Monday, October 30, 2023

Mapped: Modern Britain’s witchcraft hotspots revealed as 13,000 declare as witches in UK..

UK News
by Express IN UK News - ( 29-10-2023 )

Source: ONSMap data: © Crown copyright and database right 2021 Get the dataCreated with Datawrapper


With sorcery more popular than ever, how weary of real life witches should you be in ., by Press24 Uk, where many people are interested in watching and following the news,Mapped: Modern Britain’s witchcraft hotspots revealed as 13,000 declare as witches in UK, and now to the details.With sorcery more popular than ever, how weary of real-life witches should you be in your neighbourhood this Halloween?

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Mapped: Modern Britain’s witchcraft hotspots revealed as 13,000 declare as witches in UK

With sorcery more popular than ever, how weary of real-life witches should you be in your neighbourhood this Halloween?

Wiccan priestesses
Wiccan high priestesses praying around a fire pit to the Celtic goddess Brigid (Image: GETTY)

Conducted every 10 years, the census is the most wide-ranging and revealing survey about the residents of England and Wales carried out by the Office for National Statistics (ONS).

An important endeavour for social scientists and policymakers going back two centuries, its seriousness was undermined in 2001 when a voluntary question about religion was first included – which just under 400,000 Brits answered “Jedi”.

The “Any other religion, write in” box has endured, and today provides reliable insights into the lesser-known faiths practised around the country.

Perhaps most interestingly of all is the growing group of self-proclaimed witches, who numbered 13,858 in 2021 – up 6.3 per cent over the past decade.

Check ’s interactive map below to see how many Wiccans and practitioners of witchcraft are in your area this .

Pagan religions and their followers

Number of people in England and Wales belonging to pagan faiths according to Census 2021 survey voluntary responses.

Pagan religions by number of observers.

Social media platforms like TikTok have amplified interest in sorcery in recent years. #WitchTok videos have collectively gathered 30 billion views, while #babywitch, catering to newcomers, has amassed over 600 million.

Even back in 2019, the surging popularity of “The Craft” prompted The New York Times to ask: “When Did Everybody Become a Witch?”

The “when” may be elusive, but at least on this side of the pond we have the answer to “where” – and it’s Cornwall, with 267 people observing Wicca or witchcraft.

This may come as little surprise to those with knowledge of the South Western county’s fantastical reputation as a land apart once inhabited by pixies, fairies and giants. The village of Boscastle on the north coast pays homage to this lore with the Museum of Witchcraft and Magic.

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Witch trial
With social media groups and community meetups, we are far more tolerant of witchcraft nowadays (Image: GETTY)

Wicca and witchcraft are part of the larger contemporary pagan movement, including druids, heathens and many others, which celebrates pre-Christian beliefs.

In some ways, they are ripe for these modern, progressive times: deferring to a Goddess as well as a God, and referring to all practitioners as “witches” regardless of gender. In practical terms, their belief in magic and mass rituals aimed at establishing direct contact with the divine seem hopelessly anachronistic.

And yet, people all over the country openly subscribe to such “spiritual paths”, as they are known. The Yorkshire city of Leeds is home to the second-largest witch population, with 187 followers.

Birmingham came in third place (175), followed by Wiltshire (170) and Plymouth (140).

This is how many witches and

 Satanists there are in Southampton

James Butler
Mon, 30 October 2023 

A witch in the shadow of the moon (Image: Radar)

Dozens of modern witches are living in Southampton, according to the latest census figures.

As Halloween looms, a look at the most recent census figures shows there are a surprising number of folks who identify as witches, pagans, and even Satanists across England and Wales.

In Southampton, 63 people selected Wicca as their religion in Census 2021. The religion developed in England during the first half of the 20th century with its name deriving from the Old English 'wicca' and 'wicce', the masculine and feminine term for witch.

READ MORE: Southampton satanic witch makes a living on OnlyFans

The number of people identifying as wiccan is down from 94 in the 2011 census.

Across England and Wales, over 12,800 people opted for Wicca as their religion – a slight jump from 11,800 in 2011.

Separately, the number of people selecting Witchcraft as their religion has fallen from nearly 1,300 in 2011 to under 1,100 in the recent census.

The figures show seven people selected Witchcraft as their religion in Southampton in 2021.

While the witch population has not soared, there has been a 30% rise in pagans - from 56,600 people in 2011 to over 73,700 two years ago. In Southampton, 465 people said they were pagan.

Halloween, which has roots in paganism, originated from the Celtic celebration of Samhain that marked the end of summer and the beginning of the winter. Celts believed the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead became blurred on this night.

Celtic priests would build bonfires, where the people gathered to burn crops and animals as sacrifices to the Celtic deities.

Eventually, the influence of Christianity spread into Celtic lands and All Soul's Day and All Saint's Day – or All-hallows – was created, incorporating some of the original pagan traditions. To celebrate the days, people would light bonfires, throw parades and costume as saints, angels and devils.

Speaking of the devil, Satanism is also on the rise across the nations. Nearly 5,100 people identified as Satanists in the recent census – more than doubling from 1,900 a decade prior.

Despite the name, not all Satanists believe in a literal Lucifer. Instead, it is often a metaphor for questioning authority and rejecting mainstream religion.

In Southampton, 32 people said they were Satanists.

The number of witches living in

 Bradford has risen, figures reveal

Daryl Ames
Sun, 29 October 2023

THE latest Census figures have revealed that there are a rising number of Wiccans living in Bradford.

As Halloween looms, a look at the most recent Census figures show people identify as witches, pagans, and even Satanists across England and Wales.

In Bradford, 121 people selected Wicca as their religion in the 2021 Census. The religion developed in England during the first half of the 20th century with its name deriving from the Old English 'wicca' and 'wicce' - the masculine and feminine term for witch.

The number of people identifying as Wiccan is up from 106 in the 2011 Census.

Across England and Wales, more than 12,800 people opted for Wicca as their religion – a slight jump from 11,800 in 2011.

Separately, the number of people selecting Witchcraft as their religion has fallen from nearly 1,300 in 2011 to under 1,100 in the recent Census.

The figures show two people selected Witchcraft as their religion in Bradford in 2021.

While the witch population has not soared, there has been a 30 per cent rise in pagans - from 56,600 people in 2011 to over 73,700 two years ago. In Bradford, 559 people said they were pagan.

Halloween, which has roots in paganism, originated from the Celtic celebration of Samhain which marked the end of summer and the beginning of the winter. Celts believed the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead became blurred on this night.

Celtic priests would build bonfires, where the people gathered to burn crops and animals as sacrifices to the Celtic deities.

Eventually, the influence of Christianity spread into Celtic lands and All Soul's Day and All Saint's Day – or All-hallows – was created, incorporating some of the original pagan traditions. To celebrate the days, people would light bonfires, throw parades and costume as saints, angels and devils.

Satanism is also on the rise across the nations. Nearly 5,100 people identified as Satanists in the recent Census – more than doubling from 1,900 a decade prior.

Despite the name, not all Satanists believe in a literal Lucifer. Instead, it is often a metaphor for questioning authority and rejecting mainstream religion.

In Bradford, 46 people said they were Satanists.

More people identify as witches and

 Satanists in BCP

Matt Simpson
Sun, 29 October 2023

There has been a rise in witches, pagans and Satanists in Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole, census data reveals.

Figures from the government’s largest citizen survey suggest 101 people selected Wicca as their religion – up from 99 a decade ago.

Wicca is a religion which developed in England during the first half of the 20th century, with its name deriving from the Old English 'wicca' and 'wicce', the masculine and feminine term for witch.

There has also been a 30 per cent rise in pagans nationally, from 56,600 people in 2011 to over 73,700 two years ago, with 698 people saying they were pagans in BCP.

Halloween, which has roots in paganism, originated from the Celtic celebration of Samhain which marked the end of summer and the beginning of the winter.

Celts believed the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead became blurred on this night.

Celtic priests would build bonfires where people gathered to burn crops and animals as sacrifices to deities.

Eventually, the influence of Christianity spread into Celtic lands and All Soul's Day and All Saint's Day – or All-hallows – were created, incorporating some of the original pagan traditions.

To celebrate, people would light bonfires, throw parades and dress up as saints, angels and devils.

The figures also show seven people selected Witchcraft as their religion in the conurbation while 34 people said they were Satanists.

Satanism is also on the rise across England and Wales, with nearly 5,100 people identifying as Satanists in the recent census – more than doubling from 1,900 a decade prior.

Meanwhile, in the rest of Dorset 83 people selected Wicca as their religion, up from 79, 11 people decided Witchcraft was their religion and 19 people said they were Satanists.



Revealed: The number of satanists,

 witches and pagans living in Sussex

Savannah Nicholson
Sat, 28 October 2023

Census figures have revealed the number of witches living in Sussex.

As Halloween looms, a look at the most recent census figures shows there are a surprising number of people who identify as witches, pagans and even Satanists across England and Wales.

In Brighton and Hove, 111 people selected wicca as their religion in the 2021 Census. The religion developed in England during the first half of the 20th century with its name deriving from the Old English wicca and wicce, the masculine and feminine terms for witch.

The number of people identifying as wiccan in the city is up from 84 in the 2011 census.

In Worthing, 25 people selected wicca as their religion in Census 2021, down from 52 in the 2011 census.

In Eastbourne, 42 people selected wicca as their religion, up from 29 in the 2011 census while 28 people in Hastings selected it, up from 25.

Across England and Wales, more than 12,800 people opted for wicca as their religion – a slight jump from 11,800 in 2011.

Separately, the number of people selecting witchcraft as their religion has fallen from nearly 1,300 in 2011 to under 1,100 in the recent census.

The figures show 13 people selected witchcraft as their religion in Brighton and Hove in 2021, one person selected witchcraft as their religion in Worthing, seven people in Hastings as well as one person in Eastbourne.

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While the witch population has not soared, there has been a 30 per cent rise in pagans - from 56,600 people in 2011 to over 73,700 two years ago.

In Brighton and Hove, 612 people said they were pagan, In Worthing 201 people, 240 in Hastings and 213 in Eastbourne.

Halloween, which has roots in paganism, originated from the Celtic celebration of Samhain that marked the end of summer and the beginning of the winter. Celts believed the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead became blurred on this night.

Celtic priests would build bonfires, where the people gathered to burn crops and animals as sacrifices to the Celtic deities.

Eventually, the influence of Christianity spread into Celtic lands and All Souls Day and All Saints Day – or All Hallows – was created, incorporating some of the original pagan traditions. To celebrate the days, people would light bonfires, throw parades and costume as saints, angels and devils.

Satanism is also on the rise across the nation. Nearly 5,100 people identified as Satanists in the recent census – more than doubling from 1,900 a decade prior.

Despite the name, not all Satanists believe in a literal Lucifer. Instead, it is often a metaphor for questioning authority and rejecting mainstream religion.

In Brighton and Hove, 61 people said they were Satanists, in Worthing 18 people, Hastings 20 and Eastbourne seven.

Halloween 2023: Dozens of witches living in South Kesteven

Dozens of modern witches are living in South Kesteven, according to the latest census figures.

Dozens of modern witches are living in South Kesteven, according to the latest census figures.

As Halloween looms, a look at the most recent census figures shows there are a surprising number of folks who identify as witches, pagans, and even Satanists across England and Wales.

In South Kesteven, 37 people selected Wicca as their religion in Census 2021. The religion developed in England during the first half of the 20th century with its name deriving from the Old English 'wicca' and 'wicce', the masculine and feminine term for witch.

The number of people identifying as wiccan has remained the same since the 2011 census.

Across England and Wales, over 12,800 people opted for Wicca as their religion – a slight jump from 11,800 in 2011.

Separately, the number of people selecting Witchcraft as their religion has fallen from nearly 1,300 in 2011 to under 1,100 in the recent census.

The figures show two people selected Witchcraft as their religion in South Kesteven in 2021.

While the witch population has not soared, there has been a 30% rise in pagans - from 56,600 people in 2011 to over 73,700 two years ago. In South Kesteven, 197 people said they were pagan.

Halloween, which has roots in paganism, originated from the Celtic celebration of Samhain that marked the end of summer and the beginning of the winter. Celts believed the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead became blurred on this night.

Celtic priests would build bonfires, where the people gathered to burn crops and animals as sacrifices to the Celtic deities.

Eventually, the influence of Christianity spread into Celtic lands and All Soul's Day and All Saint's Day – or All-hallows – was created, incorporating some of the original pagan traditions. To celebrate the days, people would light bonfires, throw parades and costume as saints, angels and devils.

Speaking of the devil, Satanism is also on the rise across the nations. Nearly 5,100 people identified as Satanists in the recent census – more than doubling from 1,900 a decade prior.

Despite the name, not all Satanists believe in a literal Lucifer. Instead, it is often a metaphor for questioning authority and rejecting mainstream religion.

In South Kesteven, seven people said they were Satanists.

Halloween 2023: Number of witches and pagans is on the rise in Portsmouth, Fareham, Gosport and Havant, say latest figures

Chris Broom
Mon, 30 October 2023 

A person holding a witch's hat watches the Blue Moon rise over Castle Hill in Huddersfield, the last full moon to fall on Halloween until 2039. (Photo: Danny Lawson)

A look at the most recent census figures shows there are a surprising number of folks who identify as witches, pagans, and even Satanists across England and Wales.

In Portsmouth, 68 people selected Wicca as their religion in Census 2021, with 30 more in Fareham, 37 in Gosport and 44 in Havant for a total of 179. The religion developed in England during the first half of the 20th century with its name deriving from the Old English 'wicca' and 'wicce', the masculine and feminine term for witch.

The number of people identifying as wiccan is slightly up from 178 across the region in the 2011 census.

Across England and Wales, over 12,800 people opted for Wicca as their religion – a slight jump from 11,800 in 2011.

Separately, the number of people selecting Witchcraft as their religion has fallen from nearly 1,300 in 2011 to under 1,100 in the recent census.

The figures show five people selected Witchcraft as their religion in Portsmouth in 2021.

While the witch population has not soared, there has been a 30 per cent rise in pagans – from 56,600 people in 2011 to over 73,700 in the last census. In Portsmouth, 359 people said they were pagan with 163 in Fareham, 186 in Gosport and 198 in Havant.

Halloween, which has roots in paganism, originated from the Celtic celebration of Samhain that marked the end of summer and the beginning of the winter. Celts believed the boundary between the worlds of the living and the dead became blurred on this night.

Celtic priests would build bonfires, where the people gathered to burn crops and animals as sacrifices to the Celtic deities.

Eventually, the influence of Christianity spread into Celtic lands and All Soul's Day and All Saint's Day – or All-hallows – was created, incorporating some of the original pagan traditions. To celebrate the days, people would light bonfires, throw parades and costume as saints, angels and devils.

Speaking of the devil, Satanism is also on the rise across the nations. Nearly 5,100 people identified as Satanists in the recent census – more than doubling from 1,900 a decade prior.

Despite the name, not all Satanists believe in a literal Lucifer. Instead, it is often a metaphor for questioning authority and rejecting mainstream religion.

In Portsmouth, 42 people said they were Satanists, with 10 in Fareham, eight in Gosport and 10 in Havant.

Witchcraft and wizardry in Britain

Number of Wiccans and followers of witchcraft declared in Census 2021 per local authority.

Map of witches in Britain.

Once Again, the History of Witch Trials Has Inspired the World’s Most Annoying Merch

No! You are not the “granddaughters of the witches they couldn’t burn”!
OCT 29, 2023
A woodcut from a 1655 pamphlet by Ralph Gardiner depicting the hanging of several English “witches.”

The other day, I was minding my own business online, just trying to survive in a world of unrelenting horror, when suddenly I was served an ad. Maybe the algorithm has figured out that I am mates with a bunch of the people who appeared in the BBC’s Witch podcast, which was released earlier this year. It has certainly gleaned that I am a woman, I tend to read things about history, and I am interested in feminist theory more generally.

This piece was adapted from a post on Eleanor Janega’s blog, Going Medieval.
Screenshot by Eleanor Janega

Hilariously, what that means is I am often served ads for this schlock:

This winds me up no end, and I want to explain why. After all, enough people seem to find this idea radical that you can buy variations of this twee-ass shit on shirts, notepads, wherever.

Yeah, OK, you might say. It’s a bit basic, but is it bad?

Yes, I would argue, yes it is. For a couple of reasons.

The first and most obvious one is that the women who were killed during the early-modern witch trials were not, in fact, witches. They were just people.

This is not to say that some of those accused of witchcraft didn’t confess to it on occasion, or maybe even think they were doing some witch-ass stuff. But that doesn’t mean they were actually doing it.

Medieval people were usually pretty clear on that, unlike the people making these stupid shirts. The 10th-century monk Regino of Prüm’s Canon Episcopi, for example, had this to say about the idea that witches flew off at night:

It must not be omitted that some wicked women, turned away after Satan and seduced by the illusions and phantasams of demons, believe and profess that, in the hours of the night, they ride upon certain beasts with Diana, the goddess of the pagans, and an innumerable multitude of women, and in the silence of the dead of night traverse great spaces of the earth and they obey her commands as of their mistress, and are summoned to her service on certain nights.

This is an important point. People might think they were doing some pagan stuff and hanging out with Diana, but in fact they were just delusional—and, this monk argued, if they thought this, they needed religious intervention because they had been deceived.

Francisco Goya’s Witches’ Sabbath (1798), showing what was emphatically not happening, which even 10th-century people knew. Google Art Project

In the later medieval period, before we get into the modern witch panics, you occasionally got women who were found by inquisitorial boards to be guilty of witchcraft when they were being investigated for heresy. This is important, for reasons I will make clear later.

Anyway, this was the generalized approach put forward by the 13th-century Pope Alexander IV. In his 1258 papal bull Quod super nonnullis, he ordered inquisitors to generally avoid investigating sorcery unless what was happening “clearly savoured of manifest heresy.” This remained pretty much the approach for the rest of the medieval period. If people were messing around, doing stuff where they thought they were sacrificing to demons or something, you could get in trouble for that and excommunicated for heresy. However, it wasn’t the main thing that inquisitors were meant to be worrying about, because it was mostly just stupid.

I would argue that this is still bad, even if it’s not a death sentence per se, because it was still a way of cutting people off from their communities by exiling them from their churches, which isn’t great. Even if they think they are in a dialogue with a demon or whatever. But the point is, for a long time, the way people approached sorcery was: That’s weird. You’re being weird and not Christian.

In the early-modern period, things got a lot worse in this arena, as they did in several areas of life. (I wrote a book about it. Go read that.) Suddenly, you had a bunch of Protestants around the shop, and they were in a religious arms race with the church to prove who was the most holy. And a great way of proving you were holy was to go around yelling that women were witches. They still weren’t. Instead, they were women who had money that other people wanted. Or women who performed abortions. Or women who begged. Things of this nature.

And occasionally they still sorta thought they were witches? Or sometimes told people that to scare them. During the Pendle witch trials in 1612, for example, Alizon Device absolutely told a court that she had sold her soul to the devil and had lamed a certain John Law after he refused to sell her some pins. Anyway, she got killed. A lot of her family got killed. A bunch of people got killed. But they weren’t witches. Alizon just … had a lot going on. Because you cannot, in fact, sell your soul to the devil and get the powers to take out people’s legs in return. That is a fact.

It’s even more of a fact that the great majority of people who were killed for witchcraft did not think they were witches. In the majority of cases, if they confessed that they were witches, it was usually because they had been tortured repeatedly and at length in order to obtain a confession, as was the case in the Salem witch trials, for example. These were people who faced horrifying punishment for absolutely no reason, then were killed.

So, when you go around wearing a cute little shirt talking about “the witches they couldn’t burn,” you are calling all of these innocent people witches. And they weren’t. You are doing exactly the same thing as all those gross Puritans or inquisitors. You are being worse than the medieval Catholic Church because at least they would say, That witch stuff isn’t real.

Secondly—another thing about people who were falsely found guilty of being witches—they usually weren’t burned. They were more commonly hanged. The confusion here, I think, stems from the earlier medieval conflation of sorcery with heresy. ’Cause you know who was burned at the stake? Heretics. My boy Jan Hus? Burned at the stake. People who got prosecuted for witchcraft as a part of heresy trials in the medieval period? Sometimes burned! The people accused of being witches in the modern period? Not so much!

Occasionally, people who were accused of witchcraft were burned, but that was more typical in Catholic places, like southwestern Germany, that were still adhering to prosecuting witchcraft as heresy. Overall, if you were getting killed for witchcraft, odds were it was the less flashy hanging route for you.

This is not to excuse the burning at the stake of heretics, who, I think, should not in fact have been killed for not being the right kind of Christian. Nor is it to say that being hanged is somehow a better way to die than being burned and that, therefore, this excuses what happened. Instead, what I would argue is, if you are gonna produce merch that makes light of the estimated 30,000 to 60,000 people who were killed over the 300-some years of the witch panics, you could at least get the facts straight.

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Also! These shirts with their pictures of women and their references to being a “granddaughter” of the women killed as witches obscure the fact that, of those thousands of people killed, many were men. This isn’t to say that women didn’t account for a greater number of those who were killed, because they did. However, in Europe, a good 10 percent of the total number of people killed as witches were men. This gender breakdown also varied from region to region. For example, in Iceland, of the 22 people who were killed in witch trials, 20 of them were men. This probably has to do with a local understanding of sorcery as a learned skill that required Latin. (Because, as we all know, the demons of hell speak Latin.) We see a similar pattern in the Baltic witch trials, in which about 60 percent of those killed were men. One of the most horrific of the Salem trial killings was that of Giles Corey, who was slowly crushed to death by having rocks piled on him after he refused to admit that he was a witch.

I say this not to “well, actually” the remembrance of the witch panics but to point out that the entire thing was a disgusting waste of human life and that everyone who was killed deserves to be recognized as a victim. These were horrible violent actions, and the men killed in Iceland, or Estonia, or the American colonies were just as innocent and valid as the women who suffered alongside them. If we’re doing commemoration, then let’s do it.

All of which brings me to my last point about why this is unacceptable: All those algorithms trying to sell me a factually incorrect T-shirt are directly profiting off selling a lie rooted in the pain and death of thousands. Gross! The innocent people who were killed in one of the darkest periods of human history deserve our respect and are not, in fact, a cute little way to make a quick buck. There’s no way to argue that this is a respectful commemoration, because they haven’t even bothered to get the basic facts straight. There’s no way to argue that it’s a feminist statement because it directly plays into misogynistic lies about marginalized women in order to try to make a point. It’s also not feminist because it occludes the men who were killed based on the same lies.

I am incredibly here to celebrate all the people who identify as witches now, and I think their spiritual and religious practices are very valid. However, whatever is happening with all this merch isn’t doing that. It’s trading in lies and profiting from pain. If we want to argue that our society is better now than it was in the early-modern period, then we need to start acting like it, and we need to stop repeating these falsehoods. Now.

Make a cutesy little shirt about that.