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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Etymology  





2 Most common references to sorginak  





3 Major persecutions against Basque witches  





4 Places associated with sorginak  



4.1  Álava  





4.2  Biscay  





4.3  Gipuzkoa  





4.4  Labourd  





4.5  Navarre  





4.6  Lower Navarre  





4.7  Soule  







5 References  





6 See also  














Sorginak






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This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this articlebyadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Sorginak" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR
(March 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

Sorginak (root form: sorgin, absolutive case (singular): sorgina) are the assistants of the goddess MariinBasque mythology. It is also the Basque name for witches, priests and priestesses, making it difficult to distinguish between the mythological and real ones.

Sometimes sorginak are confused with lamiak (similar to nymphs). Along with them, and specially with Jentilak, sorginak are said often to have built the local megaliths.

Sorginak used to participate in Akelarre. These mysteries happened on Friday nights, when Mari and Sugaar are said to meet in the locally sacred cave to engender storms.

Etymology[edit]

The etymology of the name is disputed. The common suffix -gin (actor, from egin: to do) is the only agreement.

One theory claims that sor derives from sorte (fortune), and hence it would be rendered as fortune-teller. Another states that sor is the radical of sor(tu) (to create), and hence sorgin means literally: creator.

Most common references to sorginak[edit]

Sorginak are often said to recite the following spell to travel to and back from the akelarre: Under the clouds and over the brambles, or variants of it. In many legends a failed witch (normally a man) says the spell inverted (Under the brambles and over the clouds) and arrives to the akelarre quite bruised.

Sorginak also chant the following:

Ez geala, ba geala,
Hamalau mila hemen geala

We aren't, we are indeed,
Fourteen thousand here we are

Other variants of this song are also known.

Sorginak often are said to transform themselves into animals, most commonly cats. These cats are sometimes said to bother pious women that do not wish to go the akelarre. It has also been recorded that they collected monetary fines from the people that did not wish to go to their ecstatic gatherings or those witches that absented themselves from them.

Inquisitorial documents describe horrific practices of witches, like eating children or poisonings. But popular legends do not speak of these practices, instead mentioning kissing "the devil's arse" or an animal's genitals, occasional poisoning of crops, bothering modest women (in the shape of cats or other animals) and anointing their bodies with flying ointment (containing entheogenic, Solanaceous plants) to "fly" to and from the akelarre and perform other supposed feats.

Major persecutions against Basque witches[edit]

While in the late Middle Ages there are a handful of references to witchery, they are mostly fines for accusing someone of being one.

This changes in the 16th and 17th centuries with the establishment of the Spanish Inquisition and the pan-European witch panic that afflicted the Early Modern Age. Since being conquered by Castile in 1512–21, Navarre (and to a lesser extent areas of the Basque Country) suffered numerous inquisitorial processes, mainly against Jews and Muslims, but occasionally also against Basque sorginak. Particularly important was the 1610 process of Logroño that focused on the akelarre of Zugarramurdi. The previous year, in 1609, French judge Pierre de Lancre had initiated a massive process in Labourd, focusing mainly on Basque women and priests. He was eventually displaced but not without causing many deaths and much suffering. The witch panic extended beyond the frontier and accusations of witchcraft proliferated among the local population until the Spanish Inquisition intervened. The Logroño process ended with 12 people burnt at the stake (five of them symbolically, as they had died under the tortures inflicted in the process) and shattered Pyrennean Navarre and led also to a serious reconsideration of the Inquisition's attitude towards accusations of witchcraft. The Spanish and Italian Inquisition generally approached accusations of sorcery and witchcraft with skepticism and similar processes were rare in comparison to other European countries where no such centralised institution existed.

Places associated with sorginak[edit]

Throughout the Basque Country there are many places associated with sorginak, often also associated with Mari or other mythological characters. This is an incomplete list of the most famous ones:

Álava[edit]

Biscay[edit]

Gipuzkoa[edit]

Labourd[edit]

Lapurdi was particularly shaken by the large-scale trials of 1609 led by Pierre de Lancre, who was convinced that most people in the country were witches.

Navarre[edit]

Large portions of Navarre were severely affected by an inquisitorial process in 1610, focused in the akelarre of Zurgarramurdi.

Lower Navarre[edit]

Soule[edit]

References[edit]

See also[edit]

Types

Region

  • Ghana
  • Witch smeller
  • Asia
  • Europe
  • Latin America
  • Middle East
  • Oceania
  • Form

  • Goetia
  • Hoodoo
  • Medieval
  • Neopagan
  • Renaissance
  • Solitary practitioner
  • Warlock
  • Witch doctor
  • Practices

  • Apotropaic magic
  • Black magic
  • Ceremonial magic
  • Coven
  • Curse
  • Demon
  • Divination
  • Entheogen
  • Evocation
  • Familiar
  • Gray magic
  • Incantation
  • Jinn
  • Love magic
  • Mediumship
  • Moon magic
  • Necromancy
  • Occultism
  • Shamanism
  • Sex magic
  • Sigils
  • Spiritism
  • Spiritualism
  • Sympathetic magic
  • Witches' Sabbath
  • White magic
  • Objects

  • Athame
  • Broom
  • Censer
  • Cloak of invisibility
  • Crystal ball
  • Flying ointment
  • Goofer dust
  • Grimoire
  • Incense
  • Julleuchter
  • Kitchen witch
  • Love charm
  • Magic carpet
  • Magic circle
  • Magic ring
  • Magical weapons
  • Mojo bag
  • Nkisi
  • Nkondi
  • Poppet
  • Potions
  • Sator Square
  • Talisman
  • Wand
  • Witch ball
  • Witch's ladder
  • Folklore and
    mythology

  • Aradia
  • Baba Yaga
  • Circe
  • Dayan
  • Drude
  • Elbow witch
  • Hecate
  • Huld
  • Kalku
  • Medea
  • Morgan le Fay
  • Muma Pădurii
  • Nine sorceresses
  • Obayifo
  • Pasiphaë
  • Sebile
  • Sorginak
  • Spearfinger
  • Three Witches
  • Witches of Benevento
  • Witch of Endor
  • Major
    historic treatises

  • Directorium Inquisitorum (1376)
  • De maleficis mulieribus (1440)
  • Formicarius (1475)
  • Summis desiderantes affectibus (1484)
  • Malleus Maleficarum (1487)
  • De Lamiis et Pythonicis Mulieribus (1489)
  • Laienspiegel (1509)
  • De praestigiis daemonum (1563)
  • The Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584)
  • Newes from Scotland (1591)
  • A Dialogue Concerning Witches and Witchcrafts (1593)
  • Daemonolatreiae libri tres (1595)
  • Daemonologie (1597)
  • Magical Investigations (1599)
  • Compendium Maleficarum (1608)
  • A Guide to Grand-Jury Men (1627)
  • The Discovery of Witches (1647)
  • Treatise on the Apparitions of Spirits and on Vampires or Revenants (1751)
  • Persecution

    Modern

  • accusations against children
  • India
  • Nepal
  • Papua New Guinea
  • Witch camp
  • Early Modern

    Americas

  • New York
  • Salem
  • Virginia
  • Eastern Europe

  • Northern Moravia
  • Poland
  • Russia
  • Northern Europe

  • Denmark
  • England
  • Finland
  • Iceland
  • Norway
  • Scotland
  • Sweden
  • Western Europe

  • Geneva
  • Italy
  • Spain
  • Classical

    Related

  • Witch's mark
  • Pricking
  • List of people executed for witchcraft
  • In popular culture

  • Witches in fiction
  • Related

  • Witch (archetype)
  • Christian views on magic
  • Magical organization
  • Maleficium
  • Left-hand path and right-hand path
  • Feminist interpretations of witch trials in the early modern period
  • Folk religion
  • Adept

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Sorginak&oldid=1225263871"

    Categories: 
    Basque history
    Basque mythology
    European witchcraft
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    This page was last edited on 23 May 2024, at 11:02 (UTC).

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