

There was also once a common pagan fertility ritual where poles, pitchforks, and brooms (basically, phallic objects in general) were piloted through the fields with people jumping as high as they could to entice the crops to grow to that height. The first known reference to witches flying on broomsticks was confessed by a suspected male witch, Guillaume Edelin of Saint-Germain-en-Laye near Paris, while he was being tortured in 1453. Scary for any patriarch! It wasn’t just women, however. The broom was a symbol of female domesticity, yet the broom was also phallic, so riding on one was a symbol of female sexuality, thus femininity and domesticity gone wild. What follows is mildly NSFW.įor a long time the common answer to the question of why witches flew on broomsticks was relatively straightforward if a bit broad. While the image can be found pasted in elementary schools throughout America, the story of why witches look the way they do, and why they fly on broomsticks, is a racier, lesser-known tale. Silhouetted against the moon, pointy hat pushed back by the wind, the witch on her magic broomstick is an iconic image, ubiquitous during the Halloween season. 1324 investigation of suspected witch Lady Alice Kyteler. In rifleing the closet of the ladie, they found a pipe of oyntment, wherewith she greased a staffe, upon which she ambled and galloped through thick and thin. Witches were almost always portrayed naked until the 1900s. Luis Ricardo Falero, “The Witches’ Sabbath” (1880), oil on canvas (via Wikimedia)
