Although Oomancy was thought to have originated in Greece, there is belief this practice was also used by ancient
druids in Scotland as well. Oomancy was a popular divination method used in New England in the late 17th century. Along with other young girls of
Salem Village,
Elizabeth Parris and
Abigail Williams are known to have to
played at reading
omens by means of an egg and a
mirror (or "Venus glass"), an apparently similar system of egg divination. It was reported by Reverend John Hale that these girls used eggs in a glass to learn the profession of their future husbands. In 1806,
Mary Bateman, also known as the "Yorkshire Witch," created a hoax known as The Prophet Hen of Leeds, in which eggs laid by a hen were purported to have written on them 'Christ is coming' - a message believed to precede the end times. Three of these eggs were displayed by Bateman, but it was later found that she had written on the eggs using acid and reinserted them into the hen's oviduct. == Oomancy and the Evil Eye ==