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All articles filed in Podcast transcripts

Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsAugust 14, 2020July 3, 2020

Precious Stones : Lapis-Lazuli, Lodestone, Malachite

Time to return to Kunz’s Curious Lore of Precious Stones. Lapis-Lazuli Lapis Lazuli is a vibrantly blue semiprecious stone, but to Mythic Europeans, it’s a terribly rare thing. First,. let me note that when I was a lad, we were told all of that blue material in Egyptian art was lapis lazuli. This is simply…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsAugust 6, 2020July 3, 2020

The flowering of the strange orchid by H.G. Wells

I was listening to Jim Moon’s Hypnogoria podcast, an episode about the triffids, and he reminded me of this story. I’d looked at it before, but the creature seemed too weak to challenge magi. I’d made a mistake there, though. This creature may not be particularly combat worthy, but I can see it as a…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJuly 30, 2020June 12, 2020

Venice : The weapon of the urban Diana cult?

In Edgecumb Stanley’s biography of the dogaressas, the next incident of note was the rise of Charlemange. His history is poor, though, because he doesn’t mention here that Pepin, the son of Charelmange, tried to invade the city on his father’s orders, which led to the seat of power moving to the modern site. Charlemange…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJuly 23, 2020July 1, 2020

Toads and adders

Back in Episode 237, I discussed a piece of German folklore, about a bishop eaten by rats. These creatures were sent by God to punish the bishop for leaving his peasants to starve during a famine, or worse, for killing them. I though it was a bit later than the game period, but I’ve found…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJuly 16, 2020June 11, 2020

A Night in March by Duncan Campbell Scott

This is a poem that I was going to try and stat up a variety of ways, but it is just imprecise enough to make that more a work of addition than translation, so I can spend my time better on monsters made more concrete by their authors. The creature might be, according to the…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJuly 9, 2020July 1, 2020

Precious Stones : Hematite, Jacinth, and Jasper

Another little bit of Kunz’s “Curious Lore of Precious Stones“. Hematite Azchalias, as cited by Pliny… asserted that the hematite, when used as a talisman, procured for the wearer a favorable hearing of petitions addressed to kings and a fortunate issue of lawsuits and judgments. It is a red oxide of iron, which when abraded…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJuly 2, 2020July 1, 2020

Levana and Our Ladies of Sorrow

Four goddesses described by Thomas de Quiincey. He was famous for his “Confessions of an English Opium Eater” and his time in Cambridge seems to coincide with his experiments with psychoactive substances. Statistics will arrive, once per month, for the next few months. Levanna appaears to be a Roman goddess. The three Ladies of Sorrow…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJune 25, 2020June 11, 2020

Venice: The election of the first Doge

Edgecumbe Stanley’s history if the dogeressas has a lengthy section on the election of the first doge, but it’s not of great interest to us. I’ve cut it down so it contains only the pieces which Ars Magica characters, six hundred years later, might interact with. “The Greek protection of Veneto and the lagunes was…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJune 18, 2020June 11, 2020

Precious Stones: Moonstone, Onyx, Opal

In a return to Kunz’s “Lore of Precious Stones”, we find an interesting covenant site, we discover that the Pale Mountains are even more enchanting than we recall, and we discover how Roman soldiers kept their spirits up. Moonstone As a gift for lovers the moonstone takes a high rank, for it is believed to…

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Ars Magica Podcast transcriptsJune 11, 2020June 7, 2020

A horological demon from Jules Verne

There’s an odd little demon in Master Zacharius by Jules Verne. He’s a little too technologically sophisticated for 1220, but a similar idea may be used for any mastercrafter, or for a Verditus magus. The horological demon has sent a plague against the master clockmaker’s works so that, in defiance of physical laws, the springs…

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