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         Faery Tradition:     more detail
  1. Faery Wicca, Book 2: The Shamanic Practices of the Cunning Arts(The Ancient Oral Faery Tradition of Ireland) by Kisma K. Stepanich, 1998-04-08
  2. Tree of Enchantment: Ancient Wisdom and Magic Practices of the Faery Tradition by Orion Foxwood, 2008-10-01
  3. Faery Wicca, Book 1: Theory and Magick, a Book of Shadows and Lights (The Ancient Oral Faery Tradition of Ireland) (Bk.1) by Kisma K. Stepanich, 1998-08-08
  4. Faery Wicca Tarot Kit: Ancient Faery Tradition of Ireland by Kisma K. Stepanich, 1998-10-08
  5. Remembering a Faery Tradition: A Case of Wicca in Nineteenth-Century America by Trudy Last, 2010-01-01
  6. The Wondrous Land: The Faery Faith of Ireland by Kay Mullin, 1997-05
  7. Faery Beasts And Animals of Legend by Michael Howard, 2006-01-30
  8. The Faery Realm of Amy Brown Calendar 2006 by Amy Brown, 2005-06-01

1. The Faery Tradition
History, beliefs and traditions of faery wicca.
http://www.cog.org/wicca/trads/faery.html
The Faery Tradition
More information on this Tradition may be obtained from Francesca De Grandis' web site, The 3rd Road , describing a living branch of Faerie shamanism. Back to the COG Home Page

2. The Faery Tradition
A variety of faery information and links.
http://www.stormloader.com/moonfire/index7.html
Once upon a time there was a kingdom of gods, called the Tuatha De Danaan. In a battle with the Milesians, they were defeated and driven underground. The Dagda, Father of all the gods, allotted spiritual Ireland to the De Danaan, giving a sidhe to each of them. A sidhe is a mound beneath the hills, and the De Danaan became known as aes sidhe , the people of the hills, and instead of gods, they were relegated to being faery folk. Each sidhe had a bean sidhe , a woman of the faeries. You know her as banshee. The bean sidhe warned of impending death by giving an eerie wail. They say if you see her by a river ford, washing the bloody grave clothes of the soon to be dead, it bodes ill for you. Perhaps if you ask her who's clothes she's washing, she'll say that they're yours. This is Celtic history. Originally the Celts were spread across Europe, Turkey, the Slovakian countries, Austria and Switzerland, Italy to France and Belgium and Spain. They were eventually pushed back by the advance of the Roman military to Ireland, Scotland and Northern Britain, which encompasses Wales. The stories of the Celts weren't in written form until the early christian era, before that they were strictly oral tradition. Pagans and Wiccans worship the old religion, the God and Goddess that can be found in written and oral history of the Celts.

3. The Faery Tradition
The faery tradition. Among the distinguishing features of the faery tradition is the use of a Faery Power which characterizes the lineage.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

4. Shamanic Training
Presents the tradition taught by author Francesca De Grandis.
http://www.well.com/user/zthirdrd
Learn Wicca / Wiccan Classes / Classes in The Celtic Shamanism
Francesca De Grandis
and
The 3rd Road
Table of Contents What is the 3rd Road Tradition? What is a 3rd Road Class? What is 3rd Road's Mystic Rose Path? A Personal Statement ... Class Schedules THE 3RD ROAD tradition is a living branch of ancient Faerie shamanism also called Wicca, Goddess Spirituality, Faerie Tradition, or Celtic shamanism. It develops one's spiritual, psychic, and worldly potential, while honoring each person's inextricable weaving with society, nature and cosmos. This is an ecstatic path pursued via a supervised and disciplined approach to: psychic training; intense personal growth (which includes purification of the inner blocks that keep one from fulfillment and service); an experience of the love of the Goddess and God in daily life; and a practical application of shamanism to life's joys and challenges. The 3rd Road is an initiatory path. The 3rd Road has two distinct branches: Mystic Rose and Stellar Rose . Each stands on its own as a complete training with its own unique initiation. Some students choose to gain the benefits of both trainings. Although both trainings are initiatory, initiation is not guaranteed upon completion of the classes. However, certification of completion is given.

5. IRISH FAERY-FAITH TRADITION
Questions? Visit FaeryFaith.org, or write Lyceum of Brigid's Faery Faith 204 Broadway Costa Mesa, CA 92627
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

6. Faery-Faith Network
From ancient times comes the mention of an oral faery tradition a The oralfaery tradition has survived for over thousands of years and is alive today
http://www.faeryfaith.org/About.php
Faery Faith Network Faery Practices Faery Books Bhairdic College ... Faery Wicca Tarot
Faery Oracle:
August-Mathair Bandia Eire
Truth About Faeries Photo Gallery Druidic Clan of Dana ... Home NEW RELEASE click for review FAERY-FAITH TRADITIONAL WISDOM ~ Codex 1 ORDER YOUR COPY TODAY Are you the owner or manager of a Bookstore or spiritual center who is interested in having Kisma in for a booksigning and talk? After a long hiatus from the public arena, Kisma is now available for speaking engagements and other events. Use the link below to email us. The Faery-Faith Tradition From ancient times comes the mention of an oral Faery Tradition: a tradition mixed with magic and surrealism; a tradition that enchants the listener, drawing you into the mystery teachings hinted at it in its mythos. The oral Faery Tradition's teachings and its dimensions are not about little creatures flitting about with wings on their backs, as is so popularly misconstrued by individuals who are not a part of this authentic tradition. It is a tradition and world centered in the primal earth and the power contained therein, the stars above and inside and below the earth, the multiple cirlces of existence. It is a tradition rich with Sidhe or Ancient Ones, the Gods and Goddesses of Ireland, the ancestors, and the continuum. It is a Bhairdic (bardic) and Druidic tradition.

7. Feri Tradition Introduction
A currently popular name for Neopagan traditions is Fairy, Faery, or Faerie. One faery tradition, also spelled Feri, was founded by Victor
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

8. The Faery Tradition
Source The faery tradition Resource. Glossary For further reading Get a Rune or Tarot reading, dream interpretation or astrological report
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

9. Faerywolf - Witchcraft, Poetry, Visual Art, Queer Spirit, Classes
Rituals and essays on the practices of Pagan Witchcraft from the perspective of a gay man, teacher of the Craft, and initiate of the Feri Tradition.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

10. Feri Tradition Introduction
A currently popular name for Neopagan traditions is Fairy, Faery, or Faerie.One faery tradition, also spelled Feri, was founded by Victor Anderson,
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Rhodes/5569/Faery_Trad_Intro.html
Fairy Faery Faerie Feri
Victor Anderson's Feri Tradition
Part One: A General Introduction
That is the road to Heaven, my love,
and that is the road to Hell,
And that is the road to Faery,
where you and I must dwell. from the old British folk-song, Thomas the Rhymer There are many Neopagan religious traditions. One of the best known is Gardnerian Wicca, founded by Gerald Gardner. There are, however, many other paths. You can even find several very different traditions with similar names. A currently popular name for Neopagan traditions is Fairy, Faery, or Faerie. One Faery Tradition, also spelled Feri, was founded by Victor Anderson, and developed by Victor and his wife Cora, and several important Feri teachers, largely in the San Francisco Bay Area. Victor died on September 20, 2001, and became one of the Mighty Dead. A number of tributes to him, many from his memorial service, are at WitchVox: http://www.witchvox.com/passages/victoranderson.html Victor was born in 1917 and became blind at the age of two. He claimed spiritual descent from Hawai'ian Kahuna and African Vodoun. Victor was initiated into Harpy Coven in Bend, Oregon, as a teen. This group of people worked with the energy in the 1920's and '30's which eventually became the source of the Faerie Tradition. While very different from Gardnerian and other Neopagan Wicca, it was initiatory and magical, working on the phases of the Moon. The group broke up around the time of World War II. In 1944 Victor married Cora. Cora was a Southerner, as had been most of the members of Harpy Coven. She brought Southern folk magic to the practice she and Victor shared and developed. When Gardnerian and Alexandrian materials were published in the 1960's and 1970's, Victor incorporated some of them into his practice.

11. Faery~Faith Tradition Network
faery tradition has survived for thousands years and is alive and practiced in the Faery Faith Tradition today. The Faery-Faith Tradition
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

12. Faery Gold: The Tylwyth Teg Files
Among the distinguishing features of the faery tradition is the use of a The faery tradition, in common with initiatory lineages of the Craft which
http://www.geocities.com/ferigold/yttfiles/yttex2.html
Faery Gold
The Tylwyth Teg Files: Example 2
Anna Korn's Essay On the Faery Tradition
Background
The original version of this essay about the basics of the Faery Tradition appeared in the Compost Newsletter in 1988, and was put together by Anna Korn aka Andraste from notes collected during a meeting of Faery elders in California. Anna Korn is a well-known Faery priestess of the Bay Area in California, and the executor of Gwydion Pendderwen's estate. This longer article is now available on the Compost website at http://www.compostcoven.org/compost/andraste.html Anna Korn revised this article for posting on the Covenant of the Goddess website in 1995, where it now resides at http://www.cog.org/wicca/trads/faery.html YTT could ONLY have stolen the description of Feri, written by Anna/Andraste, from the COG site because the wording similarities reflect changes she made to the article SPECIFICALLY for the COG site. In private correspondence with an associate of FG, "Robert Wynne" of YTT [from Rhuddlwm Gawr's email address] claims that Anna Korn (and Gabriel and NROOGD (!?) plagiarized "his father's" original work, work he claims was produced in 1992. In the example in question here that's four years AFTER Anna's piece first appeared in the Compost Newsletter. A form of the plagiarized material was at http://www.tylwythteg.com/bos1.html

13. The Faery Faith Tradition
The FaeryFaith Tradition. From ancient times comes the mention of an oral faery tradition a tradition mixed with magic and surrealism;
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

14. Faery Witchcraft
The faery tradition honors nature and reveres the dieties that personify the forces The faery tradition provides for a passing of power upon initiation.
http://www.paralumun.com/witchfaery.htm
FAERY WITCHCRAFT
An American craft founded by Victor Anderson and Gwydion Pendderwen. Although in the beginning this craft was very small secretive it has now reached a wide audience. The faery tradition honors nature and reveres the dieties that personify the forces of nature, life, fertility, death and rebirth. There is no standard secret book of shadows in this craft. Some aspects of the craft still remain a secret but most aspects are now taught openly. The faery tradition provides for a passing of power upon initiation. Faery tradition also identifies different currents of energy within the universe. Two key teachings centre on the iron and pearl pentagrams. These are meditational tools to bring oneself into balance with the universe and to explore the self. The faery tradition also permits eclectism. Rituals are offerings of beauty to the Gods. The Real Witches Handbook
WITCHCRAFT

PARALUMUN

15. Welsh Faerie Tradition
Y Tylwyth Teg is a welsh faerie witchcraft tradition.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

16. PookLaRoux's Faerie FAQ
Collection of information about modern faery traditions.
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

17. The Faery Wicca Collection
Practices of the Cunning Arts (The Ancient Oral faery tradition of Ireland)Vol 2 ~ Faery Wicca Tarot The Ancient Oral Tradition of Ireland
http://www.veryfaery.com/faerywicca.html
T h e F a e r y Wicca C o l l e c t i o n ~in association with Amazon.com
Kisma K. Stepanich
Out of Print Order
Faery Wicca : Book 2 : The Shamanic Practices of the Cunning Arts (The Ancient Oral Faery Tradition of Ireland) Vol 2 ~
Kisma K. Stepanich
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Faery Wicca Tarot : The Ancient Oral Tradition of Ireland
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18. The British Bookshelf - Faery Tradition Books Page 1
" very inspiring and a long way from certain other 'faery wicca' books I have read" Silver Wheel Generations ago the veil between the world of
http://tmsyn.wc.ask.com/r?t=an&s=hb&uid=24312681243126812&sid=343126

19. The Faery Tradition
A Fifteen faery tradition practitioners met in June of 1988 to discuss What they agreed upon as faery tradition essentials comprises the following.
http://www.compostcoven.org/compost/andraste.html
The Faery Tradition
an interview with Andraste by Leah Samul
reprinted from the Compost Newsletter Q: Each different tradition in the Craft has its own distinguishing features; what is it about the Faery tradition that makes it different from other traditions in the Craft?
A: Fifteen Faery tradition practitioners met in June of 1988 to discuss this and other questions. What they agreed upon as Faery Tradition essentials comprises the following. Many of these features can be claimed by other traditions as well, and various Faery practitioners may accent some of these more than others.
There is an initiatory lineage, traceable to Victor, Cora, or Gwydion, although Victor tells of antecedents of the present tradition in the coven in which he was involved in the 1920's and 30's in Oregon. Aspects of the tradition are possession of secret names, the practice of energy-working using the pentacles, a body of poetic and liturgical material, information on the Deities; many archetypes are recognized which are specific to the Tradition, the doctrine of the Three Selves, a cingulum of a specific color, a "tribal" or "clan" feel to the coven, the use of the horned (sometimes called "inverted") pentagram, and to some extent the honoring of a warrior ethic, rather like bushido. For example, we are urged not to coddle weakness, support others in insincerities or self-deceptions, and never submit one's own Life force to anyone or anything, ever, which leads to a fierce openness called the "Black Heart of Innocence."

20. The Faery Tradition
The faery tradition. the pentacles and the elements The five elements andthe pentacle. More about the Faery (Feri) tradition. top TOC home.
http://www.compostcoven.org/compost/pentacles.html
The Feri Pentacles
The Pentacles of Feri are a meditational device which will teach you a lot about yourself. Try meditating on the points of the Iron Pentacle beginning with Sex, then Pride, Self, Power, Passion, and back to Sexmaking an invoking pentacle. then try going round the edges from Sex to Self, Passion, Pride, Power, and Sex. Think about the relationships between concepts as well as the meaning of each. Some good links to further study include:
http://www.faerywolf.com/essay_ironpentacle.htm
an article by Storm Faerywolf on the pentacles
http://www.reclaiming.org/newsletter/67/pentacle.html
The Iron Pentacle as a meditative tool, by Hilary Valentine of Reclaiming
http://www.tejasweb.org/html/writings/epistepentacle.html
Epistemology and the Pentacles of Feri
The Feri Pentacle of Iron
The Feri Pentacle of Pearl
Comparison of various pentacles, including the lead pentacles created by Victor Anderson (V) and Gabriel Carillo (G), respectively.
The five elements and the pentacle More about the Faery (Feri) tradition
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