Menhirs, Dolmen, and Circles of Stone: The Folklore and Magic of Sacred Stone

Forside
Algora Publishing, 2004 - 215 sider
Why are some rocks simply tossed out of the way, while others, regardless of their size, are held as sacred, mysterious and imbued with power? Humans since the dawn of civilization have used stone to represent the holy, both by fashioning sacred symbols for themselves and by granting recognition to certain sites occurring naturally. Varner shares his love of nature lore, oral traditions, folklore and ancient religious structures that are still so abundant in the world, and offers insights on the history and the technology of these artifacts, while touching on the importance of preserving a sense of reverence in today's world. This study examines the universal appeal of sites from the Dome of the Rock and Stonehenge to sites sacred to the Inuit and the Cherokees, from the Middle East to the American Midwest and the English Midlands. Philosopher-historian Mircea Eliade wrote, "a rock reveals itself to be sacred because its very existence is a hierophany: incompressible, invulnerable, it is that which man is not. It resists time; its reality is coupled with perenniality." The properties of stone were recognized as unique early in humankind's rise to civilization. Even when cultures were transitioning their technologies from stone to metal, it was stone that was used for ritual and other important acts. Early 20th-century Egyptologist Wallis Budge wrote, "in a tomb of the VIth Dynasty at Sakkrah, when the Egyptians had a good knowledge of working in metals, we see in a painting on the wall the act of circumcision being performed on a youth by an operator who uses a flint knife." Little do the keepers of worry stones today realize that they are practicing one of the ancient traditions of transferring their problems to an inanimate object. This volume looks at customs and traditions from around the world, from the curious to the profound, related to stones large and small, from prehistory to today.

Inni boken

Innhold

Introduction
1
Chapter 1 The Folk Nature of Sacred Stones
5
Chapter 2 Magical Stones and Charms
57
Chapter 3 Standing Stones and Ancient Cultures
85
Chapter 4 Standing Stones In America
101
Chapter 5 Stone Circles and Aligned Stones
107
Chapter 6 Stories from the Stones
113
Chapter 7 Simulacra Natures Artwork
131
Chapter 9 Cairns
151
Mystic Symbolism
161
Chapter 11 The Gods of Stone
183
Afterword The Importance of Sacred Stones In Contemporary Society
197
A Megalith Timeline
201
Selected Bibliography
203
Index
213
Opphavsrett

Portals to the Otherworld
139

Andre utgaver - Vis alle

Vanlige uttrykk og setninger

Populære avsnitt

Side 41 - And as they fled before Israel, while they were going down the ascent of Bethhor'on, the LORD threw down great stones from heaven upon them as far as Aze'kah, and they died; there were more who died because of the hailstones than the men of Israel killed with the sword.
Side 65 - the ancients, when they were to choose a king, were wont to stand on stones planted in the ground, and to proclaim their votes, in order to foreshadow from the steadfastness of the stones that the deed would be lasting.
Side 8 - water. Here she had twins, and their father was the war-eagle, and her children have since peopled the earth. The pipe stone, which is the flesh of their ancestors, is smoked by them as the symbol of peace...
Side 8 - young woman, K-wap-tah-w (a virgin), caught hold of the foot of a very large bird that was flying over, and was carried to the top of a high cliff, not far off, that was above
Side 70 - families have different kinds of stones, which according to their diverse shapes and colours, are supposed to promote the cultivation of the various species of yams. Before the stones are buried in the yam field they are deposited beside the ancestral skulls, wetted with water, and wiped with the leaves of certain trees.
Side 66 - fuel, each person present used to throw into the fire a small stone, with a mark whereby he should know it again. If he succeeded in finding the stone on the morrow, the year would be a lucky one for him, but the contrary if he failed to recover it.
Side 99 - 32:18: Of the Rock that begat thee thou art unmindful, and hast forgotten God that formed thee. These
Side 70 - by means of a disc-shaped stone with a hole in it. At the moment when the sun rises, the wizard holds the stone in his hand and passes a burning brand repeatedly into the hole, while he says: 'I kindle the sun, in order that he may eat up the clouds and dry up our land, so that it may produce nothing."
Side 25 - A stone carefully wrapped up in flannel is brought out at certain periods to be adored; and when a storm arises, this god is supplicated to send a wreck on their coast.
Side 77 - It is like a large transparent crystal, nearly the shape of a cartridge bullet, with a blood-red streak running through the center from top to bottom. The owner keeps it wrapped in a whole deerskin, inside an earthen jar hidden away in a secret cave in the mountains. Every seven days he feeds it with

Bibliografisk informasjon