Author’s Note: This blog is a personal space for sharing my own experiences and perspectives on magic. While the broader website is home to educational resources on the Hagstone Tradition, many of the essays and reflections here focus on my individual magical practice, not necessarily the tradition as a whole.

Witchcraft is a deeply personal and diverse path, and my approach may not reflect the beliefs or methods of others. I encourage readers to explore, question, and adapt whatever resonates with them. Nothing shared here is intended as absolute truth or professional advice. Trust your intuition, do your own research, and walk the path that is right for you.

All content on this blog is the intellectual property of Anoka Solveig and may not be shared, reproduced, or redistributed in any form, on any platform, without explicit written permission. This includesβ€”but is not limited toβ€”copying, reposting, translating, or distributing excerpts. If you'd like to reference or discuss this content, please link directly to the original post.

Personal Essays, Academic Study, Folklore & History 𝕬𝖓𝖔𝖐𝖆 π•Ύπ–”π–‘π–›π–Šπ–Žπ–Œ Personal Essays, Academic Study, Folklore & History 𝕬𝖓𝖔𝖐𝖆 π•Ύπ–”π–‘π–›π–Šπ–Žπ–Œ

A Study in Witch Lore: The Case of Ursula Kemp and the Beliefs of 1582 England

The 1582 trial of Ursula Kemp reveals far more about the fears and folklore of early modern England than it does about the woman herself. Accused of consorting with spirits, wielding charms, and offering healing, Kemp's story reflects how cunning knowledge, poverty, and neighbourly conflict could be alchemised into witchcraft in the eyes of a suspicious community. Her case reminds us that witchcraft trials were rarely about magicβ€”they were about belief, control, and survival.

Read More
Academic Witchcraft, Folkloric Witchcraft, Spirit Work, Personal Reflections, Historically Informed Witchcraft 𝕬𝖓𝖔𝖐𝖆 π•Ύπ–”π–‘π–›π–Šπ–Žπ–Œ Academic Witchcraft, Folkloric Witchcraft, Spirit Work, Personal Reflections, Historically Informed Witchcraft 𝕬𝖓𝖔𝖐𝖆 π•Ύπ–”π–‘π–›π–Šπ–Žπ–Œ

Folk Belief & Spirit Lore: How I Use Witch Trial Testimonies to Inform my Spirit Work

Witch trial testimonies, despite their distortion by fear and coercion, preserve vital fragments of folk belief concerning the roles of spirits in magical practice. By examining these records for recurring patterns β€” the familiar as ally, the initiator as tester, the guardian as protector β€” I ground my spirit work in a historically informed, culturally contextualized approach to relational magic

Read More
Community & Magic, Personal Reflections, Reconstructed Witchcraft, Historical Witchcraft 𝕬𝖓𝖔𝖐𝖆 π•Ύπ–”π–‘π–›π–Šπ–Žπ–Œ Community & Magic, Personal Reflections, Reconstructed Witchcraft, Historical Witchcraft 𝕬𝖓𝖔𝖐𝖆 π•Ύπ–”π–‘π–›π–Šπ–Žπ–Œ

Studying the Witch Trials: A Complex Legacy

The people accused in the witch trials were not witchesβ€”but the stories told about them reveal something powerful. Beneath the fear and forced confessions lie fragments of folk belief, forgotten ritual, and cultural memory. If we study these histories with care and discernment, we don’t reclaim a bloodlineβ€”we reclaim an understanding of how folkloric magic once lived in the margins.

Read More