See Also: Wicca(encyclopedia)
Wicca(dictionary)
Herbal medicine (botanical medicine, herbology, phytomedicine)(health)
Pestis(medicine)
Pasteurella pestis(medicine)
pestis siderans(medicine)
pestis major(medicine)
pestis fulminans(medicine)
pestis bubonica(medicine)
pestis ambulans(medicine)

pestis bubonica (medicine) and Wicca (sh)


pestis bubonica (medicine)


pestis bubonica -->
bubonic plague
<microbiology> This rare bacterial infection due to Yersinia pestis.

It can cause painful, enlarged lymph nodes, fever, headache and prostration 2-7 days after a flea bite. May also cause pneumonia and sepsis.

Transmitted in rodents and humans via an infected flea bite. The incubation period is 2-10 days. Yersinia infection is now rare in Western countries. Third world countries (for example India) can have epidemics of Yersinia.

Treatment with antibiotics is necessary or most individuals will die. Even with antibiotic treatment the death rate is 5%.


Wicca (sh)




Modern Western Witchcraft movement.

Some practitioners consider Wicca the Religion of pre-Christian Europe, forced underground by the Christian church. That thesis is not accepted by historians, and modern Wicca is usually dated to the work of Gerald B. Gardner (1884-1964) and Doreen Valiente (1922-1999), who, after the repeal of the last Witchcraft Act in England (1951), went public with their cult of Witchcraft, which centered on a horned god of fertility and a great earth goddess. Gardner is credited with introducing the term Wicca. So-called "Dianic" Wicca focuses on the Goddess as the supreme being and usually excludes men. Wiccans share a belief in the importance of the feminine principle, a deep respect for Nature, and a pantheistic and polytheistic worldview. They practice some form of ritual Magic, almost always considered good or constructive. Some are solitary practitioners; others belong to covens.