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@theoiblood
grocery store in echo park, CA
Wilhelm KotarbiĆski (1848-1921) - Angel in a Cemetery
Historical Witchcraft 101: Shapeshifting
A shapeshifter typically refers to a person who puts on the body of an animal, although it can sometimes be a human, through magic. The term can also technically refer to animals who turn into humans, such as the Irish selkie and the Japanese kitsune, although weâll only be discussing human transformation here. Warning: Really fucking long post ahead.Â
[Image description: German woodcut of a werewolf, half transformed.]Â [Image Source]
Witches were often said to transform into cats or hares, but mice, deer and even birds such as ravens or owls were also common. One telltale sign that the animal was a transformed witch was that it would be entirely black or entirely white, as in this tale about a witch called Auntie Greenleaf. Other witches were also said to be able to recognise witches in disguise.
Cats would be chosen because they were a common household animal that would not arouse suspicion. Hares, more so in Britain than in the New World, are associated with witchcraft due to the fact that hares jump and box during mating season, which is said to resemble a coven of witches dancing at a sabbat.
Advantages:
Connecting with nature on a deeper level
Travelling to places you might not otherwise be able to go to
Gaining a better understanding of the animal you shift into
Gaining a new perspective on a problem
Temporarily adopting or building up over time certain qualities associated with a particular animal
It is important to note that in most shapeshifting rituals, an item connected with the animal that the witch wants to shapeshift into is required, such as an animal pelt or feather. For example, folkloric werewolf transformations often involve wearing either a wolf pelt or a 7-tongued belt made of wolf skin, and sometimes also include a salve of wolf fat infused with (most likely trance-inducing) herbs.
If you want a piece of an animal for a shapeshifting ritual, please check the laws in your area first! The ownership of animal parts of many predators, such as wolves and coyotes, and feathers of many kinds of birds, is restricted. Check that these things are legal to own in your area, and if youâre buying, make sure the seller is also acting legally and humanely in their collection of animal parts. Â
Methods of shapeshifting: familiars
Okay so this is kind of cheating, but one way witches were said to shapeshift was to take advantage of the close bond between themselves and their familiar. The witch would go into a trance state send out their soul (think of it like astral projection) in spirit flight, and lay their consciousness over that of their familiarâs, and possess it. They would then be able to sense everything the animal was sensing, as well as control its movement.
This practice, also known as âborrowingâ after Terry Pratchettâs Discworld novels, is described in further detail here.
Methods of shapeshifting: the witchâs fetch
Shapeshifting using the witchâs fetch is a slightly more complex idea that is linked to the ideas of âthe sidereal bodyâ and is also kind of comparable with the practice of astral projection.
The âsidereal bodyâ is an idea taken from Eliphas Leviâs âTranscendental Magicâ, otherwise known as part one of âDogme et Ritual de la Haute Magieâ. He also refers to it as the âanimal soulâ of a person, and the âintermediary between the soul and the physical envelopeâ. Think of the âsidereal bodyâ as a part of your soul that you can project ethereally into the world around you, kind of like an aura. This âsidereal bodyâ, this part of your soul, can also detach from your body in sleep and in trance states. In its detached state, the âsidereal bodyâ can be referred to as the witchâs âfetchâ, or âfetch-beastâ. Here is a post on a possible ritual for practising raising the fetch.
With the aid of an animal talisman to act as a focus, the witch can mould their sidereal or astral body in two different ways in order to shapeshift:
They can choose not to separate it from the real body, but instead mould it into a kind of magical cloak around themselves, into the shape of the animal they wish to shapeshift into.
Or they can choose to project the sidereal body outwards, and mould the âfetchâ into the shape of the animal they wish to shapeshift into. This projection, much like an astral projection, can manifest in the physical realm much like a ghost does.
An example of the witchâs fetch in folklore are the tales in which a witch falls asleep or into a trance state and an observer sees an animal, their fetch-beast, crawl out of their mouth, often a mouse or toad.
Methods of shapeshifting: rituals and charms
In âCall of the Horned Piperâ, Nigel Jackson gives an example of how a ritual transformation may have been performed. The initiate would undergo a symbolic death, undressing and crossing a lake or a river to symbolise passing to the other side. They would then put on the wolf skin or belt, and perhaps apply a wolf fat salve. In an altered state of consciousness, the initiateâs soul would then âbe projected forth in the form of a wolfâ.
Another means of transformation would be a charm, most famously that recited by Scottish witch Isobel Gowdie. She would say the transformation charm below three times to turn into an animal:
âI sall gae intil a haire,
Wiâ sorrow and sych and meikle care;
And I sall gae in the Devillis name,
Ay quill I come home again.â
And to change back, she would say (once):
âHaire, haire, God send thee caire,
I am in a hairis likness just now,
Bot I sall be in a womanis likenes evin now.â
Less well known are the other charms that Gowdie provided for shapeshifting into a cat and a crow:
âI sall gae intil a catt,
Wiâ sorrow and sych and a black shat;
And I shall gae in the Devillis name,
Ay quill I com hom again.â
âI sall gae intil a craw,
Wiâ sory and sych and a black thraw;
And I shall gae in the Devillis name,
Ay quill I com hom again.â
Isobel Gowdieâs charm was incorporated into a longer charm known as a fath-fith, which stems from âdeer formâ, and was used by hunters, warriors and travellers for stealth.
An example of a possible shapeshifting ritual you can try can be found here. Lizzie of visardistofelphame also writes on how you could create a ritual mask for shapeshifting here.
Warning:
Shapeshifting was often seen as dangerous for the witch: if the possessed animal or projection was harmed, typically by fire or silver, then this damage would be reflected on the body of the witch. For example, if someone kicked the leg of a shapeshifted cat, the witch would have a corresponding leg injury. Â
Other dangers include not being able to return to your body because youâve forgotten you were human, have got lost, or travelled too far from your real body. You could also be captured or injured by malevolent spirits while travelling.
This post is already ridiculously long, so sources are under the cut (sorry mobile users)
Continuar lendo
âThe Annunciationâ (1984) or âAngyali Ădvözletâ
Une sĂ©rie sur les Dieux grĂ©co-romains, vus par la Renaissance et la pĂ©riode classiqueâŠ
-Â Versailles, Bassin d'Apollon et Grand CanalÂ
- Arras, expo sur Versailles -âApollon servi par les Nymphesâ (France, XVIIĂšme siĂšcle)
- Marseille, MuCEM, expo âOrâ - Mignard: âLe Jugement de Midasâ
- Villeneuve-Lembron (Auvergne) - Orphée
- Villeneuve-Lembron - Actéon changé en cerf par Diane
I want to think of death as peaceful; that decay is a slow process of giving oneâs body back to the earth.
Ăcole Romaine du XVIIIĂšme SiĂšcleÂ
Apollon et Daphné, n/d, huile sur toile, 176x120.5 cm
Private Collection
Apollo's enchantment
By Henry Howard (1769 - 1847 )
Bacchus and Ariadne
18th century
French School
Oil on canvas
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Went on a mini-adventure today to see this incredible mural in Denver. Painted by PichiAvo as part of the cityâs âCrush Wallsâ eventâ Iâm in love.
Sappho, tr. by Willis Barnstone, from Greek Lyric Poetry; âTo Aphrodite,â
The Souls of Acheron (1898) - Adolf Hirémy-Hirschl
- The Oresteia by Aeschylus
Detail: Herodias, 1843, by Paul Delaroche.
simena
Eduard Ansen-Hofmann, 1862-1955
Sappho, ancient Greek poetess, n/d, oil on canvas, 73,5x99 cm
Private Collection       (The Knohl Collection)
marcus tullius cicero: a summary