Witchology.com
Witchology.com is the website of WICA - the Witchcraft Information Centre and Archive - founded in 1999 by Dr Leo Ruickbie as a research consultancy and education provider specialising in the areas of Witchcraft, Wicca, Paganism, Magic (Magick) and the Occult. We have been online continuously since 2000.
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Let me challenge you to see what Wicca and witchcraft are really all about... All you have to do is go to one of the official websites of witchcraft (WorthFinding.com, 2002)
From Witchology.com Visitors:
Many thanks for the wonderful newsletters and for the openmindedness you wear so well. May the spirits guide you. (Wendy, 21st November, 2004.)
About Leo Ruickbie's Books:
I highly recomend Witchcraft out of the Shadows to anyone with the slightest interest in the "Craft". (Blogcritics.com, 2004)
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News on Paganism
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Breaking News: Paganism
We search the world's media using the keyword Paganism to bring you the latest breaking stories. Please be aware that these links will take you away from the Witchology.com website and we bear no responsibility for their content.
Check back often as this page will be updated frequently.
Yahoo! News Search Results for paganism
Yahoo! News Search Results for paganism
Misunderstanding Paganism (BellaOnline)
Many modern Pagans find themselves confronted over their spiritual beliefs. Just looking at the population proportions, Paganism is practiced by a very distinct minority of Americans.
Sermon surfin' (winnipegsun.com)
Gerry Michalski delivers his weekly sermons on the bus, in fast-food restaurants and on the street -- all without leaving his church. Godcasting gives the lead pastor of Soul Sanctuary a portable pulpit that allows his words to go wherever people choose to take them.
Peek inside one of the most provocative minds (MSNBC)
In “Seducing the Demon,” Erica Jong recounts her long and successful career as a poet, novelist and feminist revolutionary. Read an excerpt.
Last bastions of paganism tell all (Baltic Times)
VILNIUS - Christianity took a long time to get to Lithuania. It wasn’t officially adopted until the 14th century. And once it got here, it suffered quite a bit, and then again much later during the Soviet regime.
Will India repeat Melbourne show in Beijing? (Central Chronicle)
Why not guillotine to hardcore terrorists instead of lengthy judicial trial?
Make a leprechaun to bring you the luck of the Irish (Belleville News-Democrat)
By Kathy Antoniotti -- I may have an Italian name, but don't let that fool you. I am, by ancestry and choice, Irish. No more so than on March 17, when everyone else claims to be Irish, too. The Irish are a lyrical lot and never seem to take life or themselves too seriously. We believe any holiday, especially St. Patrick's Day, is great cause for celebration.
Irish, for a night (Beloit Daily News)
Stray tractors, hula-hoopers and politicians masquerading as leprechauns strolled along East Grand Avenue Friday night. Free from snow and rain, Beloit's first lighted St. Patrick's Day parade attracted more than 2,000 attendees.
St. Patrick statue restored after vandalism (Oakland Press)
WHITE LAKE TWP. - Irish eyes are smilin' today at St. Patrick Catholic Church, where parishioners' beloved statue of their patron saint in Ireland has been repaired after being nearly destroyed by vandals.
Quiz: Who was St. Pat? (Seattle Post-Intelligencer)
Before you hoist a glass today, see how much you really know about St. Patrick.
The British Roots of St. Patrick's Day (BellaOnline)
St. Patrick (born Maewyn) was believed to have been born sometime between 372 and 390 AD, in an area that is between what is now modern day northern England or southern Scotland. He was the son of Roman parents. He called himself Patricius, which means well-born in Latin.
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