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Tarot Fellow

Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs by Scott Cunningham — Wicca Herb Reference

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    The Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs by Scott Cunningham is the foundational herb reference for Wiccan and earth-based practitioners — covering over 400 herbs with their magical properties, planetary correspondences, elemental affinities, folk names, and ritual uses. Indispensable for any practitioner who works with herbal magic, spellcraft, or botanical correspondences, and one of the most referenced books in any witch’s library.

    Description:

    Quick Specs


    • Author: Scott Cunningham
    • Type: Herbal magic encyclopedia, reference format
    • Publisher: Llewellyn Worldwide
    • Best for: Practitioners building a serious herbal magic reference library


    Cunningham's Herb Magic Book: The Definitive Reference


    Cunningham's Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs is, without qualification, the most consulted single-volume herbal reference in contemporary Wiccan and pagan practice. First published in 1985 by Llewellyn and expanded to a 15th-anniversary edition, it has sold over 500,000 copies. The book covers more than 400 herbs, flowers, trees, and common plant materials, each entry structured identically for quick lookup: common name, folk names, Latin species name, gender, planetary ruler, element, associated deities, magical powers, and ritual uses. That consistent format is what practitioners return to again and again.


    The entry structure matters because it makes cross-referencing efficient. If a working calls for a plant governed by Venus and associated with the water element, you can identify candidates in minutes. The folk name index, which Cunningham himself described as one of the most valuable features, translates archaic spell-book terms: "bats' wings" resolves to holly, "lapstones" to potato. This cross-reference alone makes the book worth keeping on the shelf, especially if you work from older published grimoires or inherited handwritten formulas.


    Magical Herbs Encyclopedia: Depth of the Correspondence System


    What sets Cunningham's system apart from other herbal magic guides is the precision of its correspondence framework. Each plant is assigned a planetary ruler (Sun, Moon, Mars, Mercury, Jupiter, Venus, or Saturn), an element (Earth, Air, Fire, or Water), a gender polarity, and in many cases an associated deity from multiple traditions. These assignments follow a structured magical logic drawn from Western herbal tradition, with some influence from folk practices across Europe and the Americas. Practitioners who work in Wicca, ceremonial magic, or folk hoodoo all use this reference as a common foundation.


    This book is not a field guide or a medical herbal. It contains no botanical illustrations detailed enough for plant identification, no medicinal dosing information, and no foraging guidance. Its scope is specifically magical: how to select, prepare, and use plant materials within spell work, sachets, incense blends, and ritual practice. If you're looking for a guide to essential oil blending or a hands-on aromatics workbook, that is a different category of resource. But as a magical correspondence reference, nothing in print matches this book's combination of breadth, clarity, and usability. Browse my herbs and accessories collection to pair this reference with the actual botanicals it covers.


    How to Use Cunningham's Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs


    Use this encyclopedia as a practical lookup tool for selecting and blending herbs in magical workings.

    1. Look Up by Intention First

      Start with the tables at the back, which list herbs by magical purpose: protection, love, prosperity, purification. Select two or three plants whose correspondences align, then read their full entries before committing to one.

    2. Cross-Reference Folk Names Before Sourcing

      Before purchasing any herb, check the folk name index to confirm the correct species. Many spell formulas use archaic names that refer to entirely different plants, and this index prevents dangerous or costly substitution errors.

    3. Build Blends Using Planetary and Elemental Alignment

      For sachets, incense, or ritual baths, combine plants that share a planetary ruler or elemental association to reinforce a single magical intention. Cunningham's entry format makes this alignment visible at a glance for easy blending.


    The Tarot Fellow Standard


    I stock this title because it is genuinely irreplaceable as a reference. No other single-volume herb guide in print offers the same combination of breadth, entry-level accessibility, and structured correspondence data. It's the book I recommend first to anyone building a serious magical practice with plant materials, and it's the one most practitioners keep returning to even after adding more specialized texts. Take a look at my full books and journals collection for additional resources to build out your practice library.


    Frequently Asked Questions


    Is Cunningham's Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs good for beginners?

    Yes. The entry format is consistent and readable, and Cunningham includes an introductory section on magical theory and herb preparation before the encyclopedia begins. No prior herbal or magical knowledge is needed to use it.

    How is this different from Blackthorn's Botanical Magic?

    Cunningham's encyclopedia is a reference organized alphabetically by herb, covering 400 plants with correspondence data. Blackthorn's book is a working guide focused on essential oil blending. They serve different purposes in a library.

    Does the book include medicinal or culinary uses for herbs?

    No. This encyclopedia covers magical correspondences and ritual uses only. It does not provide medicinal dosing, safety information, or culinary guidance. A botanical or medical herbal is the appropriate resource for those topics.

    What is the folk name index and why does it matter?

    The folk name index translates archaic ingredient names from older grimoires into botanical identities. For example, 'bats' wings' means holly. It makes the book essential for working with traditional spell formulas using old naming conventions.

    Encyclopedia of Magical Herbs by Scott Cunningham — classic Llewellyn Publications paperback with botanical illustration cover design.