Home/Store/Books/Paganism & Wicca
Aradia: Gospel of the Witches

Aradia: Gospel of the Witches

SKU 9780982432358
$16.95
In stock: 2 available
Save this product for later
Share this product with your friends
ShareSharePin it
Customer reviews
Reviews only from verified customers
No reviews yet. You can buy this product and be the first to leave a review.
Aradia: Gospel of the Witches
Product Details
Brand: RED WHEEL/WEISER INC.

Author: Charles Godfrey Leland

Product Type: Paperback

Published: 10/01/2010

If Gerald Brosseau Gardner is the father of the religion that calls itself Wicca, then Charles Godfrey Leland is the grandfather of Witchcraft as a religion in the Englishspeaking world, and his small book, Aradia, is that religions birth-announcement. It is the first work in English in which Witchcraft is portrayed as an underground old religion, surviving in secret from ancient Pagan times. Until now Aradia has been a work more often cited than read. Its first edition (1899) garnered only one review, and sank from sight like a stone cast into murky waters; it sold poorly and is now a rare book. By chance a copy fell into the hands of Theda Kenyon, who devoted a few pages to it in her sensational Witches Still Live (1929), thereby calling it to the attention many readers. By the 1950s Doreen Valiente had read Aradia, and she incorporated some of its most beautiful passages into the Wiccan rituals that she wrote. In the 60s and 70s it was reprinted four times, but always from a defective copy of the first edition that had lost its last page. Only in the 90s did another reprint finally restore the missing page. Aradia has always been a controversial work, among Witches and scholars alike. Scholars have questioned whether it may be a fiction or a forgery by Leland or by his principal informant, Maddalena (Margherita Taludi). Witches have objected to it on theological and ethical grounds, since some of the myths that it tells are about Lucifer and Cain as well as Diana and Aradia, some of its spells work by threatening or coercing the Deities and spirits, and in its revolutionary fervor it does not shrink even from teaching that the poor and downtrodden should use poisons to destroy their feudal overlords. Despite all that, it remains a beautiful and compelling work. This editio

Show More
  • Search Products
  • My Account
  • Track Orders
  • Favorites
  • Shopping Bag
Powered by Lightspeed
Display prices in:USD
Skip to main content
Quest Bookshop
Store
About
Delivery
Contact Us
My accountSearch
Cart
Menu

QUEST BOOKSHOP

Shipping & Payment InfoReport Abuse
Powered by Lightspeed