Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 19 de dic. de 2023 · The Santa Muerte, also known as Santisima Muerte, is the beloved goddess of death whose origins date back to the pre-Hispanic period of Mexico. The Mexicans knew her under another name: MICTECACIHUATL "Lady of the Land of the Dead"; another spelling could be MICTLANTECIHUATL, it was believed to protect souls residing in the dark underground ...

  2. 6 de ago. de 2015 · CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform, Aug 6, 2015 - Religion - 118 pages. This book lists the various prayers and rituals involved in the practice of spiritual work within the cult of the Santa Muerte. Within are over 70 prayers and rituals, all in English, for love, prosperity, health, and revenge. This is the first book of it's kind in ...

  3. 30 de may. de 2021 · About this group. This group is for all devotees to our Mother, Santa Muerte, Holy Death, to seek prayers, rituals, and spells in english translation. All those whom prayer to our Santisima Muerte are welcome! Private. Only members can see who's in the group and what they post. Visible. Anyone can find this group.

  4. 2 de oct. de 2017 · BOOK REVIEW-Santa Muerte: The History, Rituals, and Magic of Our Lady of the Holy Death by Tracey Rollin. I can’t remember the last time I sat down and read a Pagan book cover to cover in two days.

  5. 11 de sept. de 2020 · Muerte means ‘death’ in Spanish and ‘Santa’ refers to both her holiness and her role as a saint. In their rituals, such as the Rosary of Santa Muerte, devotees often call her ‘Santísima Muerte’ which literally translates as ‘holiest death.’. In English, she is called Saint Death or Holy Death.

  6. Cressida Stone, author of Secrets of Santa Muerte, is an English writer.The author leads a double life as a British doctor of anthropology trained in classic methods at the University of Oxford, while also moving in occult circles as Cressida Stone, publishing grimoires on Santa Muerte, practicing witchcraft, and reading tarot cards for the wealthy elite, the disenfranchised, and sicarios alike.

  7. This paper offers an epistemological examination of devotion to Santa Muerte in Mexico. It argues that death, more than any other phenomenon, is crucial for understanding all human action. In that sense, an analysis of religious fervor, as a form of paroxysm, offers a vantage point for exploring the rationale of contemporary sociocultural behavior in the West.