Black Magic and Witchcraft

Aradia: Gospel of the Witches - Charles G. Leland (1899)

Aradia: Gospel of the Witches is a neo-Paganism classic text that claims to be an actual sacred text of traditional witchcraft from the Tuscan region of Italy. Charles Leland, an American expatriate writer claimed that he based the book on information passed on to him by a woman named Maddelena who had helped him with investigating and compiling local folklore. Leland claimed that on New Years day, 1897, Maddelena handed him a text that she said she had written, and which appeared to be in her own handwriting, called the Vangel. Leland then used the Vangel as the core of Aradia: Gospel of the Witches and based everything else upon it. Leland further claimed that after Maddelena gave him the manuscript, she went missing and was never heard from again.

The Secret to Getting What You Really Want Is Simply Using the RIGHT Kind of Magick & Spells...



Just Released! Updated and Revised!

Magic Spell Books

DOWNLOAD Your Copy NOW at Special Low Introductory Prices TODAY!

Karanina's Book of SpellsKaranina's Book of Spells New & Revised 2nd Edition
Now ONLY $6.99
Potent Protection SpellsPotent Protection Spells New & Revised 2nd Edition
Now ONLY $6.99
21 Spells of Domesius21 Spells of Domesius New & Revised 2nd Edition
Now ONLY $5.99
Best of Spelwerx 2008Best of Spelwerx 2008 - Magic Spell Collection
Now ONLY $8.99
Ancient Conjurations and InvocationsAncient Conjurations and Invocations New & Revised 2nd Edition
Now ONLY $6.99
Earth-Based Power SpellsEarth-Based Power Spells New & Revised 2nd Edition
Now ONLY $6.99
Silkira's Sex MagicSilkira's Sex Magic New & Revised 2nd Edition
Now ONLY $6.99
The Spells of SevenThe Spells of Seven — Second Revised Edition
Now ONLY $7.99

pentacle_tiny Discover the Real Story of Witchcraft and How Its Power Can Make Your Burning Desires Possible!

pentacle_tiny Why Almost Everyone Is Dead Wrong About Magick, Spells And Power... Including How to Add More Love, Money, And Health to Your Life Using Over 127 Quick & Easy Magick Spells and Rituals...

pentacle_tiny Learn The Secrets That Most Witches & Those That Practice The Craft Don't Want You To Know...

The Passion Spells of FranceThe Passion Spells of France — Special Revised Edition
Now ONLY $6.99


pentacle_tiny WARNING! Don't Even Think Of Reading Anything Else About Magick, Spells And Rituals Before You've Finished Reading THIS!

pentacle_tiny The Powerful Prosperity Spell The Most Sought After Mages In Europe Use. It Quickly, Easily And Automatically Brings Money Into Your Life...

Book Store Bullet

Witchcraft Magic Spell Book Store

NOW OPEN! Spelwerx's Witchcraft Magic Spell Book Store is now open to help you find the spell books you're looking for quickly and easily!
Aradia

PREFACE

If the reader has ever met with the works of the learned folk-lorist G. Pitré, or the articles contributed by "Lady Vere De Vere" to the Italian Rivista, or that of J. H. Andrews to Folk-Lore,[1] he will be aware that there are in Italy great numbers of strege, fortune-tellers or witches, who divine by cards, perform strange ceremonies in which spirits are supposed to be invoked, make and sell amulets, and, in fact, comport themselves generally as their reputed kind are wont to do, be they Black Voodoos in America or sorceresses anywhere.

But the Italian strega or sorceress is in certain respects a different character from these. In most cases she comes of a family in which her calling or art has been practised for many generations. I have no doubt that there are in stances in which the ancestry remounts to medieval, Roman, or it may be Etruscan times. The result has naturally been the accumulation in such families of much tradition. But in Northern Italy, as its literature indicates, though there has been some slight gathering of fairy tales and popular superstitions by scholars, there has never existed the least interest as regarded the strange lore of the witches, nor any suspicion that it embraced an incredible quantity of old Roman minor myths and legends, such as Ovid has recorded, but of which much escaped him and all other Latin writers.

This ignorance was greatly aided by the wizards themselves, in making a profound secret of all their traditions, urged thereto by fear of the priests. In fact, the latter all unconsciously actually contributed immensely to the preservation of such lore, since the charm of the forbidden is very great, and witchcraft, like the truffle, grows best and has its raciest flavor when most deeply hidden. However this may be, both priest and wizard are vanishing now with incredible rapidity-it has even struck a French writer that a Franciscan in a railway carriage is a strange anomaly-and a few more years of newspapers and bicycles (Heaven knows what it will be when flying-machines appear!) will probably cause an banishment of all.

However, they die slowly, and even yet there are old people in the Romagna of the North who know the Etruscan names of the Twelve Gods, and invocations to Bacchus, Jupiter, and Venus, Mercury, and the Lares or ancestral spirits, and in the cities are women who prepare strange amulets, over which they mutter spells, all known in the old Roman time, and who can astonish even the learned by their legends of Latin gods, mingled with lore which may be found in Cato or Theocritus. With one of these I became intimately acquainted in 1886, and have ever since employed her specially to collect among her sisters of the hidden spell in many places all the traditions of the olden time known to them. It is true that I have drawn from other sources, but this woman by long practice has perfectly learned what few understand, or just what I want, and how to extract it from those of her kind.

Among other strange relics, she succeeded, after many years, in obtaining the following "Gospel," which I have in her handwriting. A full account of its nature with many details will be found in an Appendix. I do not know definitely whether my informant derived a part of these traditions from written sources or oral narration, but believe it was chiefly the latter. However, there are a few wizards who copy or preserve documents relative to their art. I have not seen my collector since the "Gospel" was sent to me. I hope at some future time to be better informed.

For brief explanation I may say that witch craft is known to its votaries as la vecchia religione, or the old religion, of which Diana is the Goddess, her daughter Aradia (or Herodias) the female Messiah, and that this little work sets forth how the latter was born, came down to earth, established witches and witchcraft, and then returned to heaven. With it are given the ceremonies and invocations or incantations to be addressed to Diana and Aradia, the exorcism of Cain, and the spells of the holy-stone, rue, and verbena, constituting, as the text declares, the regular church-service, so to speak, which is to be chanted or pronounced at the witch-meetings. There are also included the very curious incantations or benedictions of the honey, meal, and salt, or cakes of the witch-supper, which is curiously classical, and evidently a relic of the Roman Mysteries.

The work could have been extended ad infinitum by adding to it the ceremonies and incantations which actually form a part of the Scripture of Witchcraft, but as these are nearly all-or at least in great number-to be found in my works entitled Etruscan-Roman Remains and Legends of Florence, I have hesitated to compile such a volume before ascertaining whether there is a sufficiently large number of the public who would buy such a work.

Since writing the foregoing I have met with and read a very clever and entertaining work entitled Il Romanzo dei Settimani, G. Cavagnari, 1889, in which the author, in the form of a novel, vividly depicts the manners, habits of thought, and especially the nature of witchcraft, and the many superstitions current among the peasants in Lombardy. Unfortunately, notwithstanding his extensive knowledge of the subject, it never seems to have once occurred to the narrator that these traditions were anything but noxious nonsense or abominably un-Christian folly. That there exists in them marvelous relics of ancient mythology and valuable folklore, which is the very consortium of history, is as un-cared for by him as it would be by a common Zoccolone or tramping Franciscan. One would think it might have been suspected by a man who knew that a witch really endeavored to kill seven people as a ceremony or rite, in order to get the secret of endless wealth, that such a sorceress must have had a store of wondrous legends; but of all this there is no trace, and it is very evident that nothing could be further from his mind than that there was anything interesting from a higher or more genial point of view in it all.

His book, in fine, belongs to the very great number of those written on ghosts and superstition since the latter has fallen into discredit, in which the authors indulge in much satirical and very safe but cheap ridicule of what to them is merely vulgar and false. Like Sir Charles Coldstream, they have peeped into the crater of Vesuvius after it had ceased to "erupt," and found "nothing in it." But there was something in it once; and the man of science, which Sir Charles was not, still finds a great deal in the remains, and the antiquarian a Pompeii or a Herculaneum-'tis said there are still seven buried cities to unearth. I have done what little (it is really very little) I could, to disinter something from the dead volcano of Italian sorcery.

If this be the manner in which Italian witchcraft is treated by the most intelligent writer who has depicted it, it will not be deemed remarkable that there are few indeed who will care whether there is a veritable Gospel of Witches, apparently of extreme antiquity, em bodying the belief in a strange counter- religion which has held its own from pre-historic time to the present day. "Witchcraft is all rubbish, or something worse," said old writers, "and therefore all books about it are nothing better." I sincerely trust, however, that these pages may fall into the hands of at least a few who will think better of them.

I should, however, in justice to those who do care to explore dark and bewildering paths, explain clearly that witch-lore is hidden with most scrupulous care from all save a very few in Italy, just as it is among the Chippeway Medas or the Black Voodoo. In the novel to the life of I Settimani an aspirant is represented as living with a witch and acquiring or picking up with pain, scrap by scrap, her spells and incantations, giving years to it. So my friend the late M. Dragomanoff told me how a certain man in Hungary, having learned that he had collected many spells (which were indeed subsequently published in folklore journals), stole into the scholar's room and surreptitiously copied them, so that the next year when Dragomanoff returned, he found the thief in full practice as a blooming magician. Truly he had not got many incantations, only a dozen or so, but a very little will go a great way in the business, and I venture to say there is perhaps hardly a single witch in Italy who knows as many as I have published, mine having been assiduously collected from many, far and wide. Everything of the kind which is written is, moreover, often destroyed with scrupulous care by priests or penitents, or the vast number who have a superstitious fear of even being in the same house with such documents, so that I regard the rescue of the Vangelo as something which is to say the least remarkable.

CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION & PREFACE
An introduction and preface to this abridged collection of excerpts from the Aradia.

CHAPTER I
How Diana Gave Birth to Aradia (Herodias)
Of the sufferings of Mankind, and how Diana sent Aradia on earth to relieve them by teaching resistance and Sorcery-Poem addressed to Mankind-How to invoke Diana or Aradia.

CHAPTER II
The Sabbat-Treguenda or Witch-Meeting
How to consecrate the supper - Conjuration of the meal and of Salt-Invocation to Cain - Conjuration of Diana and to Aradia.

CHAPTER III
How Diana Made the Stars and the Rain

CHAPTER IV
The Charm of the Stones Consecrated to Diana - The Incantation of Perforated Stones - The Spell
or Conjuration of the Round Stone

CHAPTER V
The Conjuration of the Lemon and Pins-Incantation to Diana

CHAPTER VI
A Spell to Win Love

CHAPTER VII
To Find or Buy Anything, or to Have Good Fortune Thereby

CHAPTER VIII
How Have a Good Vintage and Very Good Wine By the Aid of Diana

CHAPTER IX
Tana and Endamone, or Diana and Endymion

CHAPTER X
Madonna Diana
A Legend of Cettardo, and how Diana appeared with ten Bridesmaids to give away a Bride- Incantation to Diana for a Wedding.

CHAPTER XI
The House of the Wind
Showing how Diana rescued a Lady from Death at the House ol the Wind in Volterra.

CHAPTER XII
Tana or Diana, The Moon-Goddess

CHAPTER XIII
Diana and the Children

CHAPTER XIV
The Goblin Messengers of Diana and Mercury

CHAPTER XV
Laverna

APPENDIX
A collection of thoughts and comments on the Aradia from its author.