Aradia di Toscano, or Aradia de Toscano, is the name given by Raven Grimassi for the founder of Stregheria, which he describes as "the Old Religion of Italy... the Witch sect of Old Italy". The name means "Aradia of Tuscany". Grimassi suggests that Aradia di Toscano is the origin of the mythological figure Aradia that appeared in the nineteenth century book Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches. Aidan Kelly also suggested that Aradia may have been a mortal woman, but Kelly's treatment of the idea differs significantly from that of Grimassi.
The first appearance of a figure named Aradia as a teacher of religious witchcraft is in Charles Godfrey Leland's 1899 book Aradia, or the Gospel of the Witches. In that text, Aradia is the daughter of the Roman goddess Diana, who comes to Earth to teach witchcraft and relieve Diana's worshippers of oppression.
Both the figure of Aradia and the book's description of the religious practices of her worshippers played an important role in the development of modern Wicca.
Aradia di Toscano, according to Grimassi, who also calls her "The Holy Strega", or "La Bella Pellegrina" (the Beautiful Pilgrim), was a woman from Tuscany, born in 1313. Grimassi's Aradia was taught witchcraft by her aunt, and used her power to "challenge the existing order". According to the story, she recruited followers from the Lake Nemi region, and it is these followers (called "The Triad Clans") that passed on the religion of Stregheria, of which Grimassi teaches a variant that he calls the "Aridian Tradition".
Some people, while rejecting much of Grimassi's belief system, have tried to independently verify some parts of his history. Sabina Magliocco notes that it is possible that women in fourteenth century Tuscany might have adopted Aradia as a name. She comments that "The existence of ostension in connection to these legends could also mean that Grimassi's claim that Aradia was a real person may, in fact, not be entirely out of the question; a healer who was part of the society might have chosen to play the part of, or even take on the name of, Erodiade."
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It uses material from the
"Aradia di Toscano".
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