ASH - Albion’s Sacred Heritage - Issue 4 - Summer 89
ASH Magazine was a quarterly magazine covering esoterica, earth mysteries and folklore, published in Essex between 1988 - 1997. It was produced by a divergent editorial cooperative, who met regularly to garner intentions and creativity. The team had been gathered by stalwart Essex earth mysteries researcher and cunning man Dave Hunt, recruiting team members from some diverse sources, including Earthquest, the local witchcraft scene, from his own Earth Mysteries group 'New E.R.A' and from the esoteric Christian community. The idea was, in part, inspired by other ‘zines of the day, including Essex Landscape Mysteries and Lantern. The ASH Magazine editorial team were Dave Hunt, Ian Dawson, Claire Capon, Jim Kirkwood and Alex Langstone. At the magazine's height, two successive and successful 'Esoterica' conferences were staged. You can find out more from the official online archive here:
Clavis: Volume 2 - The Cloister Perilous
At 216 pages, the new volume of Clavis features an outstanding grouping of authors and image-makers.
Lexicon Lamiarum (Forthcoming)
The Lexicon of Witchcraft is an illustrated compendium of witchcraft terminology, encompassing rituals, symbols, spirits, objects, and other specialized concepts of witchcraft.
By Moonlight and Spirit Flight
As has been established by historians such as Dr. Carlo Ginzburg and Éva Pócs, the topological elements of the medieval Witches’ Sabbat –the ecstatic nocturnalia of the lamiae — carry relics of the ancient spirit-cults and localized folk-beliefs of Europe.
Children of Cain
The mid-twentieth century witnessed the birth of popular occultism in the West, including an interest in witchcraft. At the forefront of popular witchcraft was Wicca, a recension of ceremonial magic and nature worship advanced by Gerald Gardner and Alex Sanders, now widely regarded as a religion.
East Anglian Witches and Wizards
In 1643 several men and women appeared in court at Chelmsford, Essex, charged with practicing the curious combination of ‘conjuration, magic and lechery’. The chief witness was a servant woman, Martha Hurrell, who claimed that she and a group of other people met regularly in various country houses to practice magic
Scottish Witches and Warlocks
n the village of at Cullen in Forfarshire, an arrest warrant was served in January 1657 for one Margaret Philp, accused of practicing witchcraft. Her servant, Isobel Imblaugh, testified she had seen her mistress have dealings with a spirit taking the form of a talking hare.
West Country Witches
In 1930 a correspondent writing to the Western Morning Post newspaper confidently asserted 'We live in an age when those old twilight beliefs are disappearing'. The beliefs in question were various aspects of popular superstition and the supernatural once widely accepted by people in the West Country.
Welsh Witches and Wizards
The widespread belief in witches and wizards in Wales reflects a land steeped in legend and myth since ancient times. The witch’s power to harm people, livestock, and crops was greatly feared; for this reason country people consulted with so-called ‘cunning men’ and ‘wise women’ who had the power to negate their spells with counter-magic.