Hertfordshire and Essex covens with which Gardner convened as I
too was inducted into the surviving remnant of Pickingill’s Essex
coven. Gardner attained the status of magister in the ‘true
persuasion’ in another Essex coven with which I am also
associated. Thus in a double sense Gardner’s Elders were, and in
some cases still are, my own Brethren. They may be presumed to
know something about Gardner’s status and the rituals he received
from them!
Gardner also added that his friend Crowley had supplied the rituals
of the now defunct Norfolk coven, together with other papers and
rituals for founding a nature cult based on the Greek Mysteries. It
has to be stressed that neither men invented Wicca. Pickingill was
an extraordinary magician, as well as an hereditary magister. He
calculated that the Aquarian Age would not technically commence
until 2424 CE. He understood however that its influence would be
felt in the 20th century. He predicted that the Revived Craft would
be reactivated in 1962. 2
103
viable, Craft rites which would most appeal to reincarnating
Greeks.
104
Isle of Man to America. (3)
Quite frankly, I cannot see that it matters who rewrote the Craft
rites or even who introduced foreign elements into the English
‘Craft. It appears to be perfectly valid to update and streamline Craft
rituals in line with changing conditions and altered states of
consciousness. What is of vital importance is that Crafters honour
the Old Ways and tread the path of the Old Gods. Provided those
injunctions are observed, I cannot see that it is necessarily wrong
for modern Crafters to ‘invent’ their own rites - and initiate
themselves.
105
Crowley’s personal symbol in the bottom left hand corner.’
Although he does not say so, Williamson suggests these were in
Crowley’s handwriting. According to him, Gardner left the Book
in the cafe one afternoon while conducting a group of French
-women to see the exhibit of ‘tools’ loaned from the New Forest
coven. When he had returned it had gone. Unfortunately this
could not therefore be the famous BoS shown to Sylvia Tatham by
the Wilsons in the Sixties.
106
Chapter Sixteen
The Cambridge Rituals
107
many years.
108
ceremony with the young priestess who led the rites of the French
Craft (Rhodes 1954).
However Gardner could not let the public associate the worship of
Satan with a beautiful young priestess, representing the Goddess
and personifying the ‘bride of the God’ who celebrated the rites in
toto. He was justified in popularising his version of the Craft
because it did have historical parallels with the French and
Scandinavian witch cults. “
One could argue further that the Gardnerian rites are clearly based
on the format of Pickingill’s Nine Covens. However, we still have
to explain why Gardner turned his back on the Hereditary Craft.
His standing in the ‘true persuasion’ is not in doubt. He attained
the rank of magister in the East Anglian branch and was therefore
authorised to found covens as of right. Anyone or any coven which
can trace legitimate descent from Gardner is a sibling of the ‘true
persuasion’.
(2) Gardner did return to England several times during his Far East
career as a tea planter, rubber farmer and Customs officer and spent
his time following his interests in the occult and Spiritualism.
However, as Bill Liddell intimates, he would hardly have had time
during these short visits to pursue a serious membership of an
esoteric magical Order.
109
(3) The Tantric writer Swami Anandakapila (aka John Mumford)
has linked Tantra with both Wicca and the OTO. He states:
‘Perhaps the most important synthesis of Western tantric concepts
came through the formation of the Oto..’ and goes on to state:™.. I
‘would suggest that modern witchcraft is the Tantra of Western man
emerging in the 20th century.” (Mumford 1975 p129). Other
writers such as Robert Anton Wilson (1977 and 1987) have linked
the Rosicrucians, Dluminati, OTO and medieval witchcraft with a
secret Western Tantric cultus practising sex magic and the use of
natural psychedelic drugs. Tantra is said to have originated in the
ancient Goddess worship of pre-Aryan India and the shamanism of
the prehistoric period. King (1971) says the heterosexual magic
taught in the IX Degree of the OTO is similar to that of the left
handed Tantrics of Bengal.
110
Chapter Seventeen
The Nine Covens
111
Pickingill appears to have been responsible for associating cords
and the five fold kiss with the Revived Craft. The Saracen
influence lingered on in the English Craft scene for many centuries.
The five fold kiss never found favour with most English covens.
The Saracen Mysteries also failed to take root in the English Craft.
112
Pickingills always accorded great honour to Nerthus, the mighty
earth mother goddess of the Jutes, Danes and Angles. However, it
was the Horned God who was the principal object of worship in
historical covens. Goddess worship and the priestess syndrome are
concepts alien to the mainstream English Craft. No vestiges of
goddess worship can be recognised since the 17th century.
(2) The Templars were also accused of wearing girdles or cords for
‘magical purposes’.
113
modern form is patriarchal, mythologically inaccurate and
confusing. See Robert Hughe’s article ‘Descent into Confusion’ in
Web of Wyrd magazine, issue 10 of February 1994 (P.O. Box
A486, Sydney South,NSW 2000, Australia or BM Box 9290,
London WCIN 3XX)
114
Chapter Eighteen
Witchcraft & the Aquarian Age
It was quite natural for women to usurp the role of ‘priest’ after the
medieval decimation of the Cathars. Many covens in the French
Craft were led by women and Horned God worship predominated
in these female-led groups. English covens from the early Middle
Ages composed two male leaders and the Lady. The Nine Covens
founded by Pickingill also continued the tri-gradal induction
system of the French Craft. The English Craft knows nothing of
three degrees and eschews nudity, for nearly all ’old’ covens
convene robed. Established Crafters certainly repudiate any notion
that the ‘High Priestess’ can appoint a male leader as a matter of
personal whim or fancy “.
115
established Craft has never used Cabbalistic weapons @. It is true
that Traditional witches carry a sacred knife. However, this is
mostly shielded.
116
version of the Craft ‘off the ground’ as it were. His conviction that
the tough-minded Thracian and Greek priestesses would incarnate
in English bodies in the 20th century induced him to stress female
leadership and those elements of moon magic and sex magic to
which they were accustomed.
This Greek bias was a major factor in the ritual nudity espoused by
the Nine. Both Crowley and Gardner were interested in ancient
Greece. The dagger of hecate and the dagger and sword of Kali
were Officially incorporated into Craft rituals to stress the worship
of the black-faced Mother of All@) Revived Crafters may now see
why Gardner made such a thorough study of Greek ’witchcraft’.
So-called rites from the Graeco-Roman Mysteries were
incorporated into modern Wicca @).
117
Notes & References
(2) It has been suggested swords and daggers had a high profile in
Gardner's version of Wicca because he was fascinated by medieval
and native weaponry. One of his first books was a renowned study
of the Malay dagger called the kris and he believed he had a past
life on Cyprus as an ancient swordmaker.
(3) Gardner’s version of the Goddess was, in his own words, ‘the
sweetest woman’. It is possible his interest in Greek mythology and
his archaeological digs in Cyprus led him to model his version of
the Goddess on the love aspect of Aphrodite. Certainly this legacy
lives on in modern Wicca and neo-paganism, where the Dark
Goddess is neglected and often ignored.
118
Chapter Nineteen
Hereditary Family Traditions
The status of the families was dependent upon the grace and favour
of the Powers. They approved or rejected the choice of their
priests. Sometimes an entire generation of one of these families was
‘passed over’®). In such instances the scion of another Hereditary
family would be chosen to deputise for the displaced local family.
In most cases the original family line would be installed back in
office after just one skipped generation. The family would
continue to serve the community as before, as if nothing had
happened. The odd skipped generation here or there would not
jeopardise the family’s Hereditary status.
119
of the rural populace continued to convene at the sacred sites at the
seasonal festivals. They also consulted the local representatives of
the Powers. It should not be imagined that the local peasantry still
adhered to the Old Gods. They were practical, if superstitious,
farming folk. They prayed in their local church for abundant crops
and the fertility of their livestock. Then they went to the sacred site
and left offerings for the Powers. It was never forgotten that the
Old Powers had ensured the prosperity of the flocks and the fields
in former times. This half-hearted belief in the Old Gods was a
form of insurance.
These old rural witches do not concern themselves with rites, tools,
knowledge or ‘the power’. They are content to live in harmony
with nature and tread the path of the Old Gods. For my money this
is the true Hereditary tradition. Many Hereditary families secretly
approve of the present trend towards self-initiation and the
compilation of one’s own rites and rituals. The greatest impediment
to the growth of the Craft is the erroneous idea that one has to be
initiated into a coven. We want pagans and Crafters in great
numbers and many dedicated and sincere seekers spend valuable
time and energy looking for an authentic coven, because they have
been told coven membership is essential for Craft membership.
This is perhaps the most unfortunate misunderstanding foisted on
the public by the Revived Craft. ®
120
The Hereditary tradition has always existed primarily to honour and
worship the Old Gods. It is a sine qua non of the Hereditary Craft
that the Powers choose us - we do not choose them! We are
*ynitiated’ by the Lord and Lady. This Craft induction will manifest
in an altered state of consciousness and a willingness to open
oneself up to guidance and tutelage by the Bright Powers. Then we
need no human coven contacts.
121
family can lead if her brothers are dead or if the Powers choose her.
A common source of confusion is the distinction between covens
founded by an individual claiming the right of descent and those
who owe provenance to ‘the power’ successively handed down
from an historically based group.
(3) This idea that you can only be initiated into a coven to bea
witch and cannot practice self-initiation or be ‘a witch alone’ is
supported by those modern Wiccans who wish to promote and
reinforce heirarchal elitism in the modern Craft and ‘power over’
their devoted followers. The Craft at the end of the 20th century
has no place for these power junkies. Obviously though, if you are
122
self-initiated or a witch alone then you should not claim legitimate
descent from a specific established tradition unless you have
received it.
(4) This statement underlines the fact that the Craft has developed
and evolved over the centuries. What was relevant 500, or even 50,
years ago may not be so today. Also the Old Ways were
fragmented by the Persecution and many beliefs only survived in
folklore and seasonal customs. As we shall see later, the Craft was
also influenced by ‘foreign’ concepts that may not be relevant for
modern Crafters. Indeed the history of witchcraft since the 12th
century has to be examined within the context of the wider magical
and occult traditions. Today there is a movement to ‘get back to
basics’ and revive the more traditional aspects that have been
obscured and neglected in recent years, while rejecting the atavistic
hangovers that we have evolved beyond and create new traditions
for the 21st century.
123
Chapter Twenty
The Goddess in Ancient Britain
The Old Craft maintains that two goddesses have always ruled over
our Isles. This distinction between our Bright Lady and our Dark
Lady of Unfathomable Mystery is claimed to have been unique to
our islands. A further legend argues that the dark, lunar goddess
existed alone before she created male gods. The Hereditary Craft
suspects that the legends of our two goddesses have an astrological
basis. All ancient myths were astrologically inspired. The One
Life which informs the universe is ‘conditioned’ by the astrological
rulership of each country. The Father-Mother - or is it the Mother-
Father? - indwells whatever divine form is predetermined by the
planetary rulers of a country. The thought forms (archetypal
images? MH) of each god and goddess are simply human responses
to the stimuli provided by the planetary energies.
The Old Craft prefers the dual concepts of Bride or Bridget and
Arianrhod to the imported, composite figure of the Triple Goddess
(1), This insistence on a dual goddess is not simply astrologically
based. It is also founded on a profound understanding of the
energies periodically realised by the luminaries; the planets, the
Earth, Venus and the moon are the major planetary influences on
the British Isles. This naturally betokens a strong feminine
influence. England is not called ‘the mother country’ for no reason.
Both England and Ireland are predominantly Venusian, because
they are traditionally assigned by astrologers to the sign of Taurus.
One stresses that the lunar overtones are reinforced because the
moon is exalted in Taurus. Scotland is ruled by the moon because
it is traditionally assigned to the rulership of Cancer.
124
Bride (pronounced ‘Breed’) was reverenced throughout England,
Ireland and Scotland. The popular appeal of this Celtic goddess of
childbirth, livestock, healing, sacred fires, flowers and holy wells is
explained by the Taurus/Cancer axis. Bride is the gentle goddess
who is the protective mother and demonstrative lover. The
ascription of holy wells, springs and the sacred fires to Bride
denotes she personifies the right hand spiral. She is the female
polarity of that creative energy which interpenetrates the Earth
and is focused at specific sites on its surface.
Holy wells and sacred springs were dedicated to Bride once it was
determined that they could not be contaminated by the cyclic evil
which is regularly released from Mother Earth. No representation
of female polarity can ignore the destructive aspect of Mother
nature. Both the Earth and the moon are subject to periodic
configurations which adversely affect ‘leys’ and these were termed
by the ancients ‘the menses of the Goddess.’ Negative energies
emanating from planetary configurations also impinge on ’leys’.
All creatures can be adversely effected by these evil emanations @).
The Old People of our Isles understood that the pure and chaste
goddess was the mother of both inspiration and destruction. Love,
poetry, prophecy and inspiration were deliberately fostered and
heightened by ‘tapping’ the ‘leys’ at propitious times. Physical
shock, mental derangement, bodily illness or even death could
125
result from approaching megalithic sites when the ‘ley’ sources
were contaminated by the reversed spiral energies.
Our pre-Celtic ancestors also knew that Venus was both the
daughter and alter-ego of the moon. The chaste maid who is
invariably the object of love is ever the daughter of the Earth
Mother. Both aspects of the Lady are identified with the goddess of
love. Our indigenous goddess, whom the Celts named Arianrhod,
is cast more in the mould of Venus then the moon. This anomaly is
explained by the Venusian emphasis evident in our Isles.
James Vogh (1977) claims: “We are told that Arianrhod is another
name for the Spider Goddess, whom the Cretans called Ariadne”.
This radical astrologer claims that the ancients formerly used a
Zodiacal division of thirteen signs and he contends the ‘missing
sign’ is Arachne, situated in the constellation of Auriga, between
Taurus and Gemini! This narrow Zodiacal belt has always been
associated with our indigenous goddess, whom the Celtic invaders
chose to identify with Arianrhod, the Lady of the Silver Wheel. It
is interesting that Vogh identifies Arianrhod with both Ariadne and
Arachne. Graves (1948) made this same identification. However,
it is unwise to infer from this that the original Cretan goddess was
the origin of Arianrhod.
126
Scholars now discredit the diffusionist theory, which held that the
megalithic culture originated in the Mediterranean area and
gradually spread westward via Spain, Portugal and Brittany to our
Isles. Craft legends maintain that the sacred knowledge existed in
our Isles before the arrival of the megalithic culture and the
subsequent invasion by the Celts. The vast majority of the
aristocrats and priests of the Old Race are claimed to have fled the
homeland (i.e. our Isles) in the 13th century BCE.
The Goddess of the Silver Web was modified by contact with the
Mediterranean cultures and the hybrid races who sprang from her
devotees. The legend of the human Cretan princess called Arachne
being turned into a spider by the vengeful goddess Athene is
another instance of a new religion deprecating and supplanting an
earlier one. The Greek pantheon triumphed over the Cretan and
other cultures (The Old Race from our Isles who had been Goddess
orientated and matriarchal). The concepts of the Fates spinning
human destiny seems to have been Greek and the returning hybrids
imported a number of foreign ideas. The Triple Goddess and the
triads of spinning fates are amplifications of the original Goddess
of the Silver Web from whom all creation stemmed.
The surviving remnants of the Old Race are said to have reached
Anatolia (in modern Turkey MH) and from that region dispersed in
several directions. Some of the ‘Celtic’ races originated in
127
Anatolia and hence had imbibed some of the ancient lore before
they reached our islands. There is considerable evidence that
Northern Europe was devastated in 1220 BCE and research into
this has been pioneered by the climatologist D. Wildvag Spanuth
(1976). He identified this historically attested cataclysm with the
story of Atlantis and was the first to identify the Sea People with
the Atlanteans. © .
Scholars are unanimous that the Sea People who attacked and
destroyed Palestine, the Aegean isles, Crete, Greece. Thessaly and
Macedonia circa 1220 BCE were Northern Europeans, specifically
Scandinavians. A bas relief in the Medinet Habu temple in Egypt
depicts a sea battle in 1190 BCE between the Egyptians and the Sea
People. The ships, weapons and horned helmets of these sea
pirates identifies them as Scandinavians.
128
widely recognised in Indo-European myth. The Lugh material, as
will be seen later in this article, offers one possible explanation for
its origin.
129
Chapter Twenty One
The Saracen Craft
There was a North African presence in our Isles before the Berbers
infiltrated Spain and southern France in historical times (circa 9th
century Ce MH). Little can be speculated about the Old Race who
first inhabited our islands and Crafters have conflicting opinions
about the ancient knowledge and the origins of its guardians.
130
incidence of etheric vision and an unrivaled opinion of the status of
women. Our North African ancestors introduced the circle dance to
our Isles and they danced to heal, love and raise generative power.
Some African tribes still dance for therapeutic purposes and
‘modern Berbers who still incline to the Old Ways dance in a circle
to raise power.
Our African forebears did not form ‘covens’ as such; the men
specialised in hunting magic and the male shaman was usually a
lone expert. Real magical expertise was the exclusive domain of
the womenfolk. Female shamans bandied together in concentrated
unison to achieve a common purpose and this magical division of
labour seems to have been parallelled in European cave culture.
The Old Craft also speaks of a power struggle between the male
and female shamans. The women painted their bodies and donned
animal masks to communicate with the spirits and the entities of the
worlds beyond our own. This primitive sorcery reached Europe
from North Africa and it is said that men only liberated themselves
from female domination at the end of the Ice Age i.e. approx. 8000
to 10,0000 years ago.
131
After the floods caused by the melting snow caps, the male
shamans of Northern Europe gained ascendancy over their female
counterparts and hunting magic was once more to the fore. The
ancient god of the mountains, beasts and water was the undisputed
deity of Northern Europe, but the male shamans never forgot the
evil terror imposed on the human race by the cave women. The
irrational and paranoid hatred evinced by the Teutonic shamans of
the oak forest for the ‘cave witch’ undoubtedly explains the dread
of the hexe in Germany and the bias of the cunning men against
female witches.
Things were quite different in central and southern Europe, for the
supremacy of the old moon magic used by the female shamans was
acknowledged and these cave women emerged stronger then before
Their knowledge of the moon’s influence was essential in
agricultural communities and the female shaman assumed
responsibility for overseeing the planting of the crops. The Deity
was envisaged as female, not male, and the concept of the
Mediterranean Great Mother Goddess was distinctly African in
origin.
132
the Celts or the Gauls could subjugate these dominant females and
these pre-Celtic women maintained their status even after
intermarriage with successive invading tribes and races.
-The Gallic ’druidesses’, the female Cathar leaders and the witch
priestesses of medieval France testify to the perpetuation of this
racial strain of strong minded, strong willed women.
The Moors who paid lip-service to Islam were aware of the dangers
they faced from more pious Moslems. They formed themselves
into bands of comrades with an average size of ten to twelve
members. These pagan Moors in Spain and southern France used
passwords and identifying marks to recognise each other. This
clandestine Moorish brotherhood had the distinction of organising
the first coven structure.
133
They had no difficulty finding local girls to be their “love queens’.
Good Christian girls found their Moorish overlords both attractive
and exciting and furious drumming and ecstatic dancing became
the vogue in the occupied areas. Local pagans were familiar with
circle dances to raise power, love making in the woods at full
moon, worship at:the crossroads, communion with the dead, the
control of elemental spirits and the adoration of the Goddess. It was
a simple transition from simple communal paganism to a secret
elite of senior initiates who were impressed with the organisational
structure of the Moorish brotherhood ®.
The ‘captains’ who led the Moorish pagan bands were originally
mercenary soldiers and this title was used for centuries until it was
replaced by rahbin, or Robin i.e. ‘master’ or ‘teacher’. He was the
forerunner of the later magister or witch master and had a deputy
who was an assistant shaman. Both these worthies could raise and
commune with spirits, control elemental servitors, charm animals,
read the future and magically alter events. Each had the power of
life and death over his band and each of the brethren swore to kill
themselves before they would betray the secrets of the
Brotherhood.
These Berber bands used secret names to identify each other and at
initiation each brother had an incision cut with a sacred knife. In
the course of time the Brotherhood was invested with incredible
occult powers and the ‘Robin’ was popularly reputed to be able to
summon spirits who would confer untold wealth or a steady stream
of lovers. Gullible people abandoned the old pagan ways and
embraced the Moorish phenomenon. The Saracen Craft spread
from the Continent into the British Isles. Many of the charges of
witchcraft laid against Lady Alice Kyteler of Kilkenny in Ireland in
1324 were probably well founded. It is highly likely that this
noblewoman had sacrificed fowls and goats to the spirits at the
crossroad and that the mysterious ‘Robin Artisson’ who was her
134
teacher was a blackamoor.
The Saracen masters stressed sex magic in their covens and their
primary purpose was to train the initiate to transcend the normal
boundaries of human consciousness. Then, and only then, could the
candidate prepare to become a Perfected One (or Cathari). It was a
sine qua non of the Saracen Craft that each person was his or her
own god/dess - and devil. Only the knowledge inherent in his or her
own being could transform a creature into the Supreme God of the
universe. The Saracen masters claimed to have the knowledge and
expertise to affect this transformation and for this reason were
designated as ‘the Wise Ones.’
135
The Saracen masters were exponents of the Arab and Jewish
Cabbala and they introduced Eastern concepts which had no
relevance to English witchcraft @). The Eastern discipline of
absolute obedience to the guru or master’s will has no place in the
Craft, but a certain Saracen ritual found its way into a number of
Hereditary rites. The candidate for divine enlightenment
approaches the magister and implores his aid in the time honoured
words: Master, I come to the altar. Save me Robin from death and
illusion.“ Various parodies of this plea alarmed the Church, for the
‘witches’ had clearly abjured the Christ, received new *baptismal’
names from the ‘Devil’ and surrendered themselves to the powers
of darkness.
All this was a far cry from the native paganism of our forebears.
many of the rural yokels still caroused at the old festivals and
convened at the ancient meeting places. The vast majority of the
surviving pagans saw no need to join a secret cadre to honour the
Powers who ensured the prosperity of the land. Many of the old
families still served as priests and priestesses of the Old Gods. The
defeat of the Moors in Spain and the existence of Moorish secret
societies were equally important factors in the decimation of the
witch cult.
136
*covens’ and their leaders co-operated with the heads of the
Saracen secret societies who trained their initiates to steal and kill
at the command of the master. 4) There is no doubt the Church
recognised the danger and regarded those European pagans who
-had succumbed to the Moorish fortune-tellers as a dangerous fifth
column. There were many reasons why the Church moved against
the ‘witches’; however, the peasants who adored the Old Powers
went largely unscathed. Pagans who perpetuated the beliefs of
their Celtic, Saxon and Danish ancestors survived.
(2) The occultist Rollo Ahmed has stated: ‘Another effect of the
Crusades was the mingling of Eastern and Western ideas and
beliefs; men who were prisoners of the Saracens in particular
bringing back the theories and practices of Oriental magic, upon
which much of the current witchcraft came to be based.” (Ahmed
1936)
137
getting results.
(4) See alleged links between the Templars and the Assassins
(Burman 1987 and Wilson )
138
Chapter Twenty Two
Gerald Gardner & the Malay Witches
139
The Hereditary Craft has always subscribed to this view. The
indigenous ‘witchcraft’ in the British Isles was always an act of
propitiating the lesser deities of Nature. Both our ancient African
and Celtic forebears were able to communicate with the Powers
(i.e. the Sidhe) and there was a two-way communication between
them and mortals. This Nature worship was always conducted by
women and it was believed the community would only prosper as
long as the Powers were suitably invoked and honoured.
The Celts adapted readily to the new religion. The Western Celts,
who were and are, pagans, at least intuitively, recognised the
essential paganism at the heart of Catholicism. The Celtic mother
goddess was easily identified with the Virgin Mary and the Christ
was none other then the dying redeemer who invariably conquered
death. The Celtic All-Father could be worshipped in the Christian
manner without giving him offence. The other Celtic deities were
remembered by the rural populace (the pagans). Holy wells and
sacred springs were openly decorated with flowers to honour the
Goddess/Virgin Mary.
140
sacred sites and worshipped the old male deities, as well as the
Powers. It is this circumstance in the Celtic countries during the
early days of Christianity which led to the ridiculous charge that the
pagan female bands worshipped the Devil. The Celtic populace
-could worship the Goddess under the guise of the Blessed Virgin
Mary, but the Old Gods - whether of Celtic or African origin -
fulfilled many basic human needs. The Christ was a wonderful, but
austere and celibate, figure. This Christian god could not
understand warmth, laughter, joy and the comfort of another naked
human body.
141
Returning to Gardner; during his Far Eastern career he had
recognised the similarities between the English rural wise woman
and her counterpart in Malaysia. He took the most logical step and
assumed they both represented a form of ancient Nature worship
predating all theologically centred religions. He had a number of
preconceived ideas about European witchcraft before he met any
English witch. His determination to identify the Malay wise
women with European witches may account for some of the
historical anomalies found in his version of witchcraft.
142
One of his assertions was to link witchcraft with the Celts and with
Celtic religion. Of specific witchcraft incidents for which he
personally vouched, writing in 1917, he claims: ‘...the most
interesting to the student are those which show forms current in the
Middle Ages and in remote classical times. Naturally the great
number of these occur in the west of England and Scotland and
their Celtic population, but witchcraft is rife to this day also in
Brittany and Morocco, where every medieval incident, including
the witches’ sabbat, is familiar ground and universally believed in.’
143
name of the goddess worshipped by the Italian witch cult MH) was
a subsequent Italian corruption of the Cretan-Greek Ariadne.
144
armed guard they forcibly removed the statue to add to their private
collection of ancient relics.
145
Chapter Twenty-three
Athames & the Book of Shadows
146
engraved on its hilt.
It is certain that the lone rural witches knew nothing of any so-
called BoS or Cabbalistic weapons. My own researches into the
Hereditary Craft extend over four decades. Lone wise women use
certain ‘objects’ to direct their will. Many cunning men in East
Anglia use a piece of rope to work cures and I have seen one old
man use bird feathers as an adjunct to spells. Rope, string, thread,
straw, feathers, wooden objects, any vegetable matter from trees or
crops, stones, staves and walking sticks are but some of the
‘objects’ used.
I also stress that historical witches believed that metal was inimical
to spirit forces. The chapter on Canewdon in the Encyclopedia of
Witchcraft & Demonology suggests the reason why English
witches never used a knife with a metal blade. Canewdon villagers
147
are reputed to have placed a knife with a iron or steel blade under
the front doormat to prevent a witch entering a house. I can testify
that superstitious East Anglian yokels still follow this custom. The
belief that a knife with a metal blade could incapacitate a witch is
one of the oldest and most widespread superstitions in English
folklore.
Old rustics in any English county will recount that witches and
goblins will flee in terror if a knife is pointed at them. The standard
method of curing a bewitched person in rural England was to hurl a
knife over their heads. The metal in the blade was reputed to drive
away the familiar spirit. It is odd, to say the least, that Gardner
would have us believe that English witches favoured the one
safeguard that protected the peasantry from witchcraft.
(1) Gardner was of Scottish ancestry and in fact left his sgian dhu
and kilt in his will to a relative. Crowley also had pretensions to be
a Scottish laird after purchasing Boleskine House on the shores of
Loch Ness in the early 1900s.
(2) Modern Wiccans claim that the symbols on the magical dagger
in The Key of Solomon are traditional witch sigils borrowed by
medieval Cabbalistic magicians. A chicken and egg situation?
148
(3) It should be noted that Valiente (1989) claims Gardner invented
these Rules, or perhaps added to them, in the late 1950s during the
dispute that split his St Albans coven and led her to go her own
way.
149
Chapter Twenty-four
The New Forest Coven
ii) The priestess and her female deputy generally took precedence
over the male leader. This was a travesty of what normally obtained
in the mainstream British Craft.
iti)The Goddess was accorded more reverence then the God. This
150
concept was alien to virtually all the Craft thinking in recent
centuries.
151
Trithemius are specifically cited as sources for witch rituals. No
doubt Gardner’s detractors will accuse Brodie-Innes of
disinformation! ()
Gardner was astute enough to recognise that the rituals of his parent
coven lacked the magical power to launch his popular Nature
religion. He joined Pickingill’s Hertfordshire coven and his
sponsor was Dolores North (aka Madeline Montalban). Gardner
and Crowley collaborated to devise rituals for a religion to replace
Christianity. Both Francis King and Gerald Suster © argue that
Gardner and Crowley knew each other for several years before the
152
latter’s death in 1947. There is no tangible evidence that they met
prior to 1946, but Dolores North could have been their go-between
7),
153
He was able to tap both the psychic and sexual reservoirs of the
Hereditary Craft by incorporating certain facets of the Old Religion
into his rites and rituals. One should also mention his desire to draw
energy from the ancient mystery schools of Greece and Italy, by
embodying certain of their practices into his rites. All in all, Old
Gerald Gardner was quite a magus in his own right.
(4) This seems to confirm Valiente's claim that Gardner told her the
154
rituals of the New Forest coven were fragmentary - but which
coven was he talking about??
(5) The Craft Laws Valiente claims Gardner invented in 1957 (see
-Valiente 1989)
155
Chapter Twenty-five
Aidan Kelly & the Lugh ‘Conspiracy’
Craft researchers will welcome Aidan Kelly’s book Crafting the Art
of Magic:Book I - A History of Modern Witchcraft 1939-1964,
published in 1991. It should prove to be the definitive work on
how the Gardnerian BoS was compiled. Unfortunately, several of
the author’s major conclusions must be challenged. To retort his
erroneous allegations and wild speculations I am forced to reveal
information which emanated from ‘covens’ with which Gerald
Gardner was affiliated. The Lugh articles derive from these
sources, as was explained in my Preface to this book “).
156
is blatant conjecture (p30).
157
Pickingill’s Hampshire group founded in the 1860s. When it was
revamped in the 1920s members of known ‘Hereditary’ families
and solitary practitioners were successfully approached locally to
augment it. This was a recipe for disaster as the newcomers
derided and challenged the Pickingill concepts and innovations.
Squabbles broke out and the revamped coven formed into cliques.
The original Elders were too old to cope with all this and withdrew
in disgust.
The new Elders had never convened with the pre-existing (pre-
First World War) coven, but claimed its Craft authority. New
beliefs and rites more in common with mainstream British Craft
were adopted. Would-be witches who were devotees of Margaret
Murray’s bizarre theories also joined this unhappy coven.
Emphasis was already on the Horned God and the male leader,
however the Pickingill method of casting and charging the circle
was retained. The New Forest also used The Key of Solomon in its
basic rituals, for Gardner did not introduce ceremonial magic into
the Craft - many mainstream covens were using the English version
of The Key by the early 1900s. Kelly is unaware that the English
Craft had borrowed practices from various sources since at least the
17th century, and probably much earlier.
158
the lodge - a veritable ceremonial magician. The lodge circle was
described by a sword and charged with passages from The Key.
The various magical ‘tools’ were consecrated similarly.
Gerald fitted in well with New Forest after his initiation and in
Clutterbuck he found a kindred spirit. They collaborated to
improvise more acceptable rituals which would provide a
continuity with the distant past. This practice of seeking better
material to augment his rites was to occupy Gardner for many
years.
159
she knew was not true. (p44) She knew only too well that New
Forest had an authentic Craft authority from ‘Hereditary’ sources.
Indeed it was she who encouraged Gardner to popularise the Old
Religion, However she had a sense of caution manifestly absent in
-her initiate.
The Great Beast was intrigued to learn that one of Pickingill’s Nine
Covens was still operative and he went out of his way to help
Gardner launch a Nature religion to replace Christianity. Crowley
obligingly wrote out the rituals of Pickingill’s Norfolk coven as
exactly as he could recall them and also gave Gardner the Black
Book of a deceased Scottish witch which he had supposedly
acquired while living at Boleskine (circa 1902). Gardner had no
qualms about padding his rituals with long extracts from Crowley’s
poetry and Valiente was to perform a valuable service for
Gardnerian Wicca by rewriting much of the BoS in the early 1950s.
160
Valiente seizes on this loosely-worded claim that Crowley
.. dutifully copied the present Gardnerian Book of Shadows.’ (1989
p203) My Elders were not alluding to the ‘present version’ which
reflects Valiente's creative genius, but were trying to explain that
when Crowley wrote out the first initiation ritual in his own
handwriting it was the first ever ‘Gardnerian’ ritual book. In short,
it was a prototype of the present BoS.
161
cite the article which expressly states that. My Elders claimed that
Crowley supplied Gardner with the rituals of the Norfolk coven of
the Nine into which he was inducted.
162
Crowley’s writings and that he kept no secrets about anything
(p174) Crowley, the supreme egotist and male chauvinist, could not
bring himself to be bested by a woman, the Pickingill High
Priestess who expelled him from the Norfolk coven. He never
-wrote of this incident, just as he avoided all mention of his
memorable defeat by Guirdjieff (Webb 1980 p 315) I defy Kelly to
find any reference to this in Crowley’s published works.
Kelly correctly disputes the claim that Pickingill devised the basic
format of the Gardnerian rituals (1991 p17). My Elders stand
accused, yet again, of sloppy phraseology. They meant “constituent
elements’. Pickingill’s Nine Covens incorporated ritual nudity,
bound scourging, Masonic parallels, ceremonial magic, the five
163
fold kiss, three rites of admission, a Charge, Drawing Down the
Moon, magical weapons, female leaders and a dominant Goddess.
Dorothy Clutterbuck and her former magister wrote down the rites
of the New Forest coven. These incorporated ritual nudity, bound
scourging, excerpts and practices from The Key of Solomon,
worship of a French God, the circle dance and drop technique,
thumb pricking together with the soaking and retention of the
measure, and various shamanistic techniques. Both Clutterbuck and
Gardner agreed the future of the Craft lay with middle class
occultists and would subsequently collaborate to introduce an
intellectual improvement in the rituals. Dafo’s subsequent refusal
to discuss the pre-1939 coven stemmed as much from her disgust of
Gardner’s innovations, as from his unabashed publicity seeking.
The Old Style Craft is the wild card in Kelly’s assessment of the
situation. Gardner never betrayed the real wording of the Craft
rituals he received from that source, his affiliations with a cunning
lodge (1941), the Hertfordshire coven (1945) and an East Anglian
coven (late 1940s) or the true names of the Deities. Gardner was a
liar and a dissembler and Kelly is also correct to say Gardner had
been compiling extracts from books on ceremonial magic for years.
He had been fascinated by the occult all his life and during his stint
as a Spiritualist was told he would be the messiah of a new religion.
) Kelly’s problem has been compounded because Gardner did not
164
write down the rites he received from various Brethren and kept
them in his head as is the inviolate rule. The Old Style people
understood that an Oath of Obligation means exactly that and this is
an inseparable barrier between them and the Revived Craft.
In his book Kelly correctly predicts a rosy future for the Revived
Craft; ‘My intuition tells me that the Gardnerian movement is far
more important perhaps then many of us realise’ (p181). My
intuition tells me Kelly has a hidden agenda. Which Gardnerian
movement does he mean? Gerald Gardner’s brainchild or his own
Gardnerian based witchcraft organisation? Both the New
Reformed Order of the Golden Dawn and the Covenant of the
Goddess were founded by Kelly. By denying Gardner any Craft
authority, he is ironically placing his own siblings on a comparable
footing with the orthodox Gardnerian Craft. ©
165
Goddess Arrives in the 1930s and was involved in archaeological
digs in Palestine and Cyprus that unearthed Goddess figurines.
166
Contacts
For further information on the pagan Old Religion, traditional
witchcraft and Wicca contact the following. Please include a
stamped self-addressed envelope with all enquiries.
167
Bibliography
Dunning, E (Ed) A.E. Waite: Selected Masonic Papers (Aquarian Press 1988)
168
Glob,P The Bog People (Faber & Faber 1969)
Jennings, H The Rosicrucians: Their Rites & Mysteries (1870 & Health
Research USA 1966)
169
Sexuality, Magic & Perversion (Neville Spearman 1971)
Knight, R & Wright, T Sexual Symbolism & The Worship of the Generative
Powers ( 1786 & 1866 & Mantrix House USA 1966)
Kramer & Sprenger Mallues Maleficarum (1486 & The Pushkin Press 1928)
L’Estrange, E.C. Witch Trials & Witch Hunting (Regan. Paul, Trench &
Trubner & Co 1929)
Leland, C Aradia: Gospel of the Witches (Buckland Museum USA 1968 &
Pentacle Enterprises 199?)
170
The Dark World of the Witches (Robert Hale 1962)
The Realm of Ghosts (Robert Hale 1964)
Ryall, R West Country Wicca (Phoenix USA 1989 & Capall Bann 1993)
171
The Secrets of Lost Atland (Neville Spearman 1978)
172
Wright, D The Ancient Faith in Britain (1921)
THEOLOGY LIBRARY
CLAREMONT, CA
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= when the Pope sent St. Augustine on his famous mission to convert the pagan Saxons, & how this
© affected the Celtic Church.. It discusses how the Roman Church suppressed Celtic Christianity & the
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Che Pickingill Papers
The Grigin of the Gardnerian Craft
by W. E. Liddell
Compiled & Edited by Michael Howard
George Pickingill (1816 - 1909) was said to be the leader of the witches
in Canewdon, Essex, as described in “The Dark World of the Witches’
by folklorist Eric Maple in 1962. In detailed correspondence with
‘The Wiccan’ & “The Cauldron’ magazines from 1974 - 1994,
E. W. Liddell, under his pen name Lugh, claimed to be a member
of the ‘true persuasion’, i.e. the Hereditary Craft. He further claimed
that he had relatives in various parts of southern England who were
coven leaders & that his own parent coven (in Essex) had been founded
- George Pickingill’s grandfather in the 18th century. One of the subjects
iscussed by Liddell was the origin of the Gardnerian Book of Shadows.
It was alleged that Aleister Crowley had helped Gardner draft his BoS
& that Crowley had been inducted into the Craft by Pickingill in 1899
or 1900. It was further alleged that Crowley used a technique of
‘magical recall’ to remember the rites of Pickingill’s network of
Nine Covens & helped Gardner formulate rituals based on these.
The correspondence also covered such subjects as the relationship
between the Hereditary Craft, Gardnerian Wicca & Pickingill’s
Nine Covens, the influence of Freemasonry on the medieval witch cult,
sex magic, ley lines & earth energy, prehistoric shamanism, the iE
East Anglian hg of a Haeda the difference between _
Celtic wise women & the Anglo Saxon cunning men & the sources
of the Gardnerian BoS
There is considerable interest in the material in the so-called
‘Pickingill Papers’ & the controversy still rages about their content
& significance with regard to the origins of Gardnerian Wicca.
This book provides, for the first time, a chance for the complete
Pickingill material to be read & examined in toto together with
background references & extensive explanatory notes. It also
includes new material on the Craft Laws, the New Forest coven,
Pickingill’s influence on the Revived Craft & a refutation of the
material on Lugh & his basic thesis in Aidan Kelly's recent book
‘Crafting the Art of Magic’.