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Author Topic: The World of Harry Potter  (Read 212 times)
Description: New book, new film, an age-old story
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Solomon
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« on: July 06, 2007, 02:29:25 PM »

The Harry Potter tales remind me of the England of yesteryear, the countryside and villages of my youth. Not all has been lost.

I met the 'last living witch' sometime in the mid-1960s - a scruffy and rather dirty old man who lived on the Essex coast.


The Cunning Men of Essex

Tradition states that in the village of Canewdon, where he was born and spent most of his life, there were always six witches, three in silk and three in cotton -- and would be so long as the 75-foot tower of the church of St. Nicholas stands. The dress code suggests that three of the town's witches were of the higher classes, and it was said that at one time, one was the wife of the local clergyman. Other tales say that should a stone fall from this tower, one of the witches will die. It is also said that if you run three times counter-clockwise round the church you will go back in time. When Halloween comes around, the police are often called in to protect the church from enthusiastic time travellers and ghost hunters.

My home village also gained notoriety.


The ducking pond

Witchcraft:

According to Westwood and Simpson in the their book, The Lore of the Land the county in general and Mears Ashby in particular has a long tradition of witchcraft and accustations of withcraft. In their book they recall that as late as 1785 an accused Witch, Sarah Bradshaw, was so accused.

The interest in what appeared to be a ritual murder continued for years.


Meon Hill seen from College Farm

Uncovering Warwickshire's sinister secret

Valentine's Day is etched in the minds of people in a small South Warwickshire village forever because of a strange murder, carried out among rumours of witchcraft and black magic.

The murder victim at the heart of this gruesome and mysterious tale was 74 year-old Charles Walton, a farm labourer who had lived in Lower Quinton all his life.

Despite Charles' advanced years, he continued to help out in the local farms until the day of his murder.

Charles was well-liked in the village, although he was an unusual character. It is said that birds would flock to be fed from his hand and he had the ability to tame wild dogs with his voice.

When his body was found, villagers were shocked at the scene of the brutal and unusual murder.

Charles' trouncing hook was embedded in his throat and his body was pinned to the floor by his pitch fork.

Witchcraft was suspected as a large cross was carved into his chest.

Previous cases documented include people murdering those they believe have put them under a spell.

In these cases, the victim - believed to be the witch that cast the spell - was often given the sign of the cross by the person taking their revenge.

Meon Hill, the furthest of the Costwold mounds, has been surrounded by strange tales for many centuries, concerning devilish deeds and ancient hauntings.



My school, in Kimbolton Castle, was riddled with secret passages. My recreation room was a dank dungeon.

Castle history

Katherine of Aragon
After her divorce from Henry VIII, Katherine of Aragon arrived at Kimbolton in May 1534. She spent the last months of her life as a semi-prisoner in her rooms in the south-west corner of the Castle, attended by a few loyal servants. We can only guess what the rooms looked like at the time: their present appearance dates from the 18th century.

When Katherine of Aragon died in January 1536, probably from cancer, her body was carried in procession to the Abbey (now Cathedral) at Peterborough for burial. Of course, she is said to haunt the Castle.


Sir John Popham
Sir John Popham, after whom the Popham Gallery above the Chapel is named, is believed to have lived in the Castle around 1600, and his portrait now hangs in the Queen's Room. After a colourful early life, when he is said to have been a highwayman, he became Lord Chief Justice and is best remembered as the judge at the trial of Guy Fawkes. Local legend claims that he threw his baby daughter to her death from a window overlooking the courtyard, and he is, not surprisingly, the subject of several Kimbolton ghost stories.

That should give you a taste of my early life. I can tell you that whatever metaphysical world my exist, nothing bothers me: I'd happily have a picnic on a gravestone at the witching hour.

Harry Potter is, I think, a good reflection of olde England - witchcraft and wizzardry, boarding school and village life.

This has nothing whatsoever to do with the Wicca and other occult themes packaged and sold in your local bookshop. Modern 'witchcraft' belongs to modern suburbia and is more akin to UFO meetings, ghost hunters and maybe illegal drugs and group sex.


The old religion still exists. Homeopathic magic is still practised. Like King's Cross railway station platform 9�, it requires some understanding to see it.

Solomon
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The Eyrie


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« Reply #1 on: July 08, 2007, 11:56:47 PM »


They don't build schools like this anymore  Cry
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Sovereign
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« Reply #2 on: July 15, 2007, 12:07:32 PM »


The brave members of my family saw the film last night and this afternoon I am taking those with a more nervous disposition.

The hazel wand has an ancient tradition.


Circe with her magical wand, painting by John William Waterhouse

Wand:

A wand consists of a thin, straight, hand-held stick of wood, ivory, or metal. Generally, in modern language, wands are ceremonial and/or have associations with magic but there have been other uses, all stemming from the original meaning as a synonym of rod and virge, both of which had a similar development.


Hazel:

Hazel is the sacred plant of the Celtic sea god Manaman. The Celts also believed that hazelnuts held concentrated wisdom. One old tale tells of Hazel tress growing round Connla's Well, the well of wisdom and believed to be the source of the River Shannon, and dropping hazelnuts into the water. These nuts were eaten by salmon, who were revered by the Druids, who absorbed their wisdom. The number of spots on a salmon indicated the number of nuts it had eaten. Catching a salmon and eating it would endow the eater with wisdom. In an Irish version of this tale, one salmon only ate all the nuts. A Druid master told his pupil to catch and cook the fish but not to eat it. The hot fat from the fish while cooking splattered the pupil's thumb, which he licked to cool it - thereby imbibing the fish's wisdom. He was known as Fionn Mac Cumhail and became one of the most heroic leaders in Irish mythology. The phrase "in a nutshell" probably derives from this legend because all wisdom is within the nut. In Norse mythology Hazel was known as the Tree of Knowledge and was sacred to the god Thor.

Many legends tell of Hazel wands being able to induce shape-shifting, eg, Sadb, mother of Fion's son, Oisin, was turned into a deer by such a wand. According to legend, St Patrick used a Hazel wand to drive the serpents out of Ireland. In folklore, Hazel trees are often found bordering worlds where magical things happen. In "The Discoverie of Witchcraft" (1534), there is record of a Hazel wand used as a charm against witches and thieves.

In Scotland, Hazel was one of the 9 sacred woods used in fires at Beltane. Nuts have been linked with fertility in old country folklore. In nineteenth-century Devon, for example brides used to be met outside church by an old woman holding a basket of hazelnuts to encourage fertility. It was believed that a good nut year meant many babies. Hazelnuts were also given the names of potential husbands and thrown into the fire by eager girls. The loudest pop and brightest flame indicated true love. Similarly, on Halloween (Nut Crack Night) lovers would roast hazelnuts over fires - depending on if they burned steadily or flew apart signified the future of the couple's relationship. At Roman weddings Hazel torches were burnt on the wedding night, meaning happiness for the couple. A double hazelnut will kill a witch. A rosary of hazelnuts = protection. Hazel twigs gathered on Palm Sunday would protect the house from fire and lightening. Cut a Hazel stick before sunrise on May Day and draw a circle round yourself with it to protect against fairies, serpents and evil. Three Hazel pins stuck into a house wall will protect from fire. If you stir jam with a Hazel stick it won't be stolen by fairies.

The Irish kept a hazelnut in the pocket to ward off rheumatism. A double nut protected from toothache. Hazel trees were plentiful in ancient Scotland. The Romans called Scotland Caledonia, from Cal-Dun = "Hill of Hazel". Hazel twigs were used to bind vines to stakes. Vines were sacred to Bacchus, god of wine, and any goats found feeding on them were caught and sacrificed to Bacchus on spits of Hazel. Sheep farmers would not take catkins into the house because they believed to do so would lead to a poor lambing season.

14 September, Holy Cross Day, used to be a school holiday so that children could go nutting. A hurdle of Hazel around a house or a Hazel breast band on a horse, offered protection from evil. In eastern England, Hazel boughs were collected on Palm Sunday and placed in vases on windowsills to protect against lightning.

Hazel is a favourite wood for staffs, ritual wands, walking sticks, self-defence and shepherds' crooks. The wood bends easily so is ideal for weaving fences. Hazel stems bent into a U shape were used for holding down thatch on roofs. Young Hazel shoots were used to make baskets and containers. Forked twigs were used for water divining.


Alverstone wand (Isle of Wight)


Stick with rune inscriptions (magic wand/building offering?)
Early Middle Ages, 8th-9th century. Groninger museum
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Tags: magic magik wicca witchcraft england Harry potter 
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