Bazsites.com Wicca
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On the Web
- Wikipedia: Dianic Wicca - One reference source's entry on Dianic Wicca, its difference from Wicca, its roots and characteristics.
- Wicca: A Biblical Critique - This article examines some of the fundamental doctrines of Wicca, offers a biblical critique of those doctrines, and highlight the differences between Wicca and Christianity.
- World Of Wicca - Enter and you will find every thing that you need to know about wicca...
- The World of Wicca - Graphic-intensive site with a FAQ about witchcraft and a small amount of other information.
- School of Wicca, Peoria, Illinois - Non-profit organization offering classes in wicca at their center in Peoria, Illinois, or online, in such subjects as spellcasting, tarot and candle magick. Earth-based and eclectic.
- Gardnerian Wicca and American Folk Magic - Roots of Our Religion Part I: Gardnerian Wicca and American Folk Magic by Merlin. This site goes over the basics of Gardnerian Wicca and its roots.
- Wicca Sources Blog - Wicca, Paganism, gemstone and herbal lore. Commentary on news items too.
- Undernet #wicca HomePage - A free-ranging discussion of Wicca held real-time on IRC. Founded in 1995.
- De Wicca heks - Wicca-site met als onderwerpen o.a. magie, healing, meditatie en divinatie
- The Wicca Ring - A Ring For all Wiccans. One of The Original Wicca Rings.
Wikipedia Articles
- Alexandrian Wicca - Alexandrian Wicca is a tradition of the Neopagan religion of Wicca, founded by Alex Sanders (also known as "King of the Witches") who, with his wife Maxine Sanders, established the tradition in the 1960s. Alexandrian Wicca is similar in many ways to Gardnerian Wicca, and receives regular mention in books on Wicca as one of the religion's ...
- British Traditional Wicca - British Traditional Wicca (abbreviated BTW) is a term used to describe some Wiccan traditions which have their origins in the New Forest region of England. The most prominent such tradtions are Gardnerian Wicca and Alexandrian Wicca, but other traditions either derived from them or claiming a shared New Forest history (notably Central Valley Wicca), are also considered to be British Traditional Wicca.
- Central Valley Wicca - Central Valley Wicca, sometimes abbrebiated as "CVW", refers to a particular group of traditions within the Neopagan religion of Wicca which trace their roots to a group of Wiccan practitioners who brought their practice from England to the Central Valley of California at some point in the early 1960s. It is one of three branches of British Traditional Wicca, alongside Gardnerian and Alexandrian Wicca, as defined by ...
- Faery Wicca - Faery Wicca (or "Fairy Wicca") is an umbrella term that refers to any tradition of modern Wicca that focuses on the Fae (gnomes, elves, faeries, sprites, etc.), their lore, and their relation to the natural world.
- Celtic Wicca - Celtic Wicca is a Tradition of Wicca, loosely syncretized with elements of Celtic mythology, mostly, as noted by authors including Hutton, Kelly, Greer and Cooper, by way of the Romanticist Celtic Revival. Raeburn (2001) is aware of the ahistoricity of "Celtic Wicca", establishing "a firm distinction between historical Celtic inspiration and modern Wiccan practice".