Aspects of Anglo-Saxon Magic
Bill Griffiths
Magic is something special, something unauthorised; an alternative perhaps;
even a deliberate cultivation of dark, evil powers. But for the Anglo-Saxon
age, the neat division between mainstream and occult, rational and superstitious,
Christian and pagan is not always easy to discern.
To maintain its authority (or its monopoly?) the Church drew a formal
line and outlawed a range of dubious practices (like divination, spells,
folk healing) while at the same time conducting very similar rituals
itself, and may even have adapted legends of elves to serve in a Christian
explanation of disease as a battle between good and evil, between Church
and demons; in other cases powerful ancestors came to serve as saints.
In pursuit of a better understanding of Anglo-Saxon magic, a wide range
of topics and texts are examined in this book, challenging (constructively,
it is hoped) our stereotyped images of the past and its beliefs. Texts
are printed in their original language (e.g. Old English, Icelandic,
Latin) with New English translations. Contents include:- twenty charms;
the English, Icelandic and Norwegian rune poems; texts on dreams, weather
signs, unlucky days, the solar system; and much more.
£16·95
ISBN 1-898281-33-5 250mm x 175mm 10" x
7" hardback 256 pages