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  2. Great rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_rite

    The great rite is a Wiccan ritual involving symbolic sexual intercourse with the purpose of drawing energy from the powerful connection between a male and female. Both receive more power. [1]

  3. Covenstead - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Covenstead

    Depending on the location and residence of coven members and the size of their group, a covenstead can be established in a number of spaces both indoor and outdoor. [2] As a predominant function of a covenstead is to provide a safe space to conduct rituals it is typically found somewhere coven members can remain uninterrupted and able to ...

  4. Malkin Tower - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malkin_Tower

    Malkin Tower (or the Malking Tower or Mocking Tower) was the home of Elizabeth Southerns, also known as Demdike, and her granddaughter Alizon Device, two of the chief protagonists in the Lancashire witch trials of 1612. Perhaps the best-known alleged witches' coven in English legal history took place in Malkin Tower on 10 April 1612.

  5. New Forest coven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Forest_coven

    The New Forest coven was an alleged group of pagan witches who met around the area of the New Forest in Southern England during the early 20th century. According to his own claims, in September 1939, a British occultist named Gerald Gardner was initiated into the coven and subsequently used its beliefs and practices as a basis from which he formed the tradition of Gardnerian Wicca.

  6. Edith Woodford-Grimes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edith_Woodford-Grimes

    Edith Rose Woodford-Grimes (1887–1975) was an English Wiccan who achieved recognition as one of the faith's earliest known adherents. She had been a member of the New Forest coven which met during the late 1930s and early 1940s, and through this became a friend and working partner of Gerald Gardner, who would go on to found the Gardnerian tradition with her help.

  7. Coven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coven

    A coven (/ k ʌ v ən /) is a group or gathering of witches.The word "coven" (from Anglo-Norman covent, cuvent, from Old French covent, from Latin conventum = convention) remained largely unused in English until 1921 when Margaret Murray promoted the idea that all witches across Europe met in groups of thirteen which they called "covens".

  8. Bricket Wood coven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bricket_Wood_coven

    The Witches' Cottage, where the Bricket Wood coven met to celebrate the sabbats and esbats. The Bricket Wood coven, or Hertfordshire coven [1] is a coven of Gardnerian witches founded in the 1940s by Gerald Gardner. It is notable for being the first coven in the Gardnerian line, though having its supposed origins in the pre-Gardnerian New ...

  9. Eleanor Bone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleanor_Bone

    Eleanor "Ray" Bone (15 December 1911 – 21 September 2001) who also went under the craft name Artemis, was an influential figure in the neopagan religion of Wicca.She claimed to have been initiated in 1941 by a couple of hereditary witches in Cumbria.