This entire post has become a regular part of my vocabulary
You live in a old, small town out in the country side with a population of about 130 residents. The people there are very superstitious and believe in almost every urban legend. This especially includes the story that said to be as old as the town itself. It talks about the towns origins and explains why EVERYONE must get inside their homes before the sun sets and must stay there until the sun rises again. You never really believed in that stuff, âitâs just to scare us kids from doing anything illegal or somethingâ you thought. That is... until the night you werenât able to get back home in time...
Achilles. Achilles. Achilles come down.
Wonât you get up off, get off the roof- đ¶
What if instead of calling âshotgunâ or calling dibs on something we say â Iâm already tracerâ. Like, ur waiting in line and you call dibs first (im already Tracer)but then, you wanna go next on something so you say â Iâm already Widowmakerâ, but if you call thirds becsue your too late, you get ânerfedâ, meaning you go last... because you said â Iâm already Bastonâ.
Hereâs your daily dose of historical fashion! Absolutely gorgeous evening gown I saw on Pinterest!
Pre- Medieval/ Viking/ Celtic Aesthetic Playlist
(Pop Music Edition)
-âAct my ageâ One direction
- âNancy Mulliganâ Ed Sheeran
- âIâm a Messâ Ed Sheeran
- âRunawayâ Ed Sheeran
- âGalaway girlâ Ed Sheeran
- âCastle On The Hillâ Ed Sheeran
- âSomething Wildâ Lindsey Stirling
-âDevilâs Backboneâ The Civil Wars
-âWhere No One Goesâ John Powell
-âSticks and Stonesâ JĂłnsi
-âI livedâ One Republic
- âI see fireâ Ed Sheeran
-âBibia Be Ye Yeâ Ed Sheeran
- âRootsâ Imagine Dragons
-âNaturalâ Imagine Dragons
-âFeel That Fire (feat. Whissel)â Tommee Profitt
(I actually donât know who is the the artist of the last one, but, I know that you can find it on Tommee Profitts YT channel. If you like cinematic music, trust me, youâll love this guy.)
@cannawitchcreations, you are absolute life saver! As a green, kitchen witch, I bow down to you. XD. Ur awesome!
Having knowledge of herbs and plants (either magically or medicinally) during the Middle Ages, often was reason enough to accuse a woman of being a âwitch,â so there is no doubt some of the country folk at the time took these herbal folk names literal. Chances are, these names were used merely as descriptors to help remember them easier. Most plants were given names descriptive of their uses and others were given names for something they generally resembled. Spells written by witches in ancient times were often written with such descriptors, which personally i believe to be a form of secret coding.
Here is a small list of âwitchyâ herb names (most of these are already floating around the community) that you can use in your craft when you create your spells. This list could be a great addition to any Grimoire and i hope you find them as useful as i do.
Enjoy ~~~Â Cannawitch
Aaronâs Rod - Goldenrod or mullein stalk Absinthe - Wormwood Adderâs Fork - Adderâs Tongue Fern or Bistort Adderâs Tongue - Dogâs Tooth Violet (or Adderâs Tongue Fern Ague root - Unicorn root Alison - Sweet Alyssum Angel Food, Archangel - Angelica Angelâs Trumpet - Datura Assâs Ear - coltâs foot or comfrey Assâs Foot, Bullâs Foot - coltâs foot Auld Manâs Bells, Old manâs bells - wood hyacinth, Hyacinthoides hispanica
Bad Manâs/Devilâs Oatmeal/Porridge - hemlock Bad Manâs/Devilâs Plaything - Yarrow Bastard - false Dittany Bat flower - tacca Batâs Wing - Holly leaf Batâs Wool - moss (which moss?) Bearâs Foot - Ladyâs Mantle Bearâs Grape Bearberry Arctostaphylos uva-ursi Bear Paw - ramsons Allium ursinum or the root of male fern Dryopteris Felix-mas Bear weed - Yerba Santa Eriodictyon californicum Beard of a Monk - Chicory Beggarâs Lice - Houndâs tongue Beggarâs Buttons - Burdock Birdâs Eye - Speedwell Veronica officinalis Birdâs Foot - Fenugreek Trigonella foenum-graecum (Also birdâs foot violet and birdâs foot trefoil) Birdâs Nest - carrot, Indian pipe Bishopâs Wort, Bishopâs Elder - Wood betony Stachys betonica Bitter Grass - Ague Root Aletris Farinosa Black Sampson - Echinacea Blazing Star - liatris Blind Eyes - Poppy Blood from a head - Lupine * Blood from a shoulder - Bearâs breech * Blood of a Goose - Sap from a mulberry * Morus nigra Blood of an Eye - Tamarisk gall * (probably the tannin extracted from) Blood of Ares - purslane * Blood of Hephaestus - wormwood * Blood of Hestia - Chamomile * Blood - sap of the elder or bloodwort Bloody butcher - Valerian Bloody Fingers - Foxglove Blue Bottle - Bachelorâs buttons Boyâs Love, Ladâs Love: Southernwood Brain Thief - Mandrake Bone of an Ibis - buckthorn * I am not sure if this is Rhamnus cathartica or sea buckthorn Hippophae spp If I can find a recipe containing this, I will know for sure by comparing its purpose to their very different qualities Bread and Cheese - Hawthorn Bride of the Meadow - meadowsweet Bullâs Blood - beet or horehound Burning bush - false dittany, also a modern name for species of Euonymus Cowâs Horn - Fenugreek Trigonella foenum-graecum Bride of the Sun - calendula Brown Dragon - wake robin Buttons - tansy
Calfâs snout - Snapdragon Candlemas Maiden - snowdrop Candlewick - mullein, the flower stalk Caponâs Tail - valerian Carpenterâs Herb - bugleweed Lycopus europaeus Carpenterâs Square - knotted figwort Carpenterâs weed - Yarrow Cat - catnip Catâs foot - white balsam, black cohosh, ground ivy Catâs herb - valerian Chameleon star - bromeliad Cheeses - marsh mallow Chocolate flower - wild geranium (I donât buy it) Christâs eye - wild clary Salvia verbenaca Christâs ladder - centaury Christâs spear - adderâs tongue fern Ophioglossum vulgatum Church steeple - Agrimony Clear eye - clary sage Cleavers - bedstraw Click - goosegrass Clot - great mullien Cocklebur - Agrimony Cockâs comb - amaranth Coltâs Tail - fleabane Craneâs bill - wild geranium Crowâs foot - wild geranium, or wood anemone bulbous buttercup (verified) Crowdy kit - figwort Cuckooâs bread - common plantago Cucumber tree - magnolia Cuddyâs lungs - great mullein Crown for a king - wormwood
Dagger flower - blue flag Daphne - bay laurel Dead manâs bells foxglove Death angel - fly agaric Amanita Muscaria Death cap - fly agaric Amanita Muscaria Death flower - Yarrow Deathâs Herb - Belladonna Delight of the Eye - rowan Devil Plant - basil Devilâs Apple - Mayapple or Mandrake Devilâs beard - houseleek Devilâs bit - false unicorn root Devilâs cherries Belladonna berries Devilâs plaything - yarrow Devilâs dung - asafoetida Devilâs ear - wakerobin Devilâs eye - henbane or periwinkle Devilâs flower - bachelorâs buttons Devilâs fuge - mistletoe Devilâs guts - dodder Devilâs herb - belladonna Devilâs milk - celandine Devilâs nettle - yarrow Devilâs Shoestring: Various varieties of vibernum, esp Black Haw, cramp bark, hobblebush Dew of the Sea - Rosemary Dog Berry - wild rose hips Dogâs mouth - snap dragon Dogâs tongue - houndâs tongue Doveâs foot - wild geranium Dragon - tarragon Dragon Flower - blue flag (really, wild iris? not an arum or a Antirrhinum?) Dragon wort - bistort Dragonâs blood - calamus
Eagle - ramsons Allium ursinum Earth apple - potato Earth smoke- fumitory Elfâs wort - Elecampane Enchanterâs plant - vervain Englishmanâs fruit/ White manâs foot - common plantain Everlasting friendship - goosegrass Eye root - goldenseal
Fairy smoke - Indian pipe Fairy fingers - foxglove Fat from a Head - spurge * Felon herb - Mugwort Five fingers - cinquefoil Foxâs Clote - burdock Frogâs foot - bulbous buttercup From the belly - Earth-apple. * potato?? Did the writers know about potatoes? When was pgm written? From the foot - houseleek * From the loins - chamomile *
Goatâs foot - morning glory Goatâs Horn - Fenugreek Trigonella foenum-graecum Godâs hair - hartâs tongue fern Goldenâs star - avens Goslingâs wing - goosegrass Graveyard dust - mullein (and sometimes itâs just graveyard dust)
Hagâs taper - mullien stalk Hagthorn - hawthorn Hair of Venus - Maidenhair fern Hairs of a Hamadryas Baboon: Dill Seed * Hareâs beard - mullein Hawkâs Heart, Old Woman - Wormwood Artemisia absinthium crown or seed head * Hindâs tongue - hartâs tongue fern Holy herb - yerba santa Holy rope - hemp agrimony Eupatorium cannabinum Horse tongue - hartâs tongue fern Hundred eyes - periwinkle
Innocence - bluets
Jacobâs Staff - Great Mullein Joy of the Mountain - Marjoram Jupiterâs Staff - Great Mullein
Kingâs Crown: Black Haw vibernum Knightâs Milfoil - Yarrow Kronosâ Blood - sap of Cedar *
Ladyâs glove - foxglove Lambâs ears - betony but more likely lambâs ear Stachys byzantina Lionâs Hair - The extra little roots that stick out of the turnip bulb or the base leaves Brassica rapa * Lionâs tooth - dandelion Little dragon - tarragon Love in idleness - pansy Love Lies Bleeding - amaranth (Not so ancient, a modern ornamental variant) Love Leaves - burdock Love man - goosegrass Love Parsley - lovage Love root - orris root
Maidenâs Ruin - Southernwood Manâs Bile - Turnip Juice * Manâs Health - Ginseng Master of the Woods - Woodruff May Lily - Lily of the Valley May Rose - Black Haw viburnum May - Black Haw viburnum Maypops - Passion Flower Mistress of the Night - Tuberose Mutton Chops - Goosegrass
Nose Bleed - Yarrow
Old Manâs Flannel - Great Mullein Old Manâs Pepper - Yarrow Old-Maidâs-Nightcap - Wild Geranium
Password - primrose Peterâs Staff - Great Mullein Poor Manâs Treacle - Garlic Priestâs Crown - Dandelion leaves
Queen of the Meadow Root - Gravelroot Queen of the Meadow - Meadowsweet Queen of the Night - Vanilla Cactus
Rats and Mice - Houndâs tongue Ramâs horn - valerian Ring a Bells - bluebell Robin run in the grass - goosegrass
Scaldhead - blackberry Seed of Horus - horehound See bright - Clary sage Semen of Ammon - Houseleek * Semen of Ares - Clover * Semen of Helios - White Hellebore * Semen of Hephaistos - Fleabane * Semen of Herakles - arugula * Semen of Hermes - Dill * Seven Yearâs Love Yarrow Shameface - Wild Geranium Shepherdâs Heart - Shepherdâs Purse Silver Bells - Black Haw viburnum Snake Root - black cohosh Soapwort - Comfrey or Daisy or maybe Soapwort Sorcererâs Violet - Periwinkle Sparrowâs Tongue - Knotweed St. Johnâs Herb - Hemp Agrimony St. Johnâs Plant - Mugwort Star Flower - Borage Star of the Earth - Avens Starweed - Chickweed Sweethearts - Goosegrass Swineâs Snout - Dandelion leaves
Tail of a Pig - Leopardâs bane * Tannerâs bark - toadflax Tartar root - ginseng Tears of a Hamadryas Baboon - Dill Juice * Thousand weed - yarrow Thunder plant - houseleek Titanâs Blood - Wild Lettuce Lactuca virosa * Torches - mullein flower stalk
Unicornâs horn - unicorn root or false unicorn root Urine - dandelion or maybe urine
Wax dolls - fumitory Weasel - rue Weasel snout - yellow archangel Winter wood - wild cinnamon Canella alba White - ox eye daisy Witchâs Asprin - white willow bark (this is ancient?) Witchâs brier - wild brier rose hips Wolf claw - club moss Wolfâs foot - bugleweed Wolfâs milk - euphorbia Woodpecker - herbLpeony Worm fern- male fern Dryopteris Felix-mas
Yerba Santa Maria - epazote
Blood - Sap or juice Eye - The disc of a composite flower, or a seed Foot - Leaf Guts - Roots, stalks, tangly bits Hair - Very stringy roots (sometimes silk or tangly stems) Head - Flower head or seed head Tail - Stem Tongue - Petal, sometimes stigma Toes - leaf or bud Paw - sometimes bud, usually leaf Privates - Seed pod Worm - stringy roots Wool - Moss
A Snakeâs Ball of Thread - soapstone * Blood of a Snake - hematite * Crocodile Dung - Soil from Ethiopia * A Physicianâs bone - sandstone *
A Snakeâs Head - A leech * Blood of a Hyrax - A rock badger, * small weasel-like/rodent-like (but actually neither) creature native to Africa and the Middle East Blood of a Hamadryas Baboon - Blood of a spotted gecko * Bullâs semen - the egg of a blister beetle * Lion Semen - Human semen * Kronosâ Spice - Pig Milk *
* From Ecloga ex Papyris Magicis: Liber I, V, xxvi
More Sources for verification -
Galen - De succedaneis, Claudii Galeni Opera Omnia, v 19
Paulus Aegineta, Corpus Medicorum Graecorum IX/2 vII
Dioscorides De Materia Medica
Witchipedia
Lady Raven
Tryskelion