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The first Meg and Mog animation appeared on the Halloween episode of the BBC children's educational series Words and Pictures in 1977. [2]In 2001, an animated TV series of 52 five-minute episodes was planned to be produced as a co-production between Telemagination, TV-Loonland AG and Absolutely Productions for a 2002–2003 delivery, with Loonland holding non-UK rights to the series.
In February 1964 Sybil Leek announced the formation of the Witchcraft Research Association, with herself as its first president. [1] The historian Ronald Hutton suggested that its creation had been influenced by two recent events: the death of prominent Wiccan Gerald Gardner and a lecture tour by the historian Russell Hope Robbins in which Robbins had publicly criticised the Witch-cult ...
Scooby-Doo! and the Witch's Ghost; Secret Magic Control Agency; Shrek Forever After; Shrek the Third; The Snow Queen (1995 film) The Snow Queen (2012 film) The Snow Queen's Revenge; Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937 film) Spirited Away; The Swan Princess; The Sword in the Stone (1963 film)
The pamphlet contains virtually the only contemporary illustrations of Scottish witchcraft [2] and was the earliest Scottish or English printed document dedicated to only covering witchcraft in Scotland. [5] It provided the first descriptions of the osculum infame, also known as the kiss of shame or the obscene kiss, to the English population. [6]
Winsome Witch; The Winter King (TV series) Winx Club; Witch Hat Atelier; Witch's Love; The Witcher (TV series) The Witcher: Blood Origin; The Witches and the Grinnygog (TV series) Witches of East End (TV series) WITS Academy; The Wizard of Oz (TV series) Wizards Beyond Waverly Place; The Worst Witch (1998 TV series) The Worst Witch (2017 TV series)
The accuser knows that the supposed witch will be killed or forced to flee, leaving the object of his jelasy—the witch’s house, possessions or land—free for the taking. “I walked away for some time, lived in another province for some time,” Monica told me, demurring when I asked how she had escaped torture.
On April 9, 2011 the Star Tribune reported that "the Twin Cities metro area -- dubbed "Paganistan" by Wiccans for having one of the highest witch concentrations in the country—has an estimated 20,000 witches who meet in 236 different covens or groups..." in an article about a Wiccan prisoner suing the State for his religious freedom.
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