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Anima locus

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This practice is found in religions that have gods that may be more animal than man, like the Japanese Shinto. These beliefs are held throughout some modern religions too. Some of the Catholic Church has some beliefs like these. A country that follows these beliefs is Ireland, "there are several
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sites sacred to St. Patrick, but investigation has revealed that these were sites devoted to the worship of various Celtic gods and spirits long before the Catholic Church co-opted the location."
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is the "soul" of a place, its essential personality. A concept linked to the supernatural spirits of nature as residing in stones, springs, mountains, islands, trees, etc.
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In witchcraft, the anima loci is often referred to a spirit of the place, sprite, fairy, guardian.
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Index


Montgreenan castle
A view taken in the Dusk Water gorge from the Cleeves Cove cave.
Cleeves Cove cave
A view taken in the Dusk Water gorge from the Cleeves Cove cave.
Cleeves Cove cave
The Carlin stone near Craigends Farm, East Ayrshire, Scotland.
Carlin stone
A semi-natural moot hill in the Giffordland Glen with old beech trees and the Auldmuir Burn.
moot hill
Giffordland Glen
ISBN
0-500-01666-6
"Sequential Tart: Anima Loci (Volume 9 Issue 4, April 2006)"
A Guide to Local History Terminology
Stub icon
mythology
stub
expanding it
v
t
e
Categories
Tutelary deities
Mythology stubs

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