. "2009"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . . "37"^^ . . . . . . . "Hutton"@en . . . . "1999"^^ . . "Seims"@en . "299"^^ . "1116182810"^^ . "154"^^ . "153"^^ . . "2008"^^ . "2009"^^ . . "1967"^^ . . . . "2016"^^ . . . . . "Howard"@en . "2008"^^ . . . . "1984"^^ . . "Anon"@en . "Howard"@en . . . . "21048842"^^ . "1999"^^ . . . . . . . . . . . . "Valiente"@en . "Doyle White"@en . . . . . . . . "299"^^ . "299"^^ . "24"^^ . . "37"^^ . "Hutton"@en . . . . "Doyle White"@en . . . . . . . . . "153"^^ . . "Raymond Howard (Wiccan)"@en . . "Seims"@en . "11844"^^ . . . . "Raymond Howard was an English practitioner of the modern Pagan new religious movement of Wicca. He promoted his tradition, known as the Coven of Atho, through a correspondence course established in the early part of the 1960s. In the late 1950s, Howard lived in Charlwood, Surrey, where he worked for the psychologist and Wiccan Charles Cardell. After the pair fell out, Howard assisted a journalist from the London Evening News in spying on a nocturnal ritual carried out by Cardell and his coven. In the early 1960s, he established his own correspondence course, the Coven of Atho, through which he provided instruction on his own variant of Wicca, which drew upon that of Cardell and other sources. By the latter part of that decade he was running an antiques shop in Field Dalling, Norfolk, where he stored a wooden carving of the Wiccan Horned God, known as the \"Head of Atho\". He attracted press attention for the Head, informing both journalists and other Wiccans that it had been passed down to him by pre-existing Witches, although his son later revealed it to be a forgery created by Howard himself. In April 1967 the head was stolen, perhaps by Cardell, and never recovered."@en . . . . . "Raymond Howard was an English practitioner of the modern Pagan new religious movement of Wicca. He promoted his tradition, known as the Coven of Atho, through a correspondence course established in the early part of the 1960s."@en . "2016"^^ .