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What Are Some Witchcraft Bloodtypes?

Im serious, no joking..I am doing a report on witchcraft and I need to know if there’s certain blood types that are affiliated with witchcraft

No Responses to “What Are Some Witchcraft Bloodtypes?”

  1. Matthew says:

    None that I’ve encountered, since most lore related to witches and witchcraft dates long before the concept of blood types were discovered. Most of our modern information related to witchcraft comes from the neo-pagan faiths that exist today, such as Wicca. In western Europe red hair, especially in a woman, was considered an indication of witchcraft. In the Celtic nations a child born with a caul, also referred to as a veil, was an indication of natural talent as a witch or seer. A caul is the residual membrane from the amnion that is sometimes stretched tight over the face and head of a newborn immediately after birth. Dont know if any of the extra info helps, but I’ve honestly never heard a reference associating blood type with witchcraft. Good luck on the report.

  2. Pagan says:

    Because witches are everyday ordinary people they have normal blood types.
    I practiced witchcraft for 20 years and I am a A+ blood type.

  3. Maiingan says:

    Witchcraft is not a bloodright, so there are NO bloodtypes!

  4. erisian trubble says:

    Yes, they are as follows: O+, A+, B+, AB+, O-, A-, B-, AB-. Witches never have any bloodtype other than these eight.

  5. skullari says:

    My blood is toxic. It’s a common type but it has some protein in it that I make – I can’t give blood, doc says it would cause serum sickness in others. Heck it nearly kills me sometimes.
    It cuts across the general population. I don’t think there’s any reason to believe one type would be more common than others.
    It would be interesting to see if there is a difference in long time practitioners though – those of us with 15+ years or so in. I doubt there would be. The reason I say that is you have a LOT of people that get interested and go in and out of it – it really only STICKS – from what I’ve seen in my 35+ year practice – with a few people that start in it. MANY give up on it, or return to more mainstream religions. However, give someone 10-15 years of constant self identification/and practice- Then it sticks hard. That’s the demographic I’d look at if you wanted to try to correlate anything of value.

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