The Vulgar Witch ✦ Free & Easy

— End of Article —

The word "vulgar" comes from the Latin vulgus , meaning "the common crowd" or "the mob." To be vulgar is to be ordinary, coarse, and rooted in the raw, messy reality of the flesh. For centuries, the vulgar witch has been the subject of male terror and patriarchal law. But today, in an era of spiritual consumerism, reclaiming the vulgar witch is a radical act of defiance. This article is an exploration of that figure—her history, her grimoire, and why we desperately need her chaos back. To understand the vulgar witch, we must first understand what the establishment feared. During the Early Modern period (roughly 1450–1750), when the witch trials burned across Europe and the American colonies, the accused were rarely the high priestesses of elaborate cults. They were the vulgar . The Vulgar Witch

Check the hashtag. You will see white altars, rose quartz, and pastel-colored athames. There is a persistent fear of grossness in contemporary witchcraft. Ask a baby witch how they feel about using menstrual blood in a spell, and watch them recoil. Ask them about burying a jar of urine in the yard for a binding, and they will offer you a lavender cleansing spray instead. — End of Article — The word "vulgar"