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PathWalkers.Net Interactive :: Helping you along your path<br />

General information: Where Magic Began<br />

Posted by: Nyxks on Saturday, March 06, 2004 - 02:05 AM<br />

Magic is often thought of as being a capricious, abstract, "new age" concept. But in fact,<br />

magic may very well be as old as humanity, existing long before people even had a word<br />

for it.<br />

Let's travel back in time to what we call the "Stone Age"....<br />

We gather around as an elderly man decorates a cave dwelling with pictures of sabre-toothed tigers with<br />

spears protruding from their sides. By creating these symbolic murals, he has ensured that a real animal<br />

will be killed at the next hunt. The elderly man we are watching is called (today) a "Cunning Man".<br />

These cave paintings are all that remains as evidence of spells cast by "Cunning Men". They were relied<br />

on to perform ritual dances to secure a bountiful hunt and an abundant harvest.<br />

But where there is good magic, there is bad magic inevitably being worked elsewhere; or at least that is<br />

what the Cunning Men relied on people to think. When they failed at their workings, they claimed that a<br />

more powerful magician was working against them. This evil-doer was considered an unseen spirit, not a<br />

mortal like the Cunning Men. This fear of sorcery was perpetuated by the Roman Empire and later by the<br />

superstitions of the Viking barbarian invaders. Soon people began to blame their every misfortune on<br />

black magick, which was eventually considered the working of a "witch". The ultimate scapegoat, soon<br />

various policies were decreed which allowed trials for witchcraft. It also allowed people to easily put the<br />

blame on a weaker target.<br />

People's "facts" about witchcraft were hazy and convoluted. Time passed and soon the belief firm in the<br />

minds of the average villager was that witches fly around in hoards of thirteen, called covens, and they<br />

hold meetings called sabbats where they perform strange and lewd dances and feast. People added bits<br />

and pieces as the rumors spread, using words like "sacrifice", "demons", "hex", and "bewitch" to add<br />

zeal. Most likely these tales were the result of people twisting what limited fact they knew in favor of<br />

interest. Most of the victims of original witchcraft accusations were simply lonely old women, friendless<br />

and therefore defenseless.<br />

Soon people believed so strongly in magick and feared the power of the witches so much that they<br />

adopted their own charms to ward off evil magick. Iron and amber were popular tools against curses and<br />

hexes. The Cunning Men now had the occupation of casting spells which prevented bewitching and<br />

cursing.<br />

When Christianity began its spread, the Cunning Men were still heavily relied upon. Entire villagers were<br />

converted to Christianity but were concerned that their new God would not know how to supply a good<br />

crop, so they continued to entreat magic of the Cunning Men.<br />

It was at this time that a great transformation occured; magic became science. The first books on<br />

medicine were authored by Cunning Men. Those who pioneered science were considered heretics and<br />

suffered the same fate as magicians began falling to. When Friar Bacon discovered the use of gunpowder<br />

and created spectacles, it was claimed that his cleverness was the result of sorcery. Scholars, scientists,<br />

and astrologers were thought to obtain their knowledge from the devil. Because the Cunning Men<br />

dressed in animal skins and wore antlers, it was easy to convince pious Christians that they were clearly<br />

worshippers of Satan, eventually eliminating the people's faith and reliance in the magic that had held up<br />

their skies and filled their plates for so long.<br />

The consequences for seeking a deeper understanding of the natural and supernatural world were<br />

suffered greatly by our ancestors. In spite of immense intolerance and persecution, magic thrives still<br />

today.<br />

Where do we find magic now? It's all over the place. It's in our superstitions, in making a wish, in our<br />

fanciful dreams... in prayer, in the wonderment of a child, in true love. Certainly it's magic that makes the<br />

http://www.pathwalkers.net/interactive/modules....ame=News&file=index&catid=&topic=1&allstories=1 (281 of 284) [12/25/2005 12:22:23 AM]

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