「witchcraft」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

witchcraft

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  • 2004: Witchcraft: A Mystery Tradition
  • It was named after a female practitioner of witchcraft, a witch.
  • magician's circle at the Museum of Magic and Witchcraft, a memorial to those killed in the witch hun
  • Mastering Witchcraft: A Practical Guide for Witches, Warlocks and
  • hind many doors to counteract the effects of witchcraft: a hagstone with a hole through, tied to the
  • otestant (1582; STC:11849); and two works on witchcraft, A discourse of the subtill practises of deu
  • as been researching violence associated with witchcraft accusations in Central African Republic for
  • the description of the "usual suspects" for witchcraft accusations, and no one stood up for them.
  • Theis says these events can effect witchcraft accusations.
  • er daughter Mary Lacey, similarly accused of witchcraft, accused her own mother of the crime in orde
  • rds amendment to the bill for the post-union Witchcraft Act 1735
  • suaded him to introduce a Bill to repeal the Witchcraft Act 1735 and replace it with an Act criminal
  • amous British spiritualist medium, under the Witchcraft Act of 1735 (repealed by the Attlee governme
  • The Witchcraft Act remained legally in force in Northern Ir
  • ed for his successful campaign to repeal the Witchcraft Act 1735.
  • me in the 1950s after the repeal of the 1735 Witchcraft Act in 1951, she had an effect upon the form
  • o lead the successful campaign to repeal the Witchcraft Act 1735.
  • Warboys trial influenced the passage of the Witchcraft Act of 1604.
  • counts: two of conspiracy to contravene the Witchcraft Act, two of obtaining money by false pretenc
  • Scotland, Wales, and Ireland a succession of Witchcraft Acts have governed witchcraft and provided p
  • Chapter 9, "Ergot and the Salem Witchcraft Affair," pp.
  • igh school become mixed up with an occult in witchcraft after a Satanic temple is discovered underne
  • es, and continued to deny his involvement in witchcraft after almost a week of torture, which includ
  • g sued for forgery and accused of practising witchcraft against the life of King Philip VI.
  • he Bill will also prohibit the accusation of witchcraft against anyone, and it will regulate the pra
  • ases involving a variety of issues including witchcraft, alienation of affection, obscenity, as well
  • She was accused of witchcraft along with another woman, Elizabeth Francis
  • Like many similar cases of witchcraft, Alse Young was a woman without a son when t
  • e possibility is that cats were connected to witchcraft, and the throwing of the cats symbolised the
  • The draft Bill seeks to suppress Witchcraft and will imprison self-defined Witches on th
  • she believes that Abigail will accuse her of witchcraft and have her executed because she wants to b
  • court at that time was greatly perplexed by witchcraft and the black arts, and this must have impre
  • n a group of four teenage girls who practice witchcraft and use it for their own gain.
  • of Arthur Evans, specifically his 1978 book Witchcraft and the Gay Counterculture, influenced some
  • young girls, and they'd both been accused of witchcraft and thrown out of their home by the father,
  • Witchcraft and Demonology (1991)
  • She was active in her promotion of modern witchcraft and neo-paganism, being particularly keen to
  • Magic, Ritual and Witchcraft and the short story The Spy .
  • The plot focuses heavily on witchcraft and superstition.
  • The area is rife with witchcraft and superstition.
  • ion, explored history and folklore regarding witchcraft and presented elements of a local coven's ac
  • out the Author" section of his books Italian Witchcraft, and Hereditary Witchcraft, describes him as
  • Coe Ltd, Wilbarston, Northants; April 1967, Witchcraft and Demonianism by C. L'Estrange Ewen 1970 o
  • The Devil of Great Island: Witchcraft and Conflict in Early New England ISBN 14039
  • from the neighboring community for promoting witchcraft and other occult related activities.
  • inia, Charlottesville, including a course on witchcraft and magic which he designed, and historical
  • nspired by their interest in and practice of witchcraft and paganism, which has gained them a certai
  • "Women, Witchcraft and Gratuitous Violence in Colonial Western
  • n the 17th century, Jane Forsyth, accused of witchcraft and sentenced to be burned at the stake, was
  • He studied several cases of witchcraft and witch trials, criticising some procedure
  • verly superstitious, judgement in matters of witchcraft and magic while working in Dalarna, which re
  • Republic of Congo, who have been accused of witchcraft and forced to live in the streets.
  • ese crimes could range from heresy, sorcery, witchcraft, and other superstitious practices.
  • inant consensus as to the nature of European witchcraft, and included her ideas in their own works.
  • nsidered Tahsini's experiment as evidence of witchcraft and performance of magic.
  • second section describes the actual forms of witchcraft and its remedies.
  • Lenzi would also direct two films (House of Witchcraft and House of Lost Souls).
  • lises in Renaissance and women's literature, witchcraft and the English Civil War.
  • African Witchcraft and Otherness: A Philosophical and Theologic
  • ations that men exercise in various sorts of witchcraft, and in frithspottum (peace-enclosures) with
  • ied to a mute and nameless bride, suspecting witchcraft and doubting it will last, as the prince is
  • h and the Boston merchant, Hezekiah Usher of witchcraft and throughout the crisis experienced afflic
  • joining California's High on Fire, Sweden's Witchcraft, and Australia's Wolfmother (to name but a f
  • k has penned a number of acclaimed titles on witchcraft and healing.
  • witches, banning the dangerous parts of the witchcraft and rendering them relatively harmless.
  • 2, so the fates of the others are not known ( Witchcraft and Demonianism by C. L'Estrange Ewen 1970,
  • who have seen the spectacle are speaking of witchcraft and devilry.
  • nvincing him he is at the Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry from the Harry Potter novels.
  • s found guilty of “crimes of lycanthropy and witchcraftand burned at the stake.
  • e find Medea in her magic chamber performing witchcraft and singing the aria "Dell'antro magico" in
  • ect that her cousin may be a practitioner of witchcraft, and she's hell-bent on turning Rachel's lif
  • ranging themes as satire, slavery, marriage, witchcraft and piracy.
  • ker and the surrounding area were accused of witchcraft and sorcery.
  • ections has the prevailing themes of what is witchcraft and who is a witch.
  • s full title was An Act against Conjuration, Witchcraft and dealing with evil and wicked spirits, (2
  • will merely serve to justify public fear of witchcraft and promote malice and violence against susp
  • the violence associated with allegations of witchcraft and deal with killings including ritual kill
  • amily) believed his recovery was the work of witchcraft, and threatened to burn him at the stake.
  • Redd was accused of "detestable arts called Witchcraft and Sorceries wickedly, mallitiously [sic] a
  • nthropological or ethnographic literature on witchcraft and shamanism, in classical philosophy and i
  • mber of women from Haverhill were accused of witchcraft, and a few were found "guilty" by the Court
  • n of the fundamental beliefs and premises of Witchcraft and explains his interpretation of its symbo
  • lements, war, mythology, troubled relations, witchcraft, animals, and death, often placed in the Ard
  • ations Children's Fund, accusations of child witchcraft are on the rise in West and Central Africa.
  • witch trials in 1692, both as an accuser of witchcraft, as well as being accused of being a witch h
  • efinition on the grounds that it stereotypes witchcraft as harmful and portrays Witches as a danger
  • hter, also named Mary Lacey, were accused of witchcraft as well.)
  • among the founders of, Reclaiming Tradition Witchcraft, as well as Faery/Feri Tradition, Macha hold
  • Witchcraft at Salem.
  • The image of Tituba as the instigator of witchcraft at Salem was reinforced by the opening scene
  • ages Relating to Sundry Persons Afflicted by Witchcraft, at Salem Village and published by Benjamin
  • ed with those who urged the prosecutions for witchcraft at Salem, Massachusetts.
  • llness and death, eventually being tried for witchcraft at Chelmsford in February 1582.
  • , James R. (ed), Magical Religion and Modern Witchcraft, Baker, James W., "White Witches: Historic F
  • It is an arraignment of trial for witchcraft, based on his own experiences in Westphalia.
  • r the publication of the Malleus Maleficarum witchcraft became recognized as a real and precarious o
  • ries, until Roman Catholic views on European witchcraft began to change dramatically in the late med
  • le of expensive scotch, and a book on Navajo witchcraft beliefs.
  • Lucy uses the witchcraft book of her mother to revenge Wellington.
  • This includes Witchcraft Bottom, notable as the alleged location wher
  • could not be considered guilty of practising witchcraft, but due to the precocity of some children t
  • is was not the first time she was accused of witchcraft, but it was perhaps the first time she was p
  • Abigail was convicted of witchcraft, but only escaped execution because she was
  • lieve in omiti, which some translate to mean witchcraft but which others call "bad medicine".
  • Subsequently, Catellus was accused of witchcraft by a priest named Tibeius (Tibeio) of Stabia
  • He was implicated in witchcraft by other victims of the witch craze (which w
  • She was accused of witchcraft by local tailor John Rivet.
  • page of A Modest Enquiry Into the Nature of Witchcraft by John Hale (Boston, 1702)
  • its inscription, which attributes a death to witchcraft by the Witches of Belvoir.
  • that influence plays a specific part in this witchcraft case (and I grant scholars may think it does
  • itting as chief justice, began to handle the witchcraft cases in 1693, but were under specific instr
  • was eventually obliterated after charges of witchcraft) come back from the dead as zombie-like reve
  • entitled A Modest Inquiry into the Nature of Witchcraft, condemning his colleagues who played leadin
  • eighteen years of age during the time of the witchcraft crisis at Salem Village.
  • d by the afflicted girls in Salem during the witchcraft crisis were because the girls were undergoin
  • expert Professor Marshe (Boris Karloff) of a witchcraft cult based around the ancestral Lavinia Morl
  • its, which include the ability to counteract witchcraft, curses, demons and other trouble sources.
  • Gifford was a moderate in the witchcraft debate, although he still believed in the ex
  • e credited with the power to protect against witchcraft, demons, poisons, and headaches.
  • heir husbands, kill their children, practice witchcraft, destroy capitalism and become lesbians."
  • 746) was an English woman who was accused of witchcraft, died before being tried, and had her grave
  • wide ranging and she has presented papers on witchcraft, dietary influences on behaviour, the role o
  • n 1526 in order to determine how to react to witchcraft discovered in Navarre that year.
  • o methodically refute quarrels claiming that witchcraft does not exist, ill repute those who communi
  • ystematically refute arguments claiming that witchcraft does not exist, discredit those who expresse
  • ch as Circe and Xavier Von Claud, an insaine witchcraft driven couple living in a straw hut in the b
  • from Beverly, Massachusetts, was accused of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials of 1692, found
  • Deliverance Hobbs was accused of witchcraft during the Salem Witch Trials.
  • He was subsequently accused of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials in May 1692.
  • becca Blake Eames was among those accused of witchcraft during the Salem witch trials of 1692.
  • ltine) Dane was one of many women accused of witchcraft during the time of the Salem Witch Trials.
  • of Salem, Massachusetts was a man accused of witchcraft during the Salem Witch Trials of 1692.
  • 21 - July 19, 1692) was a woman executed for witchcraft during the Salem witch trials.
  • timates of the number of people executed for witchcraft during this time period vary between about 4
  • 9 the widow Common was tried three times for witchcraft, each time by 'swimming' - binding her limbs
  • The proper term for engaging in sorcery or witchcraft employing barang in Tagalog is Pambabarang,
  • alsely accused Empress Xu and Consort Ban of witchcraft; Empress Xu was deposed, and while Consort B
  • ls to ward off the Evil Eye, curses, demons, witchcraft, etc.
  • nka such as devil possessions, evil spirits, witchcraft, exorcism, sorcery, curses, spells and charm
  • It has three annual festivals: a summer witchcraft festival, in August; and two autumn celebrat
  • Covencraft: Witchcraft for Three or More (1998) Llewellyn Publicati
  • rayer of the Guardian Angel; 50 mysteries of witchcraft from the time of the Moors (including medici
  • Nobody spoke, but the men knew that her witchcraft had been found out at last.
  • The Dead, Witchcraft, Hauntings, and Monsters as well as Hellboy:
  • he left no indication of his feelings toward witchcraft, he is considered to be one of the more prin
  • to writing several books about occultism and witchcraft he has worked extensively in the film and te
  • visited Leicester; having a keen interest in witchcraft, he examined the boy and promptly declared h
  • legations, and in due time he was accused of witchcraft himself.
  • host to the peak of accusations in France's witchcraft hunt.
  • e was involved in the county response to the witchcraft hysteria that was then sweeping the populace
  • as caught up, as was much of England, in the witchcraft hysteria of the seventeenth century.
  • h death; whilst long-continued and obstinate witchcraft, if fully proven, was visited with such seve
  • If they floated they were guilty of witchcraft, if they sank they were innocent but would h
  • It is named after Hecate, the goddess of witchcraft in Greek mythology, but its name also commem
  • ymouth Colony), who would soon be accused of witchcraft in the Salem witch trials.
  • women become the last known to be hanged for witchcraft in England, at Exeter.
  • lection of which are housed at the Museum of Witchcraft in Boscastle.
  • hattan lawyer Phyllis Curott began exploring witchcraft in a women's group in the 1970s, she discove
  • n academic circles for his extensive work on witchcraft in Colonial America, as well as for his work
  • , Charles fell under suspicion of practising witchcraft, in an effort to supplant Charles, Count of
  • as one of the last people to be charged with witchcraft in England in the 19th century.
  • of the twelve persons who were executed for witchcraft in New England before 1692, when twenty othe
  • and Chergani - spiritual power of a witch or witchcraft) in a framework of sacred geography, sacred
  • g to any of ten women that were executed for witchcraft in the 16th and 17th centuries.
  • The penalty for witchcraft in England was hanging not burning at the st
  • Reverend Dane was accused of witchcraft in 1692, but was never charged.
  • nation and Faceless., and on Region 2 DVD as Witchcraft in the U.K. by Stax Entertainment in 2002.
  • any to have been the last woman executed for witchcraft in Europe.
  • and that there had been little knowledge of witchcraft in the region before the outset of the trial
  • e Tall Man from Boston, The Visionary Girls: Witchcraft in Salem Village, Cherokee Nation, The Devil
  • ce of people, mostly women, for the crime of witchcraft in Massachusetts during the Salem Witch Tria
  • appointed witch police to curtail the use of witchcraft in society, and to keep the witch kind a sec
  • s met many children who have been accused of witchcraft in the Niger Delta region.
  • , a mother and her two daughters, accused of witchcraft in England around 1619.
  • ed witch, the last person to be executed for witchcraft in Great Britain.
  • September 22, 1692, with several others, for witchcraft in the Salem witch trials.
  • A practitioner of witchcraft in Uganda is referred to as a Witch-doctor,
  • Alice Young Beamon, who would be accused of witchcraft in nearby Springfield, Massachusetts, some 3
  • Waterhouse was the first woman executed for witchcraft in England.
  • He added accounts of witchcraft in Sweden to the later editions of the Saddu
  • e purpose of the bill is to suppress Acts of witchcraft including naming and pointing of any body as
  • last occupants were suspected of practicing witchcraft, including Thomazine "Tammy" Younger, whom s
  • 692, Abigail confessed and accused others of witchcraft, including John Proctor.
  • pson remained active in teaching her form of witchcraft into the 1980s, carrying on an extensive, wo
  • nt film was described by Brakhage as "sexual witchcraft involving two couples and a 'medium' cat."
  • Witchcraft is a genetic trait, dormant within a number
  • A practitioner of witchcraft is referred to as a night dancer.
  • La Casa 4 (also known as Witchery and Witchcraft) is a 1998 horror film.
  • She has steadily maintained that Witchcraft is never meant to be employed to cause harm
  • les Michelet's non-fiction book Satanism and Witchcraft, it is the third and final film in the Anime
  • tle pain/ A small pain a great pain" is from Witchcraft: Its Power in the World Today by William Sea
  • Ann Hibbins on Boston Common, on charges of witchcraft, June 19, 1656.
  • arliament was "under attack" and referred to witchcraft, liberal abortion laws and legislation that
  • Valiente, Doreen, The Rebirth of Witchcraft, London: Robert Hale, 1989, ISBN 0-7090-3715
  • nd editor who wrote about tarot, divination, witchcraft, magic, sex magic, tantra, and holistic medi
  • Having witchcraft materials in her home, which she claimed was
  • Witchcraft Medicine: Healing Arts, Shamanic Practices,
  • queen of Hungary, ordered that all cases of witchcraft must be confirmed by the high court, which m
  • The real question is: are we to believe that witchcraft occurred in a given situation simply because
  • ribe the accusation, trial and execution for witchcraft of Alice Samuel and her family between 1589
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