Tumgik
#c: Maleficent
silvcrignis · 8 months
Note
Smash or Pass + Excella! Any of your muses to be honest!!
{Meme}: {x}
Tumblr media
“Smash,” he drawled without looking up from the game. King De Vil was NOT cheating him this fucking time.
Tumblr media
“Aye, I agree with Claude, De Vil?”
Tumblr media
“Oh give me a second to confer with my very sexy & fire breathing wife to answer for us both, darling.”
Tumblr media
“Eadric. Janus. De Vil. Jamie is our girlfriend. We have the exact same taste in women! You just want me to say it to amuse yourself…
“Yes. &?”
Long suffering sigh. “Smash.”
3 notes · View notes
lyxchee-art · 15 days
Text
Idk if I did this accurately
148 notes · View notes
houseofmouselove100 · 26 days
Text
Goofy decides to ask if they have seen any costumed villains but to no avail.
Goofy didn't know
that the evil queen was dressed as an old woman
Ursula was Vanessa
Pain and panic being the children who deceived Hercules
Everyone was seen accusing and arguing so the best solution was to lock up all the villains but after a small blackout the villains were disappeared.
33 notes · View notes
d-dormant · 28 days
Text
headcanon that has nothing to do with anything, but i think maleficent, as someone who lives very much in the highlands in late 14th century, speaks scottish gaelic, and so did stefan growing up, but as he became the king involved in political relations he started learning and speaking early scots (referred to as 'english' at the time), and by the time they meet again sixteen years later they speak different languages
13 notes · View notes
paragal · 9 months
Text
Tumblr media
Happy Birthday Jack Manifold!!! He’s 21!!!
49 notes · View notes
Text
now is the choice-D3 R!Harry or D3 R! Mal? if i do Mal, I'll have to choose between her Maleficent gear and her Hades gear, hmmm, choices choices
9 notes · View notes
legends-and-savages · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
@thewxnderer sent: ❛  you look so precious when you're needy.  ❜ (From the Darkling for Maleficent)
🐝  *  ―  𝑷𝑹𝑨𝑰𝑺𝑬 𝑲𝑰𝑵𝑲 𝑺𝑬𝑵𝑻𝑬𝑵𝑪𝑬 𝑺𝑻𝑨𝑹𝑻𝑬𝑹𝑺. ( nsfw! )| Accepting
Tumblr media
Maleficent after everything with Stefan had promised she wouldn't let herself get into another situation with a man, but somehow it had happened. "Very few people would call me precious no matter what."
2 notes · View notes
haveievermentioned · 5 months
Text
Thank you so much to the @yearoftheotpevent for giving me the chance to flesh out these two and all the forms their relationship can take. I had a lot of fun doing it. I know you mentioned you weren't doing it in 2024, but I hope you return in 2025!
2 notes · View notes
beasanfi1997 · 7 months
Text
(Darth Vader came to see baby Ezra Bridger)
Darth Vader:It's so ugly, you could almost feel sorry for it.[He tried to fright him but the baby continued to smile] I hate you. Brat.
(Later, baby Ezra crying)
Queen Neeyutnee: Why is he crying?
C-3PO: I think he might be hungry.
Tee Wat Kaa:(Seeing the boobs of Queen Neeyutnee because She Is a Human)Then feed him!
(But Queen Neeyutnee instead to feed baby Ezra with the breast, She give him a jogar fruit while R2-D2 making a disgusting beep)
Queen Neeyutnee: There you are. There you go.
(Boba Fett made a facepalm)
Darth Vader:(While he tapping his ears) It's going to starve with those four looking after it.
(Then in a night, Boba give a milk bottle mixed with jogar fruit, feed baby Ezra and then he cuddle him)
4 notes · View notes
frolicoffey · 2 years
Text
Fairies
@redtyrannoranger
It seems Conner’s left his soccer ball on what appears to be an empty field, and someone’s playing with it. That someone is what looks like a fairy version of Virgie-if you didn’t count the different eyes and higher cheekbones. 
She’s having a bit of trouble kicking it, so instead her game seems to be grabbing it, divebombing the goal, and tossing it in. Whatever works.
“Do humans really play with these things?”
5 notes · View notes
anghraine · 3 months
Text
By popular demand (aka two people asked lol), a secondary Women's Wrongs Poll for characters I considered for the first one, but ended up not choosing for various reasons:
440 notes · View notes
silvcrignis · 1 year
Text
Keira is always just irrationally bothered by Maleficent’s avoidance of swearing. She has said “Just say “FUCK!”, Maleficent!” over 2000 times in the course of their friendship at the very least.
(Maleficent has to be incredibly upset to actually swear. Usually she just gets Claude to say “Fuck” for her. He is very much a swearer.)
8 notes · View notes
breelandwalker · 1 year
Text
Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media Tumblr media
JSTOR Articles on the History of Witchcraft, Witch Trials, and Folk Magic Beliefs
This is a partial of of articles on these subjects that can be found in the JSTOR archives. This is not exhaustive - this is just the portion I've saved for my own studies (I've read and referenced about a third of them so far) and I encourage readers and researchers to do their own digging. I recommend the articles by Ronald Hutton, Owen Davies, Mary Beth Norton, Malcolm Gaskill, Michael D. Bailey, and Willem de Blecourt as a place to start.
If you don't have personal access to JSTOR, you may be able to access the archive through your local library, university, museum, or historical society.
Full text list of titles below the cut:
'Hatcht up in Villanie and Witchcraft': Historical, Fiction, and Fantastical Recuperations of the Witch Child, by Chloe Buckley
'I Would Have Eaten You Too': Werewolf Legends in the Flemish, Dutch and German Area, by Willem de Blecourt
'The Divels Special Instruments': Women and Witchcraft before the Great Witch-hunt, by Karen Jones and Michael Zell
'The Root is Hidden and the Material Uncertain': The Challenges of Prosecuting Witchcraft in Early Modern Venice, by Jonathan Seitz
'Your Wife Will Be Your Biggest Accuser': Reinforcing Codes of Manhood at New England Witch Trials, by Richard Godbeer
A Family Matter: The CAse of a Witch Family in an 18th-Century Volhynian Town, by Kateryna Dysa
A Note on the Survival of Popular Christian Magic, by Peter Rushton
A Note on the Witch-Familiar in Seventeenth Century England, by F.H. Amphlett Micklewright
African Ideas of Witchcraft, by E.G. Parrinder
Aprodisiacs, Charms, and Philtres, by Eleanor Long
Charmers and Charming in England and Wales from the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Century, by Owen Davies
Charming Witches: The 'Old Religion' and the Pendle Trial, by Diane Purkiss
Demonology and Medicine in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, by Sona Rosa Burstein
Denver Tries A Witch, by Margaret M. Oyler
Devil's Stones and Midnight Rites: Megaliths, Folklore, and Contemporary Pagan Witchcraft, by Ethan Doyle White
Edmund Jones and the Pwcca'r Trwyn, by Adam N. Coward
Essex County Witchcraft, by Mary Beth Norton
From Sorcery to Witchcraft: Clerical Conceptions of Magic in the Later Middle Ages, by Michael D. Bailey
German Witchcraft, by C. Grant Loomis
Getting of Elves: Healing, Witchcraft and Fairies in the Scottish Witchcraft Trials, by Alaric Hall
Ghost and Witch in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, by Gillian Bennett
Ghosts in Mirrors: Reflections of the Self, by Elizabeth Tucker
Healing Charms in Use in England and Wales 1700-1950, by Owen Davies
How Pagan Were Medieval English Peasants?, by Ronald Hutton
Invisible Men: The Historian and the Male Witch, by Lara Apps and Andrew Gow
Johannes Junius: Bamberg's Famous Male Witch, by Lara Apps and Andrew Gow
Knots and Knot Lore, by Cyrus L. Day
Learned Credulity in Gianfrancesco Pico's Strix, by Walter Stephens
Literally Unthinkable: Demonological Descriptions of Male Witches, by Lara Apps and Andrew Gow
Magical Beliefs and Practices in Old Bulgaria, by Louis Petroff
Maleficent Witchcraft in Britian since 1900, by Thomas Waters
Masculinity and Male Witches in Old and New England, 1593-1680, by E.J. Kent
Methodism, the Clergy, and the Popular Belief in Witchcraft and Magic, by Owen Davies
Modern Pagan Festivals: A Study in the Nature of Tradition, by Ronald Hutton
Monstrous Theories: Werewolves and the Abuse of History, by Willem de Blecourt
Neapolitan Witchcraft, by J.B. Andrews and James G. Frazer
New England's Other Witch-Hunt: The Hartford Witch-Hunt of the 1660s and Changing Patterns in Witchcraft Prosecution, by Walter Woodward
Newspapers and the Popular Belief in Witchcraft and Magic in the Modern Period, by Owen Davies
Occult Influence, Free Will, and Medical Authority in the Old Bailey, circa 1860-1910, by Karl Bell
Paganism and Polemic: The Debate over the Origins of Modern Pagan Witchcraft, by Ronald Hutton
Plants, Livestock Losses and Witchcraft Accusations in Tudor and Stuart England, by Sally Hickey
Polychronican: Witchcraft History and Children, interpreting England's Biggest Witch Trial, 1612, by Robert Poole
Publishing for the Masses: Early Modern English Witchcraft Pamphlets, by Carla Suhr
Rethinking with Demons: The Campaign against Superstition in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe from a Cognitive Perspective, by Andrew Keitt
Seasonal Festivity in Late Medieval England, Some Further Reflections, by Ronald Hutton
Secondary Targets: Male Witches on Trial, by Lara Apps and Andrew Gow
Some Notes on Modern Somerset Witch-Lore, by R.L. Tongue
Some Notes on the History and Practice of Witchcraft in the Eastern Counties, by L.F. Newman
Some Seventeenth-Century Books of Magic, by K.M. Briggs
Stones and Spirits, by Jane P. Davidson and Christopher John Duffin
Superstitions, Magic, and Witchcraft, by Jeffrey R. Watt
The 1850s Prosecution of Gerasim Fedotov for Witchcraft, by Christine D. Worobec
The Catholic Salem: How the Devil Destroyed a Saint's Parish (Mattaincourt, 1627-31), by William Monter
The Celtic Tarot and the Secret Tradition: A Study in Modern Legend Making, by Juliette Wood
The Cult of Seely Wights in Scotland, by Julian Goodare
The Decline of Magic: Challenge and Response in Early Enlightenment England, by Michael Hunter
The Devil-Worshippers at the Prom: Rumor-Panic as Therapeutic Magic, by Bill Ellis
The Devil's Pact: Diabolic Writing and Oral Tradition, by Kimberly Ball
The Discovery of Witches: Matthew Hopkins' Defense of his Witch-hunting Methods, by Sheilagh Ilona O'Brien
The Disenchantment of Magic: Spells, Charms, and Superstition in Early European Witchcraft Literature, by Michael D. Bailey
The Epistemology of Sexual Trauma in Witches' Sabbaths, Satanic Ritual Abuse, and Alien Abduction Narratives, by Joseph Laycock
The European Witchcraft Debate and the Dutch Variant, by Marijke Gijswijt-Hofstra
The Flying Phallus and the Laughing Inquisitor: Penis Theft in the Malleus Maleficarum, by Moira Smith
The Framework for Scottish Witch-Hunting for the 1590s, by Julian Goodare
The Imposture of Witchcraft, by Rossell Hope Robbins
The Last Witch of England, by J.B. Kingsbury
The Late Lancashire Witches: The Girls Next Door, by Meg Pearson
The Malefic Unconscious: Gender, Genre, and History in Early Antebellum Witchcraft Narratives, by Lisa M. Vetere
The Mingling of Fairy and Witch Beliefs in Sixteenth and Seventeenth Century Scotland, by J.A. MacCulloch
The Nightmare Experience, Sleep Paralysis, and Witchcraft Accusations, by Owen Davies
The Pursuit of Reality: Recent Research into the History of Witchcraft, by Malcolm Gaskill
The Reception of Reginald Scot's Discovery of Witchcraft: Witchcraft, Magic, and Radical Religions, by S.F. Davies
The Role of Gender in Accusations of Witchcraft: The Case of Eastern Slovenia, by Mirjam Mencej
The Scottish Witchcraft Act, by Julian Goodare
The Werewolves of Livonia: Lycanthropy and Shape-Changing in Scholarly Texts, 1550-1720, by Stefan Donecker
The Wild Hunter and the Witches' Sabbath, by Ronald Hutton
The Winter Goddess: Percht, Holda, and Related Figures, by Lotta Motz
The Witch's Familiar and the Fairy in Early Modern England and Scotland, by Emma Wilby
The Witches of Canewdon, by Eric Maple
The Witches of Dengie, by Eric Maple
The Witches' Flying and the Spanish Inquisitors, or How to Explain Away the Impossible, by Gustav Henningsen
To Accommodate the Earthly Kingdom to Divine Will: Official and Nonconformist Definitions of Witchcraft in England, by Agustin Mendez
Unwitching: The Social and Magical Practice in Traditional European Communities, by Mirjam Mencej
Urbanization and the Decline of Witchcraft: An Examination of London, by Owen Davies
Weather, Prayer, and Magical Jugs, by Ralph Merrifield
Witchcraft and Evidence in Early Modern England, by Malcolm Gaskill
Witchcraft and Magic in the Elizabethan Drama by H.W. Herrington
Witchcraft and Magic in the Rochford Hundred, by Eric Maple
Witchcraft and Old Women in Early Modern Germany, by Alison Rowlands
Witchcraft and Sexual Knowledge in Early Modern England, by Julia M. Garrett
Witchcraft and Silence in Guillaume Cazaux's 'The Mass of Saint Secaire', by William G. Pooley
Witchcraft and the Early Modern Imagination, by Robin Briggs
Witchcraft and the Western Imagination by Lyndal Roper
Witchcraft Belief and Trals in Early Modern Ireland, by Andrew Sneddon
Witchcraft Deaths, by Mimi Clar
Witchcraft Fears and Psychosocial Factors in Disease, by Edward Bever
Witchcraft for Sale, by T.M. Pearce
Witchcraft in Denmark, by Gustav Henningsen
Witchcraft in Germany, by Taras Lukach
Witchcraft in Kilkenny, by T. Crofton Croker
Witchcraft in Anglo-American Colonies, by Mary Beth Norton
Witchcraft in the Central Balkans I: Characteristics of Witches, by T.P. Vukanovic
Witchcraft in the Central Balkans II: Protection Against Witches, by T.P. Vukanovic
Witchcraft Justice and Human Rights in Africa, Cases from Malawi, by Adam Ashforth
Witchcraft Magic and Spirits on the Border of Pennsylvania and West Virginia, by S.P. Bayard
Witchcraft Persecutions in the Post-Craze Era: The Case of Ann Izzard of Great Paxton, 1808, by Stephen A. Mitchell
Witchcraft Prosecutions and the Decline of Magic, by Edward Bever
Witchcraft, by Ray B. Browne
Witchcraft, Poison, Law, and Atlantic Slavery, by Diana Paton
Witchcraft, Politics, and Memory in Seventeeth-Century England, by Malcolm Gaskill
Witchcraft, Spirit Possession and Heresy, by Lucy Mair
Witchcraft, Women's Honour and Customary Law in Early Modern Wales, by Sally Parkin
Witches and Witchbusters, by Jacqueline Simpson
Witches, Cunning Folk, and Competition in Denmark, by Timothy R. Tangherlini
Witches' Herbs on Trial, by Michael Ostling
2K notes · View notes
rayroseu · 10 months
Text
💚Mallevan/Levanoa Headcanons (1/?)
PART 01⬇️ PART 02
bcs im... cringe fluff appreciator😎✨ and my brain suddenly and randomly decided to be delulu on them 😭💥‼️
ALSO you. might see i draw them differently each time bcs these comics are actually my practice drafts for their fan design😂
... I'd like to imagine they're like a much more lovey dovey couple than a romantic MalleYuu fanfic--- 😌💕 ( plus its all the more reason why Gen. Lilia seemed to get tired by them lol)
Note that Levan is here is implied to be a dragon. (not crowley (for now) XD)
• • • Headcanon 1.
All the Draconias can basically spawn a flower garden when they are at the peak of their happiness. 🌹✨⚘
Each Draconia has different flowers that they can summon (maybe because they resonate a lot with its meaning?).
For example Malleus' flower was Wisteria, and its meaning is described on this post.
I like the thought of Malleus and Malenoa overreacting when they receive affection-- So, I'm just imagining that Malenoa once drowned Levan in a waterfall of roses once he received a "marriage proposal" from him‼️
Tumblr media
Why did I make Levan refer to Malenoa as Malle-chan? Well--- the gargoyles from the GloMas event referred to Malleus as Mare/Malle/Mal. Since that event seems to correlate to Briar Valley and Levan a lot, I'd like to imagine that Levan once gave Malenoa a nickname such as Malle-chan or something cute like that-- YOUKNOW LIKE HOW IN MALLEYUU THERES TSUNOTAROU--‼️🤭🤭🤭🤭✨✨✨
And, Levan seems to be twisted from Diablo (pet bird of Maleficent who got turned into a stone by one of the 3 fairies)
c: @/Ekala on yt
Tumblr media
This comic is also based on the scene where Gen. Lilia talked about how Levan cooked for Malenoa to cheer her up after she ate Lilia's horrible cooking---
I love how she referred to Levan as the only person she can rely on because you can relate it on the part where Malleus couldn't confide with anyone about his fear of losing Lilia--- SO!!! he went to visit Yuu—🥲💖
In that way, you can correlate it with Malleus viewing Yuu as "the only one he can depend on" as well 😭‼️💕
c: @/gasmask01 (yt) and @/081314 (tumblr)
Tumblr media Tumblr media
534 notes · View notes
c-rose2081 · 3 months
Text
Tumblr media
More swapped sketches. Princess Mallory of Auroria, and just…Auds, or A, on the Isle.
Unlike most other AU’s that have done this, Audrey doesn’t develop a rough exterior like C!Mal does. In canon she is a manipulator and thrives on attention, but her influence only works if there are people around her to control. On the Isle, Auds doesn’t have any friends. Everyone knows she’s not Maleficent’s daughter, therefore she has nothing to offer as an ally. She’s treated more like a servant than anything else. She’s invisible and outcasted, changing that manipulative part of her to be openly shy and insecure around others. She keeps her head down and stays out of other people’s way.
Mal, on the other hand, or Mallory in Auradon, is a natural born alpha with a stubborn streak and a scary amount of ambition. Like her canon-self, she has a very close knit group of powerful friends, but without the checks and balances of the Isle keeping her level-headed and a (decently) good leader, she instead is cruel, manipulative, temper-prone, and uses her magic (which she still has) to try and get what she wants. Ben x Mal is still a thing and stays a thing, but it’s a bit different now, I haven’t decided how yet.
If yall have any questions about this AU please feel free to ask, I really like the idea a lot and am having fun with the designs.
260 notes · View notes
legends-and-savages · 5 months
Text
Tumblr media
@acourtcfmuses sent: “You ask for such simple things, I can't deny you.” (For Maleficent from Diaval)
𝐓𝐇𝐄   𝐒𝐄𝐋𝐄𝐂𝐓𝐈𝐎𝐍   𝐐𝐔𝐎𝐓𝐄𝐒| Accepting
Tumblr media
Maleficent looked over her shoulder at him. "My friend even I do not know if that is necessarily true." She asked. "I have asked a great many things of you, and not all of them are simple." She knew how complicated it was. "But I'm glad you are still willing to help me."
2 notes · View notes