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Flying ointment

Flying ointment is a hallucinogenic ointment said to have been used by witches in the practice of European witchcraft from at least as far back as the Early Modern period, when detailed recipes for such preparations were first recorded.

Preparation for the Witches' Sabbath by David Teniers the Younger. Note on the left an older witch reading from a grimoire while anointing the buttocks of a young witch about to fly to the sabbath upon an inverted besom with a candle upon its twigs
A Witches' Sabbath by Frans Francken the Younger. Note on extreme right pots of magic ointment and older witch applying ointment to back of naked younger witch

Name

The ointment is known by a wide variety of names, including witches' flying ointment, green ointment, magic salve, or lycanthropic ointment. In German it was Hexensalbe (lit.'witch salve') or Flugsalbe (lit.'flying salve'). Latin names included unguentum sabbati lit.'sabbath unguent'), unguentum pharelis, unguentum populi (lit.'poplar unguent') or unguenta somnifera (lit.'sleeping unguent').[1][2]

Composition

Francis Bacon (attributed as "Lord Verulam") listed the ingredients of the witches ointment as "the fat of children digged out of their graves, of juices of smallage, wolfe-bane, and cinque foil, mingled with the meal of fine wheat."[3]

 
Ingredient: Deadly Nightshade, Atropa belladonna
 
Ingredient: Black Henbane, Hyoscyamus niger
 
Witches flying to the Sabbath: Capricho No. 68: Linda maestra (Pretty teacher) by Francisco Goya - from the series Los Caprichos

Unrelated to Francis' account, poisonous ingredients listed in works on ethnobotany include: belladonna,[4] henbane bell, jimson weed, black henbane, mandrake, hemlock, and/or wolfsbane,[5][6][7] most of which contain atropine, hyoscyamine, and/or Scopolamine.[8] Scopolamine can cause psychotropic effects when absorbed transdermally.[9] These tropane alkaloids are classified as deliriants in regards to their psychoactive effects.

Extreme toxicity of active ingredients

With the exception of Potentilla reptans, the plants most frequently recorded as ingredients in Early Modern recipes for flying ointments are extremely toxic[10] and have caused numerous fatalities when eaten,[11] whether by confusion with edible species[12][13] or in cases of criminal poisoning[14] or suicide.[15]

The historian, occultist and theosophist Carl Kiesewetter of Meiningen, author of Geschichte des Neueren Occultismus in 1892 and Die Geheimwissenschaften, eine Kulturgeschichte der Esoterik in 1895, was one such casualty.[16]

Bodily flight versus flight in spirit

He little knows the Devil who does believe that witches and wizards can be borne through the air at wondrous speed to far distant places and there hold revels, dances and suchlike with folk of the same type[17]

the mediaeval witch-ointments...brought visionary beings into the presence of the patient, transported him to the witches' sabbath, enabled him to turn into a beast.[18]

Magic ointments...produced effects which the subjects themselves believed in, even stating that they had intercourse with evil spirits, had been at the Sabbat and danced on the Brocken with their lovers...The peculiar hallucinations evoked by the drug had been so powerfully transmitted from the subconscious mind to consciousness that mentally uncultivated persons...believed them to be reality.[19]

It has been a subject of discussion between clergymen as to whether witches were able physically to fly to the Sabbath on their brooms with help of the ointment, or whether such 'flight' was explicable in other ways: a delusion created by the Devil in the minds of the witches; the souls of the witches leaving their bodies to fly in spirit to the Sabbath; or a hallucinatory 'trip' facilitated by the entheogenic effects of potent drugs absorbed through the skin.[20][21] An early proponent of the last explanation was Renaissance scholar and scientist Giambattista della Porta, who not only interviewed users of the flying ointment, but witnessed its effects upon such users at first hand, comparing the deathlike trances he observed in his subjects with their subsequent accounts of the bacchanalian revelry they had 'enjoyed'.[22][page needed]

Body in coma and riding on beasts

 
Witches prepare a magic salve. Note naked witch top left riding through the air mounted upon a goat. (woodcut, 1571)

anointing themselves with certain unguents...they are carried by night through the air to distant lands to do certain black magic...but nothing of this is true, though they think it to be...while they are thus dead and cold, they have no more feeling than a corpse and may be scourged and burnt; but after the time agreed upon...their senses are liberated, they arise well and merry, relate what they have done, and bring news from other lands.[Italics not original][23]

Dominican churchman Bartolommeo Spina of Pisa gives two accounts of the power of the flying ointment in his Tractatus de strigibus sive maleficis ('Treatise on witches or evildoers') of 1525. The first concerns an incident in the life of his acquaintance Augustus de Turre of Bergamo, a physician. While studying medicine in Pavia as a young man, Augustus returned late one night to his lodgings (without a key) to find no one awake to let him in. Climbing up to a balcony, he was able to enter through a window, and at once sought out the maidservant, who should have been awake to admit him. On checking her room, however, he found her lying unconscious - beyond rousing - on the floor. The following morning he tried to question her on the matter, but she would only reply that she had been 'on a journey'.

Bartolommeo's second account is more suggestive and points toward another element in the witches' 'flights'. It concerns a certain notary of Lugano who, unable to find his wife one morning, searched for her all over their estate and finally discovered her lying deeply unconscious, naked and dirty with her vagina exposed, in a corner of the pigsty. The notary 'immediately understood that she was a witch' (!) and at first wanted to kill her on the spot, but, thinking better of such rashness, waited until she recovered from her stupor, in order to question her. Terrified by his wrath, the poor woman fell to her knees and confessed that during the night she had 'been on a journey'.

Light is cast on the tale of the notary's wife by two accounts widely separated in time but revealing a persistent theme in European Witchcraft. The first is that of Regino of Prüm whose De synodalibus causis et disciplinis ecclesiasticis libri duo (circa 906 C.E.) speaks of women who 'seduced...by demons...insist that they ride at night on certain beasts [italics not original] together with Diana, goddess of the pagans, and a great multitude of women; that they cover great distances in the silence of the deepest night...'[24] (See also Canon Episcopi).

The second account dates from some 800 years later, coming from Norway in the early 18th century and is the testimony, at the age of thirteen, of one Siri Jørgensdatter. Siri claimed that when she was seven her grandmother had taken her to the witches' sabbath on the mountain meadow Blockula ('blue-hill'): her grandmother led her to a pigsty, where she smeared a sow with some ointment which she took from a horn, whereupon grandmother and granddaughter mounted the animal and, after a short ride through the air, arrived at a building on the Sabbath mountain.[25]

Alleged sexual element in application

The hallucinations are frequently dominated by the erotic moment...in those days, in order to experience these sensations, young and old women would rub their bodies with the 'witches' salve'.[26]

the witches confess that...they anoint a staff and ride on it to the appointed place or anoint themselves under the arms and in other hairy places...[Italics not original to text].[27]

in rifleing the closet of the ladie [Alice Kyteler], they found a pipe of oyntement, wherewith she greased a staffe, upon which she ambled and galloped through thick and thin, when and in what manner she listed.[28]

Some sources have claimed that such an ointment would best be absorbed through mucous membranes, and that the traditional image of a female witch astride a broomstick implies the application of flying ointment to the vulva.[29] The passage from the trial for witchcraft in Ireland of Hiberno-Norman noblewoman Alice Kyteler in 1324 quoted above is, while not explicit, certainly open to interpretations both drug-related and sexual. It is also a very early account of such practices, pre-dating by some centuries witch trials in the early modern period. The testimony of Dame Kyteler's maidservant, Petronilla de Meath, while somewhat compromised by having been extracted under torture, contains references not only to her mistress's abilities in the preparation of 'magical' medicines, but also her sexual behaviour, including at least one instance of (alleged) intercourse with a demon.[30][31] According to the inquisition ('in which were five knights and numerous nobles') set in motion by Richard de Ledrede, Bishop of Ossory, there was in the city of Kilkenny a band of heretical sorcerers, at the head of whom was Dame Alice Kyteler and against whom no fewer than seven charges relating to witchcraft were laid. The fifth charge is of particular interest in the context of the 'greased staffe' mentioned above:

In order to arouse feelings of love or hatred, or to inflict death or disease on the bodies of the faithful, they made use of powders, unguents, ointments and candles of fat, which were compounded as follows. They took the entrails of cocks sacrificed to demons, certain horrible worms, various unspecified herbs, dead men's nails, the hair, brains, and shreds of the cerements of boys who were buried unbaptized, with other abominations, all of which they cooked, with various incantations, over a fire of oak-logs in a vessel made out of the skull of a decapitated thief.[32][page needed]

Possible opiate component

 
Opium Poppy: Papaver somniferum

One possible key to how individuals dealt with the toxicity of the nightshades usually said to be part of flying ointments is through the supposed antidotal reaction some of the solanaceous alkaloids have with the alkaloids of Papaver somniferum (opium poppy). This is discussed by Alexander Kuklin in his brief book, How Do Witches Fly? (DNA Press, 1999). This antagonism was claimed to exist by the movement of Eclectic medicine. For instance, King's American Dispensatory states in the entry on belladonna: "Belladonna and opium appear to exert antagonistic influences, especially as regards their action on the brain, the spinal cord, and heart; they have consequently been recommended and employed as antidotes to each other in cases of poisoning" going on to make the extravagant claim that "this matter is now positively and satisfactorily settled; hence in all cases of poisoning by belladonna the great remedy is morphine, and its use may be guided by the degree of pupillary contraction it occasions." The use of opiates in the treatment of belladonna poisoning is, however, strongly contraindicated in modern medical practice [see below].

The synergy between belladonna and poppy alkaloids was made use of in the so-called "twilight sleep" that was provided for women during childbirth beginning in the Edwardian era. Twilight sleep was a mixture of scopolamine, a belladonna alkaloid, and morphine, a Papaver alkaloid, that was injected and which furnished a combination of painkilling and amnesia for a woman in labor. A version is still manufactured for use as the injectable compound Omnopon.

There is no definite indication of the proportions of solanaceous herbs vs. poppy used in flying ointments, and most historical recipes for flying ointment do not include poppy. Furthermore, a reputable publication by the former UK Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Fisheries (now DEFRA) states specifically that, in cases of poisoning by Atropa belladonna - far from being antidotes - 'Preparations containing morphine or opiates should be avoided as they have a synergic action with atropine'; an appropriate antidote being, by contrast, the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor physostigmine salicylate.[33]

Historical documents

The first mention of an unguent in relation to a popular belief of orgiastic flying occurs in Roland of Cremona's theological summa, written in the 1230s.[34] The use by witches of flying ointments was first described, according to known sources, by Johannes Hartlieb in 1456[citation needed]. It was also described by the Spanish theologian Alfonso Tostado (d. 1455) in Super Genesis Commentaria (printed in Venice, 1507), whose commentary tended to accredit the thesis of the reality of the Witches' Sabbath.[citation needed] In 1477 Antone Rose confessed that the devil gave her a stick 18 inches in length on which she would rub an ointment and with the words "go, in the name of the Devil, go" would fly to the "synagogue" (an alternative name for Sabbath in early witchcraft).[35]

In popular culture

Drama

There is, in the work of the playwright Francisco de Rojas Zorrilla (1607-1648) of Toledo, an exchange concerning the flying ointment, the (following) passage occurring in the play Lo que quería el Marqués de Villena ('What the Marquis of Villena Wanted').[36]

Marquis: Others believe that witches can fly.

Zambapalo: And can't they?

Marquis: Certainly not, you ignorant fellow.

Zambapalo: Since I'm no specialist in these matters, I must ask you what happens.

Marquis: They all rub themselves with ointment.

Zambapalo: And then what?

Marquis: The ointment, which is an opiate made of henbane given them by the Devil, sends them to sleep, and they dream such a dream that they think they are not dreaming at all. And since the Devil has great power to deceive, he makes them all dream the same dream. And that is why they think they are flying through the air, when they are really fast asleep. And although they never fly at all, they think, as soon as they wake, that they have all been to see the calf, and all visited the fields at Baraona. When, by God, in reality, more than two of them have been seen sleeping in their rooms with the ointment on them.

Literature and film

1-Water hemlock, sweet flag, cinquefoil, bat's blood, deadly nightshade and oil.
2-Baby's fat, juice of cowbane, aconite, cinquefoil, deadly nightshade and soot.
  • In the movie serial Warlock, the villain kills an unbaptised boy to get this "Flying Ointment".
  • In Jodi Picoult's Salem Falls, a group of four girls practicing witchcraft ingest a flying ointment made of belladonna.
  • In the book Calling on Dragons (Book three of the Enchanted Forest Chronicles), the witch Morwen uses a flying potion on a straw basket and a broomstick, not on herself.
  • In E. L. Konigsburg's Jennifer, Hecate, Macbeth, William McKinley, and Me, Elizabeth, two characters try to make a flying ointment.
  • In the 2015 horror film The Witch, a witch kills an infant child and makes flying ointment out of his corpse.
  • In the 2016 movie, The Love Witch, the main character applies a flying ointment to her body.
  • In the 2019 movie, Portrait of a Lady on Fire, the two main characters apply a flying ointment to their armpits.
  • In the 2020 movie, Gretel and Hansel, directed by Oz Perkins, the witch, caressing a precious jar filled with ointment, applies it to herself, and then initiates Gretel into witchcraft by inducing her to do the same.

Music

'and belladonna, to make your eyes like a...beast's!

To anoint the body and make it shine,

To drink and make thyself divine,

To choose another's form and make it...thine!'

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ Rätsch, Christian (2005). The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants: Ethnopharmacology and Its Applications. Simon and Schuster. p. 3295. ISBN 9781594776625.
  2. ^ Rätsch, Christian; Müller-Ebeling, Claudia (2006). Pagan Christmas: The Plants, Spirits, and Rituals at the Origins of Yuletide. Simon and Schuster. p. 403. ISBN 9781594776601.
  3. ^ Lewis Spence (1970). The Encyclopedia of the Occult. Bracken Books. p. 306 – via Internet Archive.
  4. ^ Schultes, Richard Evans; Hofmann, Albert (1979). The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens (2nd ed.). Springfield Illinois: Charles C. Thomas. pps. 261-4.
  5. ^ Rätsch, Christian, The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants: Ethnopharmacology and Its Applications pub. Park Street Press 2005
  6. ^ Schultes, Richard Evans; Albert Hofmann (1979). Plants of the Gods: Origins of Hallucinogenic Use New York: McGraw-Hill. ISBN 0-07-056089-7.
  7. ^ Hansen, Harold A. The Witch's Garden pub. Unity Press 1978 ISBN 978-0913300473
  8. ^ Furst, Peter T. Hallucinogens and Culture pub. Chandler and Sharp 1976 (volume in series on cross-cultural themes) p.138.
  9. ^ Sollmann, Torald, A Manual of Pharmacology and Its Applications to Therapeutics and Toxicology. 8th edition. Pub. W.B. Saunders, Philadelphia and London 1957.
  10. ^ Tampion, John : Dangerous Plants, pub. David and Charles, Canada 1977. ISBN 0 7153 7375 7
  11. ^ A Colour Atlas of Poisonous Plants : A Handbook for Pharmacists, Doctors, Toxicologists, and Biologists by Frohne, Dietrich and Pfänder, Hans Jürgen of University of Kiel, translated from second German edition by Norman Grainger Bisset, London : a Wolfe Science Book and one of the volumes in the illustrated series Wolfe Atlases, pub. Wolfe Publishing Ltd. 1984.
  12. ^ Mateo Montoya, A; Mavrakanas, N; Schutz, JS (2009). "Acute anticholinergic syndrome from Atropa belladonna mistaken for blueberries". Eur J Ophthalmol. 19 (1): 170–2. doi:10.1177/112067210901900130. PMID 19123171. S2CID 9387171.
  13. ^ "The POISON GARDEN Website blog - 28th November 2015". Thepoisongarden.co.uk. Retrieved 12 March 2019.
  14. ^ Schenk, Gustav Das Buch der Gifte translated by Michael Bullock as The Book of Poisons pub. Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1956 page 28, re. A. belladonna as Lithuanian criminal poison 'Maulda'.
  15. ^ Demirhan, A; Tekelioğlu, ÜY; Yıldız, İ; Korkmaz, T; Bilgi, M; Akkaya, A; Koçoğlu, H (2013). "Anticholinergic Toxic Syndrome Caused by Atropa Belladonna Fruit (Deadly Nightshade): A Case Report". Turk J Anaesthesiol Reanim. 41 (6): 226–8. doi:10.5152/TJAR.2013.43. PMC 4894214. PMID 27366377.
  16. ^ Bert-Marco Schuldes: Psychotropicon zum Bilsenkraut und dem Tod Kiesewetters. In: Psychotropicon. Das Online-Magazin für Psychonauten vom 5. März 2012.
  17. ^ Bishop Jesper Brocmand, Systema universae theologiae 1633
  18. ^ Tylor, Edward B.1924 Primitive Culture : Researches into the Development of Mythology, Philosophy, Religion, Language, Art, and Custom 2 vols. (combined) pub. New York : Brentano's. Originally published 1871.
  19. ^ Lewin, Louis Phantastica, Narcotic and Stimulating Drugs : Their Use and Abuse. Translated from the second German edition by P.H.A. Wirth, pub. New York : E.P. Dutton. Original German edition 1924.
  20. ^ "Witches Gallery". Bristol Radical History Group. Retrieved 19 July 2017.
  21. ^ Harner, Michael J., Hallucinogens and Shamanism, pub. Oxford University Press 1973, reprinted U.S.A.1978 Chapter 8 : pps. 125-150 : The Role of Hallucinogenic Plants in European Witchcraft.
  22. ^ John Baptista Porta (1584). . Archived from the original on 16 May 2008.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  23. ^ Ciruelo,Pedro : Tratado en el cual se repruevan todas las supersticiones y hechizerías, pub. Barcelona 1628, P.II, c. 1, N. 6, pps. 45-46, quoted in H.C. Lea : Materials Toward a History of Witchcraft, pub. Thomas Yoseloff New York and London 1957, page 413.
  24. ^ Quoted in : Ginzburg, Carlo, Ecstasies. Deciphering the Witches' Sabbath, New York, 1991, ISBN 0-226-29693-8. First published in Italian as Storia notturna: Una decifrazione del Sabba, 1989.
  25. ^ Quoted in Pickering, David : A Dictionary of Witchcraft pub. David Pickering 2014.
  26. ^ Hesse, Erich, Narcotics and Drug Addiction pub. New York : Philosophical Library 1946
  27. ^ Bergamo, Jordanes de, Quaestio de Strigis (Unpublished manuscript, Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris), quoted in Joseph Hansen Quellen und Untersuchen zur Geschichte des Hexenwahns und der Hexengefolgung im Mittelalter pps. 195-200. Pub. 1901 [1905]. Bonn : Carl Georgi.
  28. ^ Wright, Thomas, ed. A Contemporary Narrative of the Proceedings Against Dame Alice Kyteler, Prosecuted for Sorcery in 1324, by Richard de Ledrede, Bishop of Ossory. London: The Camden Society, 1843.
  29. ^ Emboden, William Narcotic Plants : Hallucinogens, stimulants, inebriants, and hypnotics, their origins and uses 2nd edition (revised and enlarged) pub. Macmillan, New York 1979 ISBN 0-02-535480-9 p.127
  30. ^ Williams, Bernadette, 'The Sorcery Trial of Alice Kyteler,' History Ireland Vol. 2, No.4 (Winter, 1994)
  31. ^ Davidson, Sharon, and John O. Ward, trans. The Sorcery Trial of Alice Kyteler: A Contemporary Account (1324). Asheville, NC: Pegasus Press, 2004.
  32. ^ Seymour, St. John D. Irish Witchcraft and Demonology pub. Dorset Press 1992 ISBN 0-88029-734-4
  33. ^ Cooper, Marion R. and Johnson, Anthony W. Poisonous Plants in Britain and their effects on Animals and Man, Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food Reference Book 161 (replacing Bulletin 161) pub. HMSO London, 1984 ISBN 0 11 242529 1 page 213
  34. ^ Ayelet Even-Ezra, “Cursus: an early thirteenth century source for nocturnal flights and ointments in the work of Roland of Cremona,” Magic, Ritual and Witchcraft 12/2 (Winter 2017), 314-330
  35. ^ Encyclopedia of witchcraft and demonology, Page 50, octopus, 1974
  36. ^ Quoted in : Baroja, Julio Caro The World of the Witches pub. Phoenix 2001 (Original Title Las brujas y su mundo) ISBN 9781842122426)

External links

  • Belladonna in flying ointments
  • If Witches No Longer Fly: Today's Pagans and the Solanaceous Plants
  • King's American Dispensatory on Belladonna
  • FLYING OINTMENTS: Their Ingredients and Their Use
  • Witches' Ointment: Information from the Gale Encyclopedia of Occultism & Parapsychology

flying, ointment, this, article, needs, more, medical, references, verification, relies, heavily, primary, sources, please, review, contents, article, appropriate, references, unsourced, poorly, sourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, news. This article needs more medical references for verification or relies too heavily on primary sources Please review the contents of the article and add the appropriate references if you can Unsourced or poorly sourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Flying ointment news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2020 Flying ointment is a hallucinogenic ointment said to have been used by witches in the practice of European witchcraft from at least as far back as the Early Modern period when detailed recipes for such preparations were first recorded Preparation for the Witches Sabbath by David Teniers the Younger Note on the left an older witch reading from a grimoire while anointing the buttocks of a young witch about to fly to the sabbath upon an inverted besom with a candle upon its twigs A Witches Sabbath by Frans Francken the Younger Note on extreme right pots of magic ointment and older witch applying ointment to back of naked younger witch Contents 1 Name 2 Composition 3 Extreme toxicity of active ingredients 4 Bodily flight versus flight in spirit 5 Body in coma and riding on beasts 6 Alleged sexual element in application 7 Possible opiate component 8 Historical documents 9 In popular culture 9 1 Drama 9 2 Literature and film 9 3 Music 10 Gallery 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksName EditThe ointment is known by a wide variety of names including witches flying ointment green ointment magic salve or lycanthropic ointment In German it was Hexensalbe lit witch salve or Flugsalbe lit flying salve Latin names included unguentum sabbati lit sabbath unguent unguentum pharelis unguentum populi lit poplar unguent or unguenta somnifera lit sleeping unguent 1 2 Composition EditFrancis Bacon attributed as Lord Verulam listed the ingredients of the witches ointment as the fat of children digged out of their graves of juices of smallage wolfe bane and cinque foil mingled with the meal of fine wheat 3 Ingredient Deadly Nightshade Atropa belladonna Ingredient Black Henbane Hyoscyamus niger Witches flying to the Sabbath Capricho No 68 Linda maestra Pretty teacher by Francisco Goya from the series Los Caprichos Unrelated to Francis account poisonous ingredients listed in works on ethnobotany include belladonna 4 henbane bell jimson weed black henbane mandrake hemlock and or wolfsbane 5 6 7 most of which contain atropine hyoscyamine and or Scopolamine 8 Scopolamine can cause psychotropic effects when absorbed transdermally 9 These tropane alkaloids are classified as deliriants in regards to their psychoactive effects Extreme toxicity of active ingredients EditWith the exception of Potentilla reptans the plants most frequently recorded as ingredients in Early Modern recipes for flying ointments are extremely toxic 10 and have caused numerous fatalities when eaten 11 whether by confusion with edible species 12 13 or in cases of criminal poisoning 14 or suicide 15 The historian occultist and theosophist Carl Kiesewetter of Meiningen author of Geschichte des Neueren Occultismus in 1892 and Die Geheimwissenschaften eine Kulturgeschichte der Esoterik in 1895 was one such casualty 16 Bodily flight versus flight in spirit EditHe little knows the Devil who does believe that witches and wizards can be borne through the air at wondrous speed to far distant places and there hold revels dances and suchlike with folk of the same type 17 the mediaeval witch ointments brought visionary beings into the presence of the patient transported him to the witches sabbath enabled him to turn into a beast 18 Magic ointments produced effects which the subjects themselves believed in even stating that they had intercourse with evil spirits had been at the Sabbat and danced on the Brocken with their lovers The peculiar hallucinations evoked by the drug had been so powerfully transmitted from the subconscious mind to consciousness that mentally uncultivated persons believed them to be reality 19 It has been a subject of discussion between clergymen as to whether witches were able physically to fly to the Sabbath on their brooms with help of the ointment or whether such flight was explicable in other ways a delusion created by the Devil in the minds of the witches the souls of the witches leaving their bodies to fly in spirit to the Sabbath or a hallucinatory trip facilitated by the entheogenic effects of potent drugs absorbed through the skin 20 21 An early proponent of the last explanation was Renaissance scholar and scientist Giambattista della Porta who not only interviewed users of the flying ointment but witnessed its effects upon such users at first hand comparing the deathlike trances he observed in his subjects with their subsequent accounts of the bacchanalian revelry they had enjoyed 22 page needed Body in coma and riding on beasts EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Witches prepare a magic salve Note naked witch top left riding through the air mounted upon a goat woodcut 1571 anointing themselves with certain unguents they are carried by night through the air to distant lands to do certain black magic but nothing of this is true though they think it to be while they are thus dead and cold they have no more feeling than a corpse and may be scourged and burnt but after the time agreed upon their senses are liberated they arise well and merry relate what they have done and bring news from other lands Italics not original 23 Dominican churchman Bartolommeo Spina of Pisa gives two accounts of the power of the flying ointment in his Tractatus de strigibus sive maleficis Treatise on witches or evildoers of 1525 The first concerns an incident in the life of his acquaintance Augustus de Turre of Bergamo a physician While studying medicine in Pavia as a young man Augustus returned late one night to his lodgings without a key to find no one awake to let him in Climbing up to a balcony he was able to enter through a window and at once sought out the maidservant who should have been awake to admit him On checking her room however he found her lying unconscious beyond rousing on the floor The following morning he tried to question her on the matter but she would only reply that she had been on a journey Bartolommeo s second account is more suggestive and points toward another element in the witches flights It concerns a certain notary of Lugano who unable to find his wife one morning searched for her all over their estate and finally discovered her lying deeply unconscious naked and dirty with her vagina exposed in a corner of the pigsty The notary immediately understood that she was a witch and at first wanted to kill her on the spot but thinking better of such rashness waited until she recovered from her stupor in order to question her Terrified by his wrath the poor woman fell to her knees and confessed that during the night she had been on a journey Light is cast on the tale of the notary s wife by two accounts widely separated in time but revealing a persistent theme in European Witchcraft The first is that of Regino of Prum whose De synodalibus causis et disciplinis ecclesiasticis libri duo circa 906 C E speaks of women who seduced by demons insist that they ride at night on certain beasts italics not original together with Diana goddess of the pagans and a great multitude of women that they cover great distances in the silence of the deepest night 24 See also Canon Episcopi The second account dates from some 800 years later coming from Norway in the early 18th century and is the testimony at the age of thirteen of one Siri Jorgensdatter Siri claimed that when she was seven her grandmother had taken her to the witches sabbath on the mountain meadow Blockula blue hill her grandmother led her to a pigsty where she smeared a sow with some ointment which she took from a horn whereupon grandmother and granddaughter mounted the animal and after a short ride through the air arrived at a building on the Sabbath mountain 25 Alleged sexual element in application EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message The hallucinations are frequently dominated by the erotic moment in those days in order to experience these sensations young and old women would rub their bodies with the witches salve 26 the witches confess that they anoint a staff and ride on it to the appointed place or anoint themselves under the arms and in other hairy places Italics not original to text 27 in rifleing the closet of the ladie Alice Kyteler they found a pipe of oyntement wherewith she greased a staffe upon which she ambled and galloped through thick and thin when and in what manner she listed 28 Some sources have claimed that such an ointment would best be absorbed through mucous membranes and that the traditional image of a female witch astride a broomstick implies the application of flying ointment to the vulva 29 The passage from the trial for witchcraft in Ireland of Hiberno Norman noblewoman Alice Kyteler in 1324 quoted above is while not explicit certainly open to interpretations both drug related and sexual It is also a very early account of such practices pre dating by some centuries witch trials in the early modern period The testimony of Dame Kyteler s maidservant Petronilla de Meath while somewhat compromised by having been extracted under torture contains references not only to her mistress s abilities in the preparation of magical medicines but also her sexual behaviour including at least one instance of alleged intercourse with a demon 30 31 According to the inquisition in which were five knights and numerous nobles set in motion by Richard de Ledrede Bishop of Ossory there was in the city of Kilkenny a band of heretical sorcerers at the head of whom was Dame Alice Kyteler and against whom no fewer than seven charges relating to witchcraft were laid The fifth charge is of particular interest in the context of the greased staffe mentioned above In order to arouse feelings of love or hatred or to inflict death or disease on the bodies of the faithful they made use of powders unguents ointments and candles of fat which were compounded as follows They took the entrails of cocks sacrificed to demons certain horrible worms various unspecified herbs dead men s nails the hair brains and shreds of the cerements of boys who were buried unbaptized with other abominations all of which they cooked with various incantations over a fire of oak logs in a vessel made out of the skull of a decapitated thief 32 page needed Possible opiate component EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Opium Poppy Papaver somniferum One possible key to how individuals dealt with the toxicity of the nightshades usually said to be part of flying ointments is through the supposed antidotal reaction some of the solanaceous alkaloids have with the alkaloids of Papaver somniferum opium poppy This is discussed by Alexander Kuklin in his brief book How Do Witches Fly DNA Press 1999 This antagonism was claimed to exist by the movement of Eclectic medicine For instance King s American Dispensatory states in the entry on belladonna Belladonna and opium appear to exert antagonistic influences especially as regards their action on the brain the spinal cord and heart they have consequently been recommended and employed as antidotes to each other in cases of poisoning going on to make the extravagant claim that this matter is now positively and satisfactorily settled hence in all cases of poisoning by belladonna the great remedy is morphine and its use may be guided by the degree of pupillary contraction it occasions The use of opiates in the treatment of belladonna poisoning is however strongly contraindicated in modern medical practice see below The synergy between belladonna and poppy alkaloids was made use of in the so called twilight sleep that was provided for women during childbirth beginning in the Edwardian era Twilight sleep was a mixture of scopolamine a belladonna alkaloid and morphine a Papaver alkaloid that was injected and which furnished a combination of painkilling and amnesia for a woman in labor A version is still manufactured for use as the injectable compound Omnopon There is no definite indication of the proportions of solanaceous herbs vs poppy used in flying ointments and most historical recipes for flying ointment do not include poppy Furthermore a reputable publication by the former UK Ministry of Agriculture Food and Fisheries now DEFRA states specifically that in cases of poisoning by Atropa belladonna far from being antidotes Preparations containing morphine or opiates should be avoided as they have a synergic action with atropine an appropriate antidote being by contrast the acetylcholinesterase inhibitor physostigmine salicylate 33 Historical documents EditThe first mention of an unguent in relation to a popular belief of orgiastic flying occurs in Roland of Cremona s theological summa written in the 1230s 34 The use by witches of flying ointments was first described according to known sources by Johannes Hartlieb in 1456 citation needed It was also described by the Spanish theologian Alfonso Tostado d 1455 in Super Genesis Commentaria printed in Venice 1507 whose commentary tended to accredit the thesis of the reality of the Witches Sabbath citation needed In 1477 Antone Rose confessed that the devil gave her a stick 18 inches in length on which she would rub an ointment and with the words go in the name of the Devil go would fly to the synagogue an alternative name for Sabbath in early witchcraft 35 In popular culture EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Drama Edit There is in the work of the playwright Francisco de Rojas Zorrilla 1607 1648 of Toledo an exchange concerning the flying ointment the following passage occurring in the play Lo que queria el Marques de Villena What the Marquis of Villena Wanted 36 Marquis Others believe that witches can fly Zambapalo And can t they Marquis Certainly not you ignorant fellow Zambapalo Since I m no specialist in these matters I must ask you what happens Marquis They all rub themselves with ointment Zambapalo And then what Marquis The ointment which is an opiate made of henbane given them by the Devil sends them to sleep and they dream such a dream that they think they are not dreaming at all And since the Devil has great power to deceive he makes them all dream the same dream And that is why they think they are flying through the air when they are really fast asleep And although they never fly at all they think as soon as they wake that they have all been to see the calf and all visited the fields at Baraona When by God in reality more than two of them have been seen sleeping in their rooms with the ointment on them Literature and film Edit In Nathaniel Hawthorne s Young Goodman Brown Goody Cloyse after meeting the Devil says I was all anointed with the juice of smallage and cinquefoil and wolf s bane to which the Devil replies m ingled with fine wheat and the fat of a new born babe In Mikhail Bulgakov s The Master and Margarita Margarita after agreeing to act as hostess at Dr Woland s ball uses the ointment to become a witch and fly to the estate where the event is being held In Clayton Rawson s Death from a Top Hat two recipes by Johann Weyer a 16th century demonologist are given in a footnote 1 Water hemlock sweet flag cinquefoil bat s blood deadly nightshade and oil 2 Baby s fat juice of cowbane aconite cinquefoil deadly nightshade and soot In the movie serial Warlock the villain kills an unbaptised boy to get this Flying Ointment In Jodi Picoult s Salem Falls a group of four girls practicing witchcraft ingest a flying ointment made of belladonna In the book Calling on Dragons Book three of the Enchanted Forest Chronicles the witch Morwen uses a flying potion on a straw basket and a broomstick not on herself In E L Konigsburg s Jennifer Hecate Macbeth William McKinley and Me Elizabeth two characters try to make a flying ointment In the 2015 horror film The Witch a witch kills an infant child and makes flying ointment out of his corpse In the 2016 movie The Love Witch the main character applies a flying ointment to her body In the 2019 movie Portrait of a Lady on Fire the two main characters apply a flying ointment to their armpits In the 2020 movie Gretel and Hansel directed by Oz Perkins the witch caressing a precious jar filled with ointment applies it to herself and then initiates Gretel into witchcraft by inducing her to do the same Music Edit The Bonzo Dog Doo Dah Band song 11 Moustachioed Daughters a track on the Album The Doughnut in Granny s Greenhouse is a darkly comic and surprisingly detailed evocation of the traditional Witches Sabbath featuring the flying ointment related lines and belladonna to make your eyes like a beast s To anoint the body and make it shine To drink and make thyself divine To choose another s form and make it thine The Swedish symphonic metal band Therion has a song called Unguentum Sabbati Ointment of the Sabbat on the album Sitra Ahra Gallery Edit Wolfsbane or aconite Aconitum napellus virulent poison Hemlock Conium maculatum virulent poison Cowbane or water hemlock Cicuta virosa virulent poison Hemlock water dropwort or water hemlock Oenanthe crocata virulent poison Greater water parsnip or sium Sium latifolium root poisonous Lesser water parsnip or sium Berula erecta Fool s parsley Aethusa cynapium poison Wild celery Apium graveolens wild form of well known vegetable Creeping cinquefoil Potentilla reptans Sweet flag or strewing rush Acorus calamus aromatic Belladonna or deadly nightshade Atropa belladonna virulent poison Henbane flower Jimsonweed flower Jimsonweed seed capsule Opium poppy flower Opium poppy seed capsules Deadly nightshade flower Domestic chimney soot Human fat Common pipistrelle in flight bat s blood See also EditBesom Cunning folk Deliriants Hedgewitch Nightshades Witches Sabbath Johannes Hartlieb Will Erich PeuckertReferences Edit Ratsch Christian 2005 The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants Ethnopharmacology and Its Applications Simon and Schuster p 3295 ISBN 9781594776625 Ratsch Christian Muller Ebeling Claudia 2006 Pagan Christmas The Plants Spirits and Rituals at the Origins of Yuletide Simon and Schuster p 403 ISBN 9781594776601 Lewis Spence 1970 The Encyclopedia of the Occult Bracken Books p 306 via Internet Archive Schultes Richard Evans Hofmann Albert 1979 The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens 2nd ed Springfield Illinois Charles C Thomas pps 261 4 Ratsch Christian The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants Ethnopharmacology and Its Applications pub Park Street Press 2005 Schultes Richard Evans Albert Hofmann 1979 Plants of the Gods Origins of Hallucinogenic Use New York McGraw Hill ISBN 0 07 056089 7 Hansen Harold A The Witch s Garden pub Unity Press 1978 ISBN 978 0913300473 Furst Peter T Hallucinogens and Culture pub Chandler and Sharp 1976 volume in series on cross cultural themes p 138 Sollmann Torald A Manual of Pharmacology and Its Applications to Therapeutics and Toxicology 8th edition Pub W B Saunders Philadelphia and London 1957 Tampion John Dangerous Plants pub David and Charles Canada 1977 ISBN 0 7153 7375 7 A Colour Atlas of Poisonous Plants A Handbook for Pharmacists Doctors Toxicologists and Biologists by Frohne Dietrich and Pfander Hans Jurgen of University of Kiel translated from second German edition by Norman Grainger Bisset London a Wolfe Science Book and one of the volumes in the illustrated series Wolfe Atlases pub Wolfe Publishing Ltd 1984 Mateo Montoya A Mavrakanas N Schutz JS 2009 Acute anticholinergic syndrome from Atropa belladonna mistaken for blueberries Eur J Ophthalmol 19 1 170 2 doi 10 1177 112067210901900130 PMID 19123171 S2CID 9387171 The POISON GARDEN Website blog 28th November 2015 Thepoisongarden co uk Retrieved 12 March 2019 Schenk Gustav Das Buch der Gifte translated by Michael Bullock as The Book of Poisons pub Weidenfeld and Nicolson 1956 page 28 re A belladonna as Lithuanian criminal poison Maulda Demirhan A Tekelioglu UY Yildiz I Korkmaz T Bilgi M Akkaya A Kocoglu H 2013 Anticholinergic Toxic Syndrome Caused by Atropa Belladonna Fruit Deadly Nightshade A Case Report Turk J Anaesthesiol Reanim 41 6 226 8 doi 10 5152 TJAR 2013 43 PMC 4894214 PMID 27366377 Bert Marco Schuldes Psychotropicon zum Bilsenkraut und dem Tod Kiesewetters In Psychotropicon Das Online Magazin fur Psychonauten vom 5 Marz 2012 Bishop Jesper Brocmand Systema universae theologiae 1633 Tylor Edward B 1924 Primitive Culture Researches into the Development of Mythology Philosophy Religion Language Art and Custom 2 vols combined pub New York Brentano s Originally published 1871 Lewin Louis Phantastica Narcotic and Stimulating Drugs Their Use and Abuse Translated from the second German edition by P H A Wirth pub New York E P Dutton Original German edition 1924 Witches Gallery Bristol Radical History Group Retrieved 19 July 2017 Harner Michael J Hallucinogens and Shamanism pub Oxford University Press 1973 reprinted U S A 1978 Chapter 8 pps 125 150 The Role of Hallucinogenic Plants in European Witchcraft John Baptista Porta 1584 Magiae naturalis Archived from the original on 16 May 2008 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Ciruelo Pedro Tratado en el cual se repruevan todas las supersticiones y hechizerias pub Barcelona 1628 P II c 1 N 6 pps 45 46 quoted in H C Lea Materials Toward a History of Witchcraft pub Thomas Yoseloff New York and London 1957 page 413 Quoted in Ginzburg Carlo Ecstasies Deciphering the Witches Sabbath New York 1991 ISBN 0 226 29693 8 First published in Italian as Storia notturna Una decifrazione del Sabba 1989 Quoted in Pickering David A Dictionary of Witchcraft pub David Pickering 2014 Hesse Erich Narcotics and Drug Addiction pub New York Philosophical Library 1946 Bergamo Jordanes de Quaestio de Strigis Unpublished manuscript Bibliotheque Nationale Paris quoted in Joseph Hansen Quellen und Untersuchen zur Geschichte des Hexenwahns und der Hexengefolgung im Mittelalter pps 195 200 Pub 1901 1905 Bonn Carl Georgi Wright Thomas ed A Contemporary Narrative of the Proceedings Against Dame Alice Kyteler Prosecuted for Sorcery in 1324 by Richard de Ledrede Bishop of Ossory London The Camden Society 1843 Emboden William Narcotic Plants Hallucinogens stimulants inebriants and hypnotics their origins and uses 2nd edition revised and enlarged pub Macmillan New York 1979 ISBN 0 02 535480 9 p 127 Williams Bernadette The Sorcery Trial of Alice Kyteler History Ireland Vol 2 No 4 Winter 1994 Davidson Sharon and John O Ward trans The Sorcery Trial of Alice Kyteler A Contemporary Account 1324 Asheville NC Pegasus Press 2004 Seymour St John D Irish Witchcraft and Demonology pub Dorset Press 1992 ISBN 0 88029 734 4 Cooper Marion R and Johnson Anthony W Poisonous Plants in Britain and their effects on Animals and Man Ministry of Agriculture Fisheries and Food Reference Book 161 replacing Bulletin 161 pub HMSO London 1984 ISBN 0 11 242529 1 page 213 Ayelet Even Ezra Cursus an early thirteenth century source for nocturnal flights and ointments in the work of Roland of Cremona Magic Ritual and Witchcraft 12 2 Winter 2017 314 330 Encyclopedia of witchcraft and demonology Page 50 octopus 1974 Quoted in Baroja Julio Caro The World of the Witches pub Phoenix 2001 Original Title Las brujas y su mundo ISBN 9781842122426 External links EditFlying Potions and Getting to the Sabbat Belladonna in flying ointments Ritual of the Raven If Witches No Longer Fly Today s Pagans and the Solanaceous Plants King s American Dispensatory on Belladonna FLYING OINTMENTS Their Ingredients and Their Use Witches Ointment Information from the Gale Encyclopedia of Occultism amp Parapsychology Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flying ointment amp oldid 1117752968, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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