Thursday, 18 June 2026

Book time: Witchcraft in Britain by Christina Hole

 





Witchcraft in Britain 

by Christina Hole


Paperback. First published 1977 by BT Batsford under the title “Witchcraft in England”. 1945.
Republished by Granada  Publishing/ Paladin Books 1979. 
Version discussed here is the 1979 paperback edition from my own library.
208 pages
ISBN
0586083332


Witchcraft in Britain (originally published as Witchcraft in England in 1945) is one of the classic popular histories of British witchcraft. Written by folklorist Christina Hole ( more on her later) and illustrated by the celebrated artist and writer Mervyn Peake, the book surveys the history, beliefs, fears, and folklore surrounding witchcraft in England from the medieval period through the decline of witch trials and belief in witchcraft.



Hole divides the subject into a series of thematic chapters rather than presenting a strict chronology. Topics include:

  • The history of magical practices and folk beliefs.
  • The relationship between witchcraft and religion.
  • Maleficium (harmful magic used to injure people, livestock, or crops).
  • Familiar spirits and animal companions.
  • Witch-finding and the methods used to identify suspected witches.
  • White witches, cunning folk, and village healers.
  • Astrology, prophecy, and occult practices.
  • The gradual decline of belief in witchcraft during the Enlightenment.  



The book discusses famous witchcraft cases, the social conditions that led to accusations, and the widespread fear of supernatural harm that shaped everyday life in Britain for centuries.


Christina Hole’s approach

Unlike many modern academic historians, Hole wrote for a general audience. Her style is clear, engaging, and rich in folklore. She was one of Britain’s leading folklorists and was particularly interested in how traditional beliefs survived in customs and superstitions.  


Because the book was written in the 1940s, some of its interpretations reflect the scholarship of its time. Modern historians tend to place greater emphasis on social, economic, and gender factors behind witch trials than Hole did. Nevertheless, the book remains valuable as a survey of traditional beliefs and as a snapshot of mid-twentieth-century folklore studies.  


The illustrations

One of the book’s greatest attractions is the artwork by Mervyn Peake. Long before he became famous for the Gormenghast novels, Peake created haunting black-and-white illustrations for the volume. His drawings of witches, familiars, and supernatural scenes contribute greatly to the book’s eerie atmosphere.  



Importance to modern readers

For readers interested in:

  • British folklore
  • Traditional witchcraft
  • Witch trials
  • Cunning folk and folk magic
  • The history of occult beliefs

the book remains an enjoyable introduction. It is especially useful for understanding how ordinary people in Britain once viewed magic and the supernatural, rather than focusing solely on modern Wicca or contemporary paganism.  


From an occult perspective

Many modern practitioners of traditional witchcraft, folk magic, and pagan spirituality appreciate the book because it preserves accounts of charms, superstitions, healing practices, and beliefs that might otherwise have been forgotten. However, it should be read primarily as a work of folklore and historical interpretation rather than as a practical manual of witchcraft.


Overall, Witchcraft in Britain is a fascinating blend of folklore, history, and the supernatural, made even more memorable by Mervyn Peake’s atmospheric illustrations. It remains one of the classic introductory works on the subject nearly eighty years after its first publication.  



About the author 

Christina Hole (1896–1985)


Christina Hole was an English folklorist, writer, and lecturer best known for her studies of witchcraft, folklore, customs, ghosts, and popular beliefs. She was one of the most respected popularizers of folklore in twentieth-century Britain, bringing academic subjects to a wide general audience through accessible books and lectures.


Early Life and Education


Born in 1896, Christina Hole was educated at St Hugh’s College, Oxford. She developed a lifelong interest in folklore, local traditions, and the ways in which ancient beliefs survived in modern society.


Unlike many scholars who focused exclusively on archives and historical records, Hole was interested in living traditions. She collected stories, customs, and beliefs from ordinary people, helping to preserve aspects of British folk culture that were disappearing during the twentieth century.


Folklore Research

Christina Hole’s work covered a remarkable range of subjects:

  • Witchcraft and witch trials
  • Ghosts and hauntings
  • Folk medicine
  • Superstitions
  • Seasonal customs
  • Divination and fortune-telling
  • Folk beliefs surrounding birth, marriage, and death

She approached these subjects primarily as a folklorist rather than as an occult practitioner. Her goal was to understand what people believed and how those beliefs influenced everyday life.


Major Works



Some of her best-known books include:

* indicates free download available 


Of these, A Mirror of Witchcraft is often regarded as her most influential work. It explores the history of witchcraft beliefs from antiquity through the twentieth century and remains widely read by historians, folklorists, and occult enthusiasts.


Her View of Witchcraft

Hole wrote during a fascinating period. Modern Wicca was only beginning to emerge publicly through figures such as Gerald Gardner. Although she was aware of contemporary claims about surviving witch cults, she generally approached such topics cautiously and preferred historical evidence over speculation.



Her books focus less on practicing magic and more on:

  • Why people believed in witches
  • How accusations arose
  • The role of fear and superstition
  • The social effects of witchcraft beliefs

Legacy

Today, Christina Hole is remembered as one of Britain’s most important popular folklorists. While some of her interpretations have been revised by modern scholarship, her work remains valuable because she documented traditions and beliefs that were still remembered during her lifetime.


For readers interested in witchcraft, paganism, folklore, ghosts, and the supernatural, her books provide an excellent window into the beliefs of earlier generations. Many modern practitioners of folk magic and traditional witchcraft still consult her works, not as instruction manuals, but as rich sources of historical lore and folk tradition.


She died in 1985 at the age of 89, leaving behind a substantial body of work that continues to influence the study of British folklore and witchcraft traditions.

Wednesday, 17 June 2026

Germanic and Teutonic Deities and mythology

 





Germanic and Teutonic Folklore and deities 



Long before Adolf Hitler and the Third Reich sullied and corrupted it, Germanic and Teutonic folklore forms one of the richest mythological traditions in Europe. Rooted in the beliefs of the ancient Germanic peoples who inhabited northern and central Europe before the spread of Christianity, these traditions gave rise to a vast world of gods, spirits, heroes, magical beings, and cosmic mysteries. Although the terms “Germanic” and “Teutonic” are often used interchangeably, Germanic is the broader scholarly term encompassing the myths and folklore of various tribes, including the Saxons, Franks, Angles, Jutes, Goths, and Scandinavians. Much of what survives today comes from the Norse branch of the tradition, preserved in medieval Icelandic texts, but echoes of older Germanic beliefs can be found throughout Europe.


The Sacred Cosmos

Germanic mythology envisioned the universe as a living, interconnected structure centered upon the cosmic tree Yggdrasil. This immense ash tree connected the Nine Worlds, realms inhabited by gods, giants, elves, dwarfs, humans, and the dead. The cosmos was not divided into simple categories of good and evil; instead, it was a dynamic balance between order and chaos.



Among the Nine Worlds were:


The universe was viewed as cyclical rather than permanent, destined to end and be reborn through the cataclysm known as Ragnarök.


The Great Gods

Odin


Odin was the chief god, associated with wisdom, magic, poetry, war, and death. Unlike many supreme deities, Odin was not all-powerful. He constantly sought knowledge, sacrificing an eye at the Well of Mimir and hanging himself upon Yggdrasil to gain the secrets of the runes.


Odin was accompanied by his ravens, Huginn (“Thought”) and Muninn (“Memory”), who flew across the world gathering information. He was also attended by wolves and rode the eight-legged horse Sleipnir.


Thor

Thor was perhaps the most beloved deity among ordinary people. God of thunder, storms, protection, and strength, Thor wielded the mighty hammer Mjölnir. Farmers, warriors, and travelers invoked him for protection against danger and chaos.



Thor’s endless battles against giants symbolised humanity’s struggle to maintain order against the forces of destruction.




Freyja


Freyja was among the most important female deities. She governed love, beauty, fertility, wealth, and magical arts known as seiðr. Freyja also possessed a warrior aspect, receiving half of the slain warriors into her hall, while Odin received the other half in Valhalla.



Freyr


Freyr represented fertility, peace, abundance, and kingship. Closely connected to agriculture, he was revered by farming communities throughout the Germanic world.


Tyr


Tyr embodied courage, justice, and honourable warfare. His most famous myth recounts his sacrifice of a hand to bind the monstrous wolf Fenrir.


Frigg


Frigg was associated with marriage, motherhood, and prophecy. As Odin’s wife, she occupied a central role among the divine powers and was renowned for her wisdom.



The Vanir and Aesir


Germanic mythology recognised two major groups of deities: the Aesir and the Vanir.


The Aesir were associated with sovereignty, war, wisdom, and social order. The Vanir were connected to fertility, prosperity, nature, and magic. According to myth, the two groups fought a great war before establishing peace and exchanging hostages.


Many scholars interpret this story as preserving memories of older religious traditions merging together over centuries.


Spirits, Elves, and Hidden Beings


Germanic folklore extends far beyond the gods. The landscape was believed to be inhabited by numerous supernatural beings.



Elves


Elves were powerful nature spirits. In older traditions they were neither wholly good nor evil. They could bring blessings, healing, fertility, or illness depending upon how they were treated.


Dwarfs


Dwarfs lived beneath mountains and earth. They forged magical treasures, including Thor’s hammer Mjölnir and Odin’s spear Gungnir.


Giants


Jötnar represented primal natural forces. Although often enemies of the gods, they were not merely evil monsters. Many possessed great wisdom and were closely related to the divine families.


Land Spirits


Germanic peoples believed in numerous local spirits inhabiting forests, rivers, hills, and ancient stones. These beings were often honored with offerings to ensure good fortune and avoid misfortune.


Many later folk traditions concerning household spirits, brownies, kobolds, and nature beings likely derive from these ancient beliefs.


The Norns and Fate


One of the most profound concepts in Germanic thought was fate, known as wyrd among the Anglo-Saxons.


The three Norns—UrdVerdandi, and Skuld—wove the destinies of gods and mortals alike.


Unlike many religious traditions, Germanic mythology taught that even the gods could not entirely escape fate. This belief fostered an ethic of courage: one should face destiny with honor, even when defeat is inevitable.


Heroes and Legendary Sagas

Germanic folklore is filled with heroic figures whose stories blend myth and history.


Among the most famous is Sigurd, the dragon-slayer whose adventures inspired later medieval legends. His story shares themes with other Germanic heroic traditions, including the epic of Beowulf.


These tales celebrated bravery, loyalty, hospitality, and the pursuit of lasting fame through noble deeds.


Magic and the Runes

The ancient Germanic peoples regarded runes as far more than an alphabet. The runic systems, particularly the Elder Futhark, were believed to contain sacred and magical power.


Runes were used for:


  • Divination
  • Protection
  • Blessings
  • Memorial inscriptions
  • Magical workings


According to myth, Odin discovered the runes through sacrifice and spiritual ordeal. Consequently, rune magic occupied an important place in both mythology and later folklore.


Folklore After Christianisation

When Christianity spread across Germanic Europe between the 4th and 12th centuries, the old gods gradually ceased to be openly worshipped. Yet many beliefs survived in folk customs, legends, and seasonal celebrations.


Ancient deities often became transformed into:

  • Folk spirits
  • Legendary kings
  • Demonic figures
  • Characters in fairy tales


Traditional beliefs about elves, trolls, witches, ghosts, enchanted forests, and sacred springs continued for centuries alongside Christian practices.


Legacy


The influence of Germanic and Teutonic folklore remains enormous. It inspired the works of 
Jacob Grimm and Wilhelm Grimm, shaped the operas of Richard Wagner, and profoundly influenced modern fantasy literature through figures such as J. R. R. Tolkien.


At its heart, Germanic mythology presents a worldview in which wisdom must be earned through sacrifice, courage matters even in the face of inevitable loss, and the natural world is alive with spiritual presence. Its gods are not distant, perfect beings but complex figures who struggle against fate, making the tradition one of the most human and enduring mythologies ever recorded.