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Articles from

Morningbird & MS Team

Morningbird & MS Team

By Witchipedia, Herbs & Oils

Bindweed: Correspondences, Healing & Magical Uses

This article examines bindweed (*Convolvulus arvensis*), a common plant in the Convolvulaceae family, exploring its botanical identification, traditional magical correspondences, and folk healing applications within Western herbalism and witchcraft traditions. Readers will learn about the plant’s associations with lunar energies, protection magic, and dreamwork, as well as its historical uses for skin ailments, digestive support, and practical household purposes such as rope-making.

Morningbird & MS Team

By Witchipedia, Runes

Secrets of Bindrunes: Ancient Symbols for Modern Power

This article provides an introduction to bindrunes, a practice rooted in runic traditions that involves combining multiple symbols from the Futhark alphabet into unified designs for spiritual and magical purposes. The text outlines the conceptual framework of bindrunes, methods for their physical creation, and a multi-stage activation and consecration process that may include blood offerings, deity invocation, or elemental work depending on the practitioner’s spiritual tradition.

Morningbird & MS Team

By Witchipedia, Tools

What is a Besom: a Ceremonial Broom

This article provides an overview of the besom, a ceremonial broom traditionally associated with witchcraft and pagan practices, examining its construction, symbolic meanings, and ritual applications. The text explores the besom’s role as both a practical tool for energetic cleansing of sacred spaces and a symbolic object representing concepts such as purification, the Axis Mundi, and the union of masculine and feminine principles.

Morningbird & MS Team

By Witchipedia, Deities

Bel in Mythology and Religion: Mesopotamian God

This article examines the Mesopotamian deity Bel, tracing the etymological origins of the name from the Akkadian term *bēlu* (“lord” or “master”) and exploring its application as both a divine title and proper name across ancient Near Eastern religious traditions. The discussion addresses Bel’s associations with major deities including Enlil, Marduk, and the Palmyrene god Bol, while also considering linguistic connections to cognate terms such as Ba’al and the Greek Belos.