Question

On an episode of Antiques Roadshow, a glass expert tasted “port” from a 180-year-old object used for this purpose, only to later find out that the “wine” was a mixture of hair, alcohol, urine, and brass pins. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this purpose accomplished by the burial of horse skulls and mummified cats in the walls of houses. Grotesques like hunky punks were potentially used for this purpose, shared by apotropaic icons like the Gorgoneion.
ANSWER: protection from witchcraft [accept answers indicating protection from or warding against evil magic or evil or harm or misfortune or sickness and the like; accept protection from or warding out specific entities like the evil eye, demons, witches, spirits, and similar; accept counter-magic; prompt on partial answer] (The 180-year-old object was a witch bottle.)
[10h] “Concealed” examples of these items were frequently buried in European buildings as protective charms. Calceology studies these items, the oldest known examples of which were found in Oregon’s Fort Rock Cave.
ANSWER: shoes [accept other types of footwear like sandals and boots]
[10e] “Anti-witch” marks carved into British buildings featured flowers surrounded by overlapping examples of this pattern. Henges like the Rollright Stones and Stonehenge commonly feature standing stones arranged in this shape, as seen from above.
ANSWER: circles [accept rings; accept concentric pattern]

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Summary

2023 ARCADIA at UC BerkeleyPremiereY215.00100%50%0%
2023 ARCADIA at Carleton UniversityPremiereY316.67100%67%0%
2023 ARCADIA at Claremont CollegesPremiereY120.00100%100%0%
2023 ARCADIA at IndianaPremiereY516.0080%80%0%
2023 ARCADIA at RITPremiereY215.0050%100%0%
2023 ARCADIA at WUSTLPremiereY316.67100%67%0%

Data

Chicago AVanderbilt1001020
Chicago BIndiana001010
Illinois BIllinois A1001020
Purdue ANotre Dame B1001020
Purdue BNotre Dame A100010