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- Newsgroups: alt.pagan
- From: mimir@stein.u.washington.edu (Al Billings)
- Subject: History of Wicca Lecture
- Message-ID: <1nk85kINNb3t@shelley.u.washington.edu>
- Date: 10 Mar 1993 08:16:52 GMT
- Organization: The Friends of Loki Society
- Lines: 924
-
-
- HISTORY OF WICCA IN ENGLAND: 1939 - present day
-
- This talk was given by Julia Phillips at the Wiccan Conference
- in Canberra, 1991. It is mainly about the early days of the
- Wicca in England; specifically what we now call Gardnerian and
- Alexandrian traditions. The text remains "as given", so please remember
- when you read it that it was never intended to be "read", but "heard"
- and debated.
-
- Text begins:
-
- There are three main strands I intend to examine: one,
- Gardner's claim of traditional initiation, and its subsequent
- development; two, magical traditions to which Gardner would
- have had access; and three, literary sources.
-
- As we look at these three main threads, it is important to
- bear in mind that Gardner was 55 years old at the time of his
- claimed initiation; that he had spent many years in Malaya,
- and had an enormous interest in magic, Folklore and Mythology.
- By the time he published High Magic's Aid, he was 65, and 75
- when "The Meaning of Witchcraft" appeared. He died in 1964, at
- the age of 80.
-
- Gardner was born in 1884, and spent most of his working adult
- life in Malaya. He retired, and returned to the UK in 1936. He
- joined the Folklore Society, and in June 1938, also joined the
- newly opened Rosicrucian Theatre at Christchurch where it is
- said he met Old Dorothy Clutterbuck.
-
- I chose 1939 as my arbitrary starting point as that was the
- year that Gerald Gardner claims he was initiated by Old
- Dorothy into a practising coven of the Old Religion, that met
- in the New Forest area of Britain. In his own words,
-
- "I realised that I had stumbled upon something interesting;
- but I was half-initiated before the word, "Wica" which they
- used hit me like a thunderbolt, and I knew where I was, and
- that the Old Religion still existed. And so I found myself in
- the Circle, and there took the usual oath of secrecy, which
- bound me not to reveal certain things." This quote is taken
- from The Meaning of Witchcraft, which was published in 1959.
-
- It is interesting that in this quote, Gardner spells Wicca
- with only one "c"; in the earlier "Witchcraft Today" (1954)
- and "High Magic's Aid" (1949), the word Wicca is not even
- used. His own derivation for the word, given in "The Meaning
- of Witchcraft", is as follows:
-
- "As they (the Dane and Saxon invaders of England) had no
- witches of their own they had no special name for them;
- however, they made one up from "wig" an idol, and "laer",
- learning, "wiglaer" which they shortened into "Wicca".
-
- "It is a curious fact that when the witches became English-
- speaking they adopted their Saxon name, "Wica"."
-
-
-
-
- In "An ABC of Witchcraft Past and Present", Doreen Valiente
- does not have an entry for Wicca, but when discussing
- Witchcraft, does mention the Saxon derivation from the word
- Wicca or Wicce. In the more recently published The Rebirth Of
- Witchcraft, however, she rejects this Saxon theory in favour
- of Prof. Russell's derivation from the Indo-European root
- "Weik", which relates to things connected with magic and
- religion.
-
- Doreen Valiente strongly supports Gardner's claim of
- traditional initiation, and published the results of her
- successful attempt to prove the existence of Dorothy
- Clutterbuck in an appendix to "The Witches' Way" by Janet and
- Stewart Farrar. It is a marvellous piece of investigation, but
- proving that Old Dorothy existed does nothing to support
- Gardner's claims that she initiated him.
-
- In his book, "Ritual Magic in England", occultist Francis King
- does offer some anecdotal evidence in support of Gardner's
- claims. However, it is only fair to point out that in the same
- book, he virtually accuses Moina Mathers of murder, based upon
- a misunderstanding of a story told by Dion Fortune! With that
- caveat, I'll recount the tale in full:
-
- King relates that in 1953, he became acquainted with Louis
- Wilkinson, who wrote under the pen-name of Louis Marlow, and
- had contributed essays to Crowley's Equinox. He later became
- one of Crowley's literary executors. King says that in
- conversation, Wilkinson told him that Crowley had claimed to
- have been offered initiation into a witch coven, but that he
- refused, as he didn't want to be bossed around by a bunch of
- women. (This story is well-known, and could have been picked
- up anywhere.)
-
- Wilkinson then proceeded to tell King that he had himself
- become friendly with members of a coven operating in the New
- Forest area, and he thought that whilst it was possible that
- they derived their existence from Murray's "Witch Cult in
- Western Europe", he felt that they were rather older.
-
- King draws the obvious conclusion; that these witches were the
- very same as those who initiated Gardner. King claims that the
- conversation with Wilkinson took place in 1953, although
- "Ritual Magic in England" was not published - or presumably
- written - until 1970. However, on September 27 1952,
- "Illustrated" magazine published a feature by Allen Andrews,
- which included details of a working by, "the Southern Coven of
- British Witches", where 17 men and women met in the New Forest
- to repel an invasion by Hitler. Wilkinson had told King of
- this working during their conversation, which King believes to
- be proof that such a coven existed; there are some differences
- in the two stories, and so it is possible that two sources are
- reporting the same event, but as Wilkinson's conversation with
- King came after the magazine article, we shall never know.
-
- In the recently published "Crafting the Art of Magic", Aidan
- Kelly uses this same source to "prove" (and I use the word
- advisedly - the book "proves" nothing") that Gardner, Dorothy,
- et al created Wicca one night following a social get together!
- Of one thing we can be certain though: whatever its origin,
- modern Wicca derives from Gardner. There may of course be
- other traditional, hereditary witches, but even if they are
- genuine, then it is unlikely that they would have been able to
- "go public" had it not been for Gardner.
-
- There have been many claims of "hereditary" origin (other than
- Gardner's own!) One of the most famous post-Gardner claimants
- to "hereditary" status was actress Ruth Wynn-Owen, who fooled
- many people for a very long time before being exposed. Roy
- Bowers, who used the pseudonym Robert Cochrane, was another:
- Doreen Valiente describes her association with him in "The
- Rebirth of Witchcraft", and The Roebuck, which is still active
- in the USA today, derives directly from Cochrane, via Joe
- Wilson. "Witchcraft: A Tradition Renewed" by Evan John Jones
- with Doreen Valiente describes a tradition derived from Robert
- Cochrane. Alex Sanders, of course is another who claimed
- hereditary lineage, and like Cochrane, deserves his own place
- in this history, and we'll get to both of them later.
-
- Many people have been suspicious of Gardner's claims, and have
- accused him of making the whole thing up. They suggest that
- the Wicca is no more than the fantasy of an old man coloured
- by a romantic imagination. One particularly virulent attack
- upon Gardner came from Charles Cardell, writing under the
- pseudonym of Rex Nemorensis.
-
- One of Gardner's initiates who is still active in the Wicca
- today has an interesting tale to tell about Cardell, whom he
- knew:
-
- "Cardell claimed to be a Witch, but from a different tradition
- to Gardner's. Cardell was a psychopathic rat, with malevolent
- intent toward all and sundry. He managed to get a woman called
- Olive Green (Florannis) into Gardner's coven, and told her to
- copy out the Book of Shadows so that Cardell could publish it,
- and destroy Gardner. He also contacted a London paper, and
- told them when and where the coven meetings were held, and of
- course the paper got quite a scoop. Cardell led people in the
- coven to believe that it was Doreen Valiente who had informed
- on them.
-
- Doreen had just left Gardner in a bit of a huff after a
- disagreement; another coven member, Ned Grove, left with her.
- Anyway, the day the paper printed the exposure, Cardell sent
- Gardner a telegram saying, "Remember Ameth tonight". (Ameth
- was Doreen's Craft name, and as it has now been published, I
- see no reason not to use it here)."
-
- My informant also said that Olive Green was associated with
- Michael Houghton, owner of Atlantis book shop in Museum
- Street, who was the publisher of High Magic's Aid. Through
- this association, she also encountered Kenneth Grant of the
- OTO, although their association was not friendly.
-
- Cecil Williamson, the original owner of the witchcraft museum
- on the Isle of Man, and present owner of the Witchcraft Museum
- in Boscastle, has also published a number of articles where he
- states quite categorically that Gardner was an utter fraud;
- but, he offers only anecdotes to support these allegations.
-
- Although Gardner claimed his initiation occurred in 1939, we
- don't really hear anything about him until 1949, when "High
- Magic's Aid" was published by Michael Houghton.
-
- This book has very strong Solomonic leanings, but like
- Gardner's own religious beliefs, combined the more natural
- forms of magic with high ceremonial. In his introduction to
- the book, Gardner says that: "The Magical rituals are
- authentic, party from the Key of Solomon (MacGregor Mathers'
- translation) and partly from magical MSS in my possession)."
- Gardner did indeed have a large collection of MSS, which
- passed with the rest of his goods to Ripleys in Toronto after
- his death.
-
- Scire (pseudonym) was the name Gardner took as a member of
- Crowley's branch of the OTO; although it is generally agreed
- that his membership was purely nominal, he was certainly in
- contact with people like Kenneth Grant and Madeline Montalban
- (founder of the Order of the Morning Star).
-
- Gardner was given his OTO degree and Charter by Aleister
- Crowley, to whom he was introduced in 1946 by Arnold Crowther.
- As Crowley died in 1947, their association was not long-lived,
- but Crowther confirms that the two men enjoyed each other's
- company.
-
- So, after that brief introduction we can have a look at the
- first of the strands I mentioned.
-
- In 1888, the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn was born,
- beginning a renaissance of interest in the occult that has
- continued to the present day. It is impossible to overstate
- the importance of the GD to modern occultists; not only in its
- rituals, but also in its personalities; and of course, through
- making available a large body of occult lore that would
- otherwise have remained unknown, or hidden in obscurity.
-
- I will be looking at this body of occult lore with other
- literary influences later, and will here concentrate on the
- rituals and personalities that have influenced Wicca.
-
- We cannot look at the GD in isolation from its own origins. It
- is descended from a myriad of esoteric traditions including
- Rosicrucianism, Theosophy, and Freemasonry. The latter in its
- own right, as well as via the SRIA - a scholarly and
- ceremonial association open to Master Masons only.
-
- Whether the German Lodge or Fraulein Sprengel actually existed
- is a matter still under debate; but either in fact or in
- spirit, this is the source for the "Cypher Manuscripts" which
- were used to found the Isis-Urania Lodge in 1888.
-
- As I'm sure everyone knows, Isis-Urania was founded by Dr
- Wynn-Westcott, Dr Woodman, and MacGregor Mathers. Not only
- were all three Master Masons; Wynn-Westcott and Mathers were
- also members of the Theosophical Society. The most important
- thing though is the fact the these three men were a ruling
- triumvirate that managed the affairs of the SRIA. This is
- important, for the SRIA included Hargrave Jennings in its
- membership, and Jennings is reputed to have been involved with
- a Pagan group at the end of the 19th century, which drew its
- inspiration from Apuleius - The Golden Ass.
-
- But back to the GD - whether the Cypher Manuscripts actually
- existed, or Wynn-Westcott manufactured them is now irrelevant;
- Mathers was commissioned to write-up the rituals into a
- workable shape, and thus the Golden Dawn was born.
-
- Members of the Isis-Urania Lodge at various times also
- included Allan Bennett, Moina Mathers, Aleister Crowley,
- Florence Farr, Maud Gonne, Annie Horniman, Arthur Machen,
- "Fiona Macleod", Arthur Waite and WB Yeats. Also associated
- were Lady Gregory, and G W Russell, or AE, whose "The Candle
- of Vision" was included in the bibliography of "The Meaning of
- Witchcraft". The literary and Celtic influences within the GD
- were immense.
-
- From the Isis-Urania Lodge sprang all the others, including
- the so-called Dissident Orders derived through Crowley. It is
- this line that some commentators trace to modern Wicca, so it
- is the one upon which we will concentrate.
-
- Aleister Crowley was initiated into the Isis-Urania Lodge on
- 18 November 1898. As you most probably know, Crowley later
- quarrelled with MacGregor Mathers, and in 1903 began to create
- his own Order, the Argenteum Astrum, or Silver Star. In 1912,
- Crowley was initiated into the OTO, and in 1921, succeeded
- Theodor Reuss as its Chief.
-
- According to Arnold Crowther's account, it was in 1946, a year
- before Crowley's death, that Crowley gave Gardner an OTO
- Charter. Ithell Colquhoun says only that it occurred in the
- 1940s, and further states that Gardner introduced material
- from the OTO, and less directly from the GD, into "...the lore
- of his covens".
-
- As Doreen Valiente also admits, "Indeed, the influence of
- Crowley was very apparent throughout the (Wiccan) rituals.".
- This, Gardner explained to her, was because the rituals he
- received from Old Dorothy's coven were very fragmentary, and
- in order to make them workable, he had to supplement them with
- other material.
-
- To give an example of some of the lines by Crowley which are
- rather familiar to modern Wiccans:
-
- I give unimaginable joys on earth; certainty, not faith, while
- in life, upon death; peace unutterable, rest, ecstasy; nor do
- I demand aught in sacrifice.
-
- I am Life, and the giver of Life, yet therefore is the
- knowledge of me the knowledge of death.
-
- And of course, the Gnostic Mass has been immensely
- influential.
-
- Not only poetry, but also magical practices in Wicca are often
- derived from GD sources. For example:
-
- the way of casting the circle: that is, the visualisation of
- the circle, and the pentagrams at the quarters, are both based
- upon the standard GD Pentagram Ritual;
-
- both the concept and word "Watchtowers" are of course from the
- Enochian system of Magic, passed to Wicca via the GD (although
- I would like to make it very clear that their use within Wicca
- bears no relation to the use within Enochia - the only
- similarity is in the name);
-
- the Elements and colours generally attributed to the Quarters
- are those of the GD;
-
- the weapons and their attributions are a combination of GD,
- Crowley and Key of Solomon.
-
- In "Witchcraft Today", Gardner says, "The people who certainly
- would have had the knowledge and ability to invent (the Wiccan
- rites) were the people who formed the Order of the Golden Dawn
- about seventy years ago...".
-
- The GD is not the only influence upon Gardner; Freemasonry has
- had a tremendous impact upon the Wicca. Not only were the
- three founders of Isis-Urania Temple Masons, so too were
- Crowley and Waite; Gardner and at least one member of the
- first coven (Daffo) were both Co-Masons. Gardner was also a
- friend of JSM Ward, who had published a number of books about
- Masonry.
-
- Doreen describes Ward as a "leading Mason", but Francis King
- says only that Ward was, "a bogus Bishop... who had written
- some quite good but far-fetched books on masonry, and who ran
- a peculiar religious-cum-occult community called The Abbey of
- Christ the King..." Whether the books were far-fetched or
- not, we can assume that some of the many similarities between
- Wicca and Masonry are in some ways due to Ward's influence.
-
- Some of these include:
-
- The Three Degrees
- The Craft
- So Mote It Be
- The Challenge
- Properly Prepared
- The 1st Degree Oath (in part)
- Presentation of the Working Tools at 1st degree
-
- and so on.
-
- It seems to me quite clear that even if Gardner received a
- traditional set of rituals from his coven, they must have been
- exceptionally sparse, as the concepts that we know of as Wicca
- today certainly derive from ceremonial magic and Freemasonry
- to a very great extent. Indeed, Gardner always claimed that
- they were sparse.
-
- It could be argued that all derive from a common source. That
- the appearance of a phrase, or technique in one tradition does
- not automatically suggest that its appearance elsewhere means
- that the one was taken from the other. However, Gardner admits
- his sources in many cases, and Doreen confirms them in others,
- so I think it is safe to presume that the rituals and
- philosophy used by Wicca descends from the traditions of
- Freemasonry and Ceremonial magic, rather than from a single
- common source. However, as Hudson Frew points out in his
- commentary upon Aidan Kelly's book, the phenomena of the
- techniques and practices of ceremonial magic influencing folk
- magic and traditions is widely recognised by anthropologists,
- and certainly does not indicate plagiarism. And of course
- there are many traditional witchcraft aspects in the Wicca.
-
- We have looked at the development of the magical orders which
- resulted from the British occult revival of the 19th and 20th
- centuries, and now we can see where this ties in with Wicca,
- and Gardner's claim of traditional initiation.
-
- I have here a "family tree" of the main branches of British
- Wicca. It is by no means exhaustive, and is intended to
- provide an outline, not a definitive history! I have included
- my own coven lines and development as an indication of the
- kind of "cross-over" of tradition which often occurs, not to
- suggest that these are the only active groups! Also, it would
- not be ethical for me to include details of other covens.
-
- We have two possible "hereditary" sources to the Gardnerian
- Craft: one, the Horsa Coven of Old Dorothy, and two, the
- Cumbrian Group which Rae Bone claims to have been initiated
- into before meeting Gardner. (NB: Doreen Valiente says that
- the Horsa Coven is not connected with Old Dorothy, but is
- another group entirely.) There is also sometimes mention of a
- St Alban's group that pre-dates Gardner, but as far as I know,
- this is mistaken. The St Albans group was Gardner's own group,
- which as far as research confirms, did not pre-date him.
-
- To return to Rae Bone: she was one of Gardner's HPSs, and her
- "line" has been immensely important to the modern Wicca; she
- was featured in the magazine series, "Man Myth and Magic" if
- anyone has a copy of that.
-
- In her heyday she ran two covens: one in Cumbria, and one in
- South London. Rae is still alive, and lives in Cumbria,
- although her last coven moved to New Zealand many years ago,
- and she is no longer active. No-one has ever been able to
- trace the coven in New Zealand.
-
- At this point, I will just mention George Pickingill, although
- he is not shown on the tree, as I think it extremely dubious
- that he had any connection with Gardner, or any other modern
- Wiccan.
-
- Pickingill died in 1909, whilst Gardner was still in Malaya.
- Eric Maple is largely responsible for the beginnings of the
- Pickingill myth, which were expanded by Bill Liddell (Lugh)
- writing in "The Wiccan" and "The Cauldron" throughout the
- 1970s. Mike Howard still has some of Liddell's material which
- he has never published, and I have yet to meet anyone within
- the British Craft who gives credence to Liddell's claims.
-
- In the book, "The Dark World of Witches", published in 1962,
- Maple tells of a number of village wise women and cunning men,
- one of whom is George Pickingill. There is a photograph
- included of an old man with a stick, holding a hat, which
- Maple describes as Pickingill. This photograph has
- subsequently been re-used many times in books about
- witchcraft and Wicca.
-
- Issue number 31 of "Insight" Magazine, dated July 1984,
- contains a very interesting letter from John Pope:
-
- "The photograph purporting to be Old George Pickingill is in
- fact a photo of Alf Cavill, a station porter at Ellstree,
- taken in the early 1960s. Alf is now dead, but he was no
- witch, and laughed over the photograph when he saw it."
-
- A very respected Craft authority has told me that he believes
- the photo, which is in his possession, to be of Pickingill,
- but like so much to do with Craft history, there is no
- definitive answer to this one.
-
- Many claims were made by Liddell; some obviously from cloud-
- cuckoo land, others which could, by a stretch of the
- imagination, be accepted. The very idea of Pickingill, an
- illiterate farm labourer, co-ordinating and supervising nine
- covens across the breadth of the UK is staggering. To accept -
- as Liddell avers - that he had the likes of Alan Bennett and
- Aleister Crowley as his pupils bends credulity even further.
-
- The infamous photograph which Liddell claims shows Crowley,
- Bennett and Pickingill together has conveniently disappeared,
- and no-one admits to ever having seen it. Like most of
- Liddell's claims, nothing has ever been substantiated, and
- when pushed, he retreats into the time honoured favourite of,
- "I can't reveal that - you're not an initiate"!
-
- But to return to the family tree: the names of Doreen
- Valiente, Pat and Arnold Crowther, Lois Bourne (Hemmings),
- Jack Bracelin and Monique Wilson will probably be the most
- familiar to you.
-
- Jack Bracelin is the author of Gardner's biography, "Gerald
- Gardner, Witch", (published 1960) now out of print, although
- still available 2nd hand, and in libraries. (In Crafting the
- Art of Magic, Kelly claims that this book was actually written
- by Idries Shah, and simply published under Bracelin's name. As
- with every other claim, Kelly offers no evidence of this)
-
- I have seen a copy of Bracelin's Book of Shadows, which it is
- claimed dates from 1949, although in The Rebirth Of
- Witchcraft, Doreen says that Bracelin was a "relative
- newcomer" in the mid-1950s. I have also been told by two
- different sources that Bracelin helped Gardner write "The
- Laws". In The Rebirth Of Witchcraft, Doreen states that she
- did not see The Laws until the mid 1950s, when she and her
- partner Ned Grove accused Gardner of concocting them in order
- to re-assert control over the coven. As Bracelin was in the
- Gardner camp during the break-up of the group, it seems
- reasonable that he did in fact help with their composition.
- (NB: Alex Sanders increased the number of "The Laws" much
- later - these appeared in June Johns' book, "The King of the
- Witches")
-
- Although Doreen claims that the reason for the coven break-up
- was the fact that Gardner and Bracelin were publicity crazy,
- there was another reason, which was the instatement of a new
- lady into the coven, effectively replacing Doreen as HPS. This
- is also the main reason for Gerald's Law which states that the
- HPS will, "...gracefully retire in favour of a younger woman,
- should the coven so decide in council." Needless to say,
- Doreen was not impressed, and she and Ned left the coven under
- very acrimonious circumstances. It was quite some time before
- Doreen had contact with Gardner again, and they never quite
- regained the degree of friendship that had previously existed.
-
- Monique and Campbell Wilson are infamous, rather than famous,
- as Gardner's heirs who sold off his magical equipment and
- possessions after his death, to Ripleys in the USA.
-
- Monique was the last of his Priestesses, and many Wiccans
- today still spit when her name is mentioned. Pat Crowther was
- rather scathing about her recently in an interview, and in The
- Rebirth Of Witchcraft, although Doreen tells of the sale of
- Gardner's magical possessions to Ripleys, she doesn't ever
- mention the Wilsons by name. In effect, the Craft closed ranks
- against them, and they became outcasts.
-
- Eventually, in the face of such opposition they had to sell
- the Museum in Castletown, and they moved to Torremolinos,
- where they bought a cafe. Monique died nine years after
- selling the Museum. It is rumoured that Campbell Wilson moved
- to the USA, and met with a car accident there: this is only
- hearsay though - I really do not know for sure what happened
- to him.
-
- However, Monique was influential in a way that even she could
- not have imagined, when in 1964 or 5 she initiated Ray
- Buckland, who with his wife Rosemary (later divorced), was
- very influential in the development of the Wicca in the USA.
-
- Fortunately, Richard and Tamarra James managed to buy the bulk
- of Gardner's collection back from Ripleys in 1987, for the
- princely sum of US$40,000, and it is now back within the
- Craft, and available for initiates to consult and view.
-
- D and C S. are probably completely anonymous, and if it were
- not for the fact that C initiated Robert Cochrane (briefly
- mentioned earlier) they would probably stay that way!
-
- Cochrane's origins are obscure, but I have been told that he
- was initiated into the Gardnerian tradition by C S, and met
- Doreen Valiente through a mutual acquaintance in 1964. When he
- met Doreen, however, he claimed to be a hereditary witch, from
- a different tradition to Gardner's, and as Doreen confirms,
- was contemptuous of what he called "Gardnerian" witches.
- Indeed, Doreen believes he coined the term, "Gardnerian".
-
- Doreen said she was completely taken in by Cochrane and for a
- while, worked with him and the "Clan of Tubal-Cain" as he
- described his tradition, which was also known as "The Royal
- Windsor Cuveen", or 1734.
-
- The figures "1734" have an interesting history. Doreen gives a
- rather strange account of them in The Rebirth Of Witchcraft,
- which contradicts what Cochrane himself describes in a letter
- to Joe Wilson, dated "12th Night 1966", where he says,
-
- "...the order of 1734 is not a date of an event but a grouping
- of numerals that mean something to a witch.
-
- "One that becomes seven states of wisdom - the Goddess of the
- Cauldron. Three that are the Queens of the Elements - fire
- belonging alone to Man, and the Blacksmith God. Four that are
- Queens of the Wind Gods.
-
- "The Jewish orthodoxy believe that whomever knows the Holy and
- Unspeakable name of God has absolute power over the world of
- form. Very briefly, the name of God spoken as Tetragrammaton
- ... breaks down in Hebrew to the letters YHVH, or the Adam
- Kadmon (The Heavenly Man). Adam Kadmon is a composite of all
- Archangels - in other words a poetic statement of the names of
- the Elements.
-
- "So what the Jew and the Witch believe alike, is that the man
- who discovers the secret of the Elements controls the physical
- world. 1734 is the witch way of saying YHVH." (Cochrane, 1966)
-
- Although Doreen says that Cochrane's group was small, it still
- proved to be remarkably influential. As well as Cochrane and
- his wife (whom Doreen refers to as "Jean") and Doreen herself,
- there were others who are well-known today, and a man called
- Ronald White, who very much wanted to bring about a new age in
- England, with the return of King Arthur.
-
- In The Rebirth Of Witchcraft, Doreen elaborates upon the
- circumstances surrounding the death of Cochrane: the bald
- facts are that he died at the Summer Solstice of 1966 of an
- overdose. Craft tradition believes that he became in fact, and
- of his own choice, the male ritual sacrifice which is
- sometimes symbolically enacted at the height of Summer.
-
- The Royal Windsor Cuveen disbanded after Cochrane died, only
- to be re-born from the ashes at Samhain that year under a new
- name - The Regency. All of its early members were from the
- Royal Windsor Cuveen, and they were under the leadership of
- Ronald White. The Regency proved to be of great importance to
- the development of the Wicca, although its existence was kept
- a fairly close secret, and even today, there are relatively
- few people who have ever heard of it.
-
- Meetings were held in North London, at a place called Queens
- Wood. As well as Ron White and Doreen Valiente, members
- included "John Math", founder of the Witchcraft Research
- Association in 1964, and editor of Pentagram magazine, and the
- founder of the Pagan Movement, Tony Kelly. At its height,
- there were frequently more than 40 in attendance at rites,
- which tended to be of the dramatic, pagan kind rather than the
- ceremonial associated with high ritual magic. The Regency
- operated fairly consistently for over twelve years, finally
- disbanding in 1978. The Membership roll reads like a who's who
- of the British Wicca! Some of the rites have been incorporated
- into modern Wiccan rituals - in fact, one was used at the Pan
- European Wiccan Conference 1991 with very great success.
-
- Moving back over to Rae Bone's line, there are a number of
- influential people here, mainly through her initiates, Madge
- and Arthur, who probably take the award for the most prolific
- pair in Wiccandom! Rae, although initiated by Gardner, does of
- course also claim a hereditary status in her own right.
-
- Madge and Arthur's initiates include:
-
- John and Jean Score
-
- John Score was the partner of Michael Houghton (mentioned
- earlier), and the founder of the Pagan Federation, which is
- very active today.
-
- Houghton died under very mysterious circumstances, which is
- briefly mentioned in "The Sword of Wisdom" by Ithell
- Colquhoun. My Craft source told me that this was actually a
- ritual that went badly wrong, and Houghton ended up on the
- wrong end of some fairly potent energies.
-
- There is an interesting anecdote about Houghton in The Rebirth
- Of Withcraft, which is taken from "Nightside of Eden" by
- Kenneth Grant, and agrees in some respect to a similar story
- that I was told some years ago. Doreen suggests in The Rebirth
- Of Witchcraft that the story may relate to a magical working
- involving Kenneth Grant and his wife, Gardner, Dolores North
- (Madeline Montalban), and an un-named witch, who was probably
- Olive Green.
-
- They were all to perform a ritual together, supposedly to
- contact an extra-terrestrial being. The material basis for the
- rite, which took place in 1949, was a drawing by AO Spare.
-
- Apparently soon after the rite commenced, a nearby bookseller
- (Michael Houghton) turned up and interrupted proceedings. On
- hearing that Kenneth Grant was within, he declined to enter,
- and wandered off. The rite was disrupted, and the story goes
- that everyone just went home.
-
- Kenneth Grant claims that as a result of disturbing their
- working, Houghton's marriage broke up, and that Houghton died
- in mysterious circumstances. In fact, the Houghton divorce was
- a cause celebre, with her suing him for cruelty because he
- boasted of being a Sagittarian while sneering at her because
- she was only a dingy old Capricorn!
-
- The interrupted ritual could well have taken place. Madeline
- had a flat near to Atlantis (Houghton's shop), and would
- certainly have known both Grant and Houghton. I know for a
- fact that Madeline was acquainted with Gerald, although her
- opinion of both him and the Wicca was rather poor. One of
- Madeline's older students told me that she thought Gardner
- rather a fraud, and ritually inept. She also had a very low
- opinion of Wiccans, and refused to allow her own students to
- participate in Wiccan rites. The reason for this lies in an
- anecdote which Doreen doesn't relate: the story goes that
- Madeline agreed to participate in a rite with Gerald, which
- turned out to involve Madeline being tied up and tickled with
- a feather duster! The great lady was not amused.
-
- Prudence Jones
-
- Prudence was for many years the president of the Pagan
- Federation, and editor of its newsletter. She inherited her
- role from John Score, after he passed away. With Nigel
- Pennick, Prudence also runs the Pagan Anti-Defamation League
- (PADL), and is an active astrologer and therapist. She has
- edited a book on astrology, and with Caitlin Matthews, edited
- "Voices from the Circle", published by Aquarian Press.
- Although Prudence took her degree in Philosophy, her main
- interests lie in the areas of the Grail and troubadour tales,
- and she has published privately an excellent essay on the
- Grail and Wicca. She is also a very highly respected
- astrologer, who lectures extensively in Britain.
-
- Vivianne and Chris Crowley
-
- Vivianne Crowley, is author of "Wicca - The Old Religion in
- the New Age", and also secretary of the Pagan Federation. She
- has a PhD in Psychology, and is perhaps the only person to
- have been a member of both a Gardnerian Coven and an
- Alexandrian one simultaneously!
-
- Vivianne is very active at the moment, and has initiated
- people in Germany (having memorised the ritual in German - a
- language she doesn't speak!), Norway, and - on the astral -
- Brazil. As a result of her book, she receives many letters
- from people from all around the world, and organised the first
- ever pan-European Wiccan conference, held in Germany 1990. The
- second conference was held in Britain at the June solstice,
- and the third (1992) in Norway. In 1993, the Conference will
- be in Scotland.
-
- John and Kathy (Caitlin) Matthews, are probably well-known to
- everyone, but possibly their Gardnerian initiations are not
- such common knowledge. The story that John Matthews relates in
- "Voices from the Circle" is essentially the one which he told
- the HPS who initiated him.
-
- Pat and Arnold Crowther
-
- I have left Pat and Arnold till last, as it is from their line
- that the infamous Alex Sanders derives! It is no secret
- anymore that Alex, far from being initiated by his grandmother
- when he was seven, was in fact turned down by Pat Crowther in
- 1961, but was later accepted by one of her ex-coven members,
- Pat Kopanski, and initiated to 1st Degree.
-
- In "The Rebirth of Witchcraft" Doreen says that Alex later met
- Gardner, and was allowed to copy from the Book of Shadows;
- Craft tradition is somewhat different! It has always been said
- (even by Alex's supporters!) that he pinched what he could
- from Pat Kopanski before being chucked out, and that the main
- differences between the Alexandrian and Gardnerian Books of
- Shadows occur where Alex mis-heard, or mis-copied something!
- There are certainly significant differences between the two
- Books; some parts of Gardnerian ritual are quite unknown
- within the Alexandrian tradition, and the ritual techniques
- are often different. It is usually very easy to spot whether
- someone is an Alexandrian, or Gardnerian initiate.
-
- Alex needed a HPS, and as we know, chose Maxine Morris for the
- role. Maxine is a striking Priestess, and made a very good
- visual focus for the movement which grew in leaps and bounds.
-
- In the late 1960s, Alex and Maxine were prolific initiators,
- and a number of their initiates have become well known. Some
- came to Australia, and there are still a number of covens in
- the UK today whose HP and/or HPS was initiated by Alex or
- Maxine.
-
- Alex and Maxine's most famous initiates are almost certainly
- Janet and Stewart Farrar, who left them in 1971 to form their
- own coven, first in England, then later, in Ireland. Through
- their books, they have probably had the most influence over
- the direction that the modern Craft has taken. Certainly in
- Australia, the publication of "What Witches Do" was an
- absolute watershed, and with Janet and Stewart's consistent
- output, their form of Wicca is more likely to become the
- "standard" than any other type.
-
- Since their early days of undiluted Alexandrianism, they have
- drifted somewhat towards a more Gardnerian approach, and
- today, tell everyone that there are no differences between the
- two traditions. In fact, despite the merging that has been
- occurring over the last few years, there are very distinct
- differences between the traditions; some merely external,
- others of a very significant difference of philosophy.
-
- Seldiy Bate was originally magically trained by Madeline
- Montalban, and then took an Alexandrian initiation from Maxine
- and Alex. Her husband, Nigel, was also initiated by Maxine,
- and they have been "public" witches for a number of years now,
- often appearing on TV, radio and in the press. Their
- background in ritual magic is expressed in the type of coven
- that they run; a combination of Wicca and Ceremonial Magic.
-
- In 1971, Alex and Maxine went their separate ways. David
- Goddard is a Liberal Catholic Priest, and for many years, he
- and Maxine worked in the Liberal Catholic faith, and did not
- run a coven of any kind. Then in 1984, Maxine gathered
- together a group again, and started practising a combination
- of Wicca, Qabalah and Liberal Catholicism. She and David
- separated in 1987, and since then her coven has been
- exclusively Wiccan. In 1989, she married one of her initiates,
- Vincent, and they are still running an active coven in London
- today.
-
- Alex's history after the split was a little more sordid, with
- one girl he married, Jill, filling the gutter press with
- stories about Alex being homosexual, and defrauding her of all
- her money to spend on his boyfriends. Sally Taylor was
- initiated by Maxine and David, but then transferred to Alex.
- She was trained by him, and then started her own group.
-
- I'd now like to focus upon the last of the strands which I
- believe has been influential upon the birth and development of
- Wicca; that of the literary traditions and sources to which
- Gardner would have had access. To a certain extent these are
- contiguous with the magical traditions described earlier, as
- nowhere is it ever suggested that Gardner did in fact ever
- work in a magical Lodge, so we must assume that his knowledge
- came from the written form of the rites, not from the actual
- practise of them.
-
- From reading Gardner's books, it is quite apparent that
- Margaret Murray had a tremendous impact upon him. Her book,
- "The God of the Witches" was published in 1933, and twelve
- years previously, "The Witch Cult in Western Europe" had
- appeared. "The God of the Witches" has been tremendously
- influential on a number of people, and certainly inspired
- Gardner.
-
- In fact, "Witchcraft Today", published by Gardner in 1954
- contained a foreword by Margaret Murray. At this time,
- remember, Murray's work was still taken seriously, and she
- remained the contributor on the subject of witchcraft for the
- Encyclopedia Britannica for a number of years.
-
- Now of course her work has been largely discredited, although
- she remains a source of inspiration, if not historical
- accuracy. In Gardner's day, the idea of a continuing worship
- of the old pagan gods would have been a staggering theory, and
- in the second article in my series about Murray (published in
- The Cauldron), I made the point that Murray may have had to
- pretend scientific veracity in order to get her work published
- in such times. Don't forget that Dion Fortune had to publish
- her work privately, as did Gardner with High Magic's Aid.
- Carlo Ginzburg's excellent book, "Ecstasies", also supports
- Murray's basic premise; although of course he regrets her
- historical deceptions.
-
- There were of course other sources than Murray. In 1899,
- "Aradia: Gospel of the Witches" was published. Most of
- Crowley's work was available during the pre- and post-war
- years, as were the texts written and translated by MacGregor
- Mathers and Waite. Also readily available were works such as
- The Magus, and of course the classics, from which Gardner drew
- much inspiration.
-
- Of paramount importance would have been "The White Goddess",
- by Robert Graves, which is still a standard reference book on
- any British Wiccan's bookshelf. This was published in 1952;
- three years after High Magic's Aid appeared, and two years
- before Gardner's first non-fictional book about witchcraft. I
- would just like to say at this point that Graves has taken
- some very unfair criticism in respect of this book. The White
- Goddess was written as a work of poetry, not history, and to
- criticise it for being historically innaccurate is to miss the
- point. Unfortunately, I agree that some writers have referred
- to it as an "authority", and thus led their readers up the
- garden path. This is not Graves's fault, nor do I believe it
- was his intention.
-
- Another book which has had a profound influence on many
- Wiccans, and would undoubtedly have been well known by Gardner
- is "The Golden Bough"; although the entire book was written
- based upon purely secondary research, it is an extensive
- examination of many pagan practices from the Ancient World,
- and the emphasis of the male sacrifice could certainly have
- been taken from here equally as well as from Murray. Certain
- of the Gardnerian ritual practices were almost certainly
- derived from The Golden Bough, or from Frazer's own sources.
-
- In "Witchcraft Today" Gardner mentions a number of authors
- when speculating where the Wiccan rites came from. He says
- that, "The only man I can think of who could have invented the
- rites was the late Aleister Crowley."
-
- He continues to say, "The only other man I can think of who
- could have done it is Kipling...". He also mentions that,
- "Hargrave Jennings might have had a hand in them..." and then
- suggests that "Barrat (sic) of The Magus, circa 1800, would
- have had the ability to invent or resurrect the cult."
-
- It's possible that these references are something of a damage
- control operation by Gardner, who, according to Doreen, was
- not too impressed when she kept telling him that she
- recognised certain passages in the Witch rites! "Witchcraft
- Today" was published the year after Doreen's initiation, and
- perhaps by seeming genuinely interested in where the Rites
- came from, Gardner thought he might give the appearance of
- innocence of their construction!
-
- As mentioned previously, Gardner also had a large collection
- of unpublished MSS, which he used extensively, and one has
- only to read his books to realise that he was a very well-read
- man, with wide-ranging interests. Exactly the sort of man who
- would be able to draw together a set of rituals if required.
-
- The extensive bibliography to "The Meaning of Witchcraft"
- published in 1959, demonstrates this rather well. Gardner
- includes Magick in Theory and Practice and The Equinox of the
- Gods by Crowley; The Mystical Qabalah by Dion Fortune; The
- Goetia; The White Goddess (Graves); Lady Charlotte Guest's
- translation of The Mabinogion; English Folklore by Christina
- Hole; The Kabbalah Unveiled and the Abramelin by Mathers; both
- Margaret Murray's books and Godfrey Leland's Gypsy Sorcery, as
- well as a myriad of classic texts, from Plato to Bede!
-
- Although this bibliography postdates the creation of
- Gardnerian Wicca, it certainly indicates from where Gardner
- draws his inspiration from. There are also several books
- listed which are either directly, or indirectly, concerned
- with sex magic, Priapic Cults, or Tantra.
-
- Hargrave Jenning, mentioned earlier, wrote a book called "The
- Rosicrucians, their Rites and Mysteries", which Francis King
- describes as a book, "concerned almost exclusively with
- phallicism and phallic images - Jennings saw the penis
- everywhere."
-
- As I mentioned earlier, Hargrave Jennings, a member of the
- SRIA, also belonged to a group, described as a coven, which
- met in the Cambridge area in the 1870s, and performed rituals
- based upon the classical traditions - specifically, from The
- Golden Ass. There is no evidence to support this, except that
- there are often found references to a "Cambridge Coven" linked
- to Jennings' name.
- Many of the rituals we are familiar with today were of course
- later additions by Doreen Valiente, and these have been well
- documented by both her and the Farrars, in a number of books.
- Doreen admits that she deliberately cut much of the poetry by
- Aleister Crowley, and substituted either her own work, or
- poems from other sources, such as the Carmina Gadelica.
-
- Of course we can never really know the truth about the origins
- of the Wicca. Gardner may have been an utter fraud; he may
- have actually received a "Traditional" initiation; or, as a
- number of people have suggested, he may have created the Wicca
- as a result of a genuine religious experience, drawing upon
- his extensive literary and magical knowledge to create, or
- help create, the rites and philosophy.
-
- What I think we can be fairly certain about is that he was
- sincere in his belief. If there had been no more to the whole
- thing than an old man's fantasy, then the Wicca would not have
- grown to be the force that it is today, and we would not all
- be sitting here in Canberra on a Saturday morning!
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