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CHAPTER I. THE HORNED GOD
The God of the old religion becomes the Devil of the new."
THE earliest known representation of a deity is in the Caverne des
Trois Frères in Ariège, and dates to the late Palaeolithic period (plate
I). The figure is that of a man clothed in the skin of a stag and wearing
on his head the antlers of a stag. The hide of the animal covers the whole
of the man's body, the hands and feet are drawn as though seen through a
transparent material; thus conveying to the spectator the information that
the figure is a disguised human being. The face is bearded, the eyes large
and round, but there is some doubt whether the artist intended to
represent the man-animal with a mask or with the face uncovered.
The horned man is drawn on the upper part of the wall of the cave,
below and around him are representations of animals painted in the
masterly manner characteristic of the Palaeolithic artist. It seems
evident from the relative position of all the figures that the man is
dominant and that he is in the act of performing some ceremony in which
the animals are concerned. The ceremony appears to consist of a dance with
movements of the hands as well as the feet. It is worth noting that though
the pictures of the animals are placed where they can easily be seen by
the spectator the horned man can only be viewed from that part of the
cavern which is most difficult of access. This fact suggests that a great
degree of sanctity was attached to this representation, and that it was
purposely placed where it was screened from the gaze of the vulgar.
The period when the figure was painted is so remote that it is not
possible to make any conjectures as to its meaning except by the analogy
of historical and modern instances. Such instances are, however,
sufficiently numerous to render it fairly certain that the man represents
the incarnate god, who, by performing the sacred dance, causes the
increase of the kind of animal in the disguise of which he appears.
Though the stag-man is the most important of the horned figures of the
Palaeolithic period, there are many smaller drawings of masked and horned
men on small objects of bone and horn. These figures are usually
represented with the horns of a goat or chamois, and are dancing singly or
in groups. The most interesting example is on plate II, where the horned
man is not only dancing but also accompanies himself on a kind of musical
bow. The only Palaeolithic representation of a human figure found in
England is the well-known engraving on bone of a man masked with a horse's
head, which was discovered in the Pinhole Cave, Derbyshire.
The art of the Palaeolithic period came to a sudden and complete end
before the Neolithic era; it was utterly wiped out in Europe, and seems to
have had no influence on later periods. The Neolithic people have left few
artistic remains; their human figures are almost invariably of women, and
the masked man does not appear. But when the Bronze-age is reached the
horned human-being is found again, and occurs first in the Near and Middle
East, i.e., in Egypt, Mesopotamia and India. In the Near East the figures
may be either male or female, and the horns are those of cattle, sheep or
goats.[1] There are no stag antlers, possibly because the stag did not
occur in those lands or was so uncommon as not to be of importance as a
food animal.
Horned gods were common in Mesopotamia, both in Babylon and Assyria.
The copper head found in one of the gold-tombs at Ur, is very early;
possibly earlier than the first Egyptian dynasty. It is about half
life-size, and the style and workmanship show an advanced stage of
metal-working. The eyes were originally inlaid with limestone or shell for
the white of the eye, and lapis lazuli for the iris. The head wears two
horns, a number which at a slightly later period would indicate that the
wearer was an inferior deity; for, during many centuries, the position of
a deity in the Babylonian pantheon was shown by the number of horns worn.
The great gods and goddesses had seven horns, which is the reason that the
divine Lamb in the Book of Revelation was said to have seven horns. The
two-horned deities of Babylonia are so numerous that it is likely that
they were originally the deities of the primitive inhabitants, who had to
take a lower place when the great gods were introduced; these latter were
given more horns than the godlings to show their superior position. The
horns were a sign of divinity. When the King or High-priest appeared as
the god Asshur with the Queen or High-priestess as his consort Ishtar, the
appropriate number of horns was worn on the royal headdresses, the royal
pair being then regarded as the incarnate deities. When Alexander the
Great raised himself above the kings of the earth and made himself a god,
he wore horns in sign of his divinity, hence his name in the Koran,
Dhu'l Karnain The Two-horned. In Egypt his horns were those of Amon,
the supreme god.
A godling, who is found in all parts of Babylonia and at all periods of
her history, is a two-horned male figure, known as Enkidu. He is
represented as fighting with animals, or holding a staff, but his special
duty is to guard the door. He has a man's head with two horns, his body is
human, and from the waist down he is a bull. Sometimes the legs appear to
be human, but the hoofs are always clearly indicated, and the tail also is
a marked feature. In short, he answers to the usual description of the
Christian devil in having horns, hoofs and a tail. But in the eyes of the
early Babylonians he was far from being a devil, and his image-sometimes
the whole figure, sometimes the head only-was worn as a charm against all
evil and ill-luck. He was credited with great prophylactic powers; so much
so that such charms were in use throughout Babylonia. The evidence shows
that the great seven-horned gods of the temples, who gave their special
protection to the royal family, had little or no appeal for the people,
and that the smaller deities, the little two-horned godlings, were
regarded as the real protectors in matters of everyday life.
Throughout the Bronze and Iron ages horned deities are to be found in
Egypt. The earliest example has a woman's face and the horns of a buffalo;
this is on the slate-palette of Narmer,[2] who is usually identified with
the first historic king of Egypt. It is worth noting that, with the
exception of the god Mentu, the horns of cattle are worn by goddesses
only, while the gods have the horns of sheep. The chief of the horned gods
of Egypt was Amon, originally the local deity of Thebes, later, the
supreme god of the whole country. He is usually represented in human form
wearing the curved horns of the Theban ram. Herodotus mentions that at the
great annual festival at Thebes the figure of Amon was wrapped in a ram's
skin, evidently in the same way that the dancing god of Ariège was
wrapped. There were two types of sheep whose horns were the insignia of
divinity; the Theban breed had curved horns, but the ordinary breed of
ancient Egyptian sheep had twisted horizontal horns. The horizontal horns
are those most commonly worn by Egyptian gods. One of the most important
of these deities is Khnum, the god of the district round the First
Cataract; he was a creator god and was represented as a human being with a
sheep's head and horizontal horns. But the greatest of all the horned gods
of Egypt was Osiris, who appears to have been the Pharaoh in his aspect as
the incarnate god. The crown of Osiris, of which the horizontal horns were
an important part, was also the crown of the monarch, indicating to all
who understood the symbolism that the king as god was the giver of all
fertility'
In the accounts of the divine birth of the Egyptian Kings, the future
father of the divine child, the Pharaoh, visits the queen as the god Amon
wearing all the insignia of divinity, including the horns. In this
connection it should also be noted that down to the latest period of
pharaonic history the divine father was always the horned Amon.
There are two other links between Egypt and the dancing god of Ariège.
On a slate palette, which is dated to the period just before the beginning
of Egyptian history, there is represented a man with the head and tail of
a jackal;[3] as in the Ariège example the body, hands and feet are human;
he plays on a flute, and like the Palaeolithic god he is in the midst of
animals. The other link is in the ceremonial dress of the Pharaoh, who on
great occasions wore a bull's tail attached to his girdle. The sed-heb
or Tail-festival, when the king was invested with the tail, was one of the
most important of the royal ceremonies. A sacred dance, performed by the
Pharaoh wearing the bull's tail, is often represented as taking place in a
temple before Min, the god of human generation. The worship of horned gods
continued in Egypt until Christian times, especially in connection with
the horned goddess Isis.
The Indian figures of the Horned God, found at Mohenjo-Daro, are of the
earliest Bronze-age. There are many examples, and in every case it is
clear that a human being is represented, either masked or horned.
Sometimes the figure has a human body with a bull's head, sometimes the
head and body are covered with a hairy skin, probably indicating a bull's
hide. The most remarkable is that of a man with bull's horns on his head,
sitting cross-legged, and like the Ariège figure surrounded with animals
(plate III. i). This representation was regarded in historic times as a
form of Shiva and is called Pasupati, "Lord of animals". When in relief
sculpture Pasupati is three-faced, as here; but in figures in the round he
has four faces. Such a representation is a naive attempt to show the
all-seeing god, and is found in Europe in the four-faced Janus. It is
still uncertain whether the four-faced form arose independently in India
and Europe, or whether one is the prototype of the other; if the latter,
the Indian appears to be the earlier.
Though it is not possible to give an exact date to the early legends of
the Aegean, it is evident that there also the Horned God flourished
throughout the Bronze and Iron ages.
The best known, on account of the dramatic legends attached to his
cult, was the Minoan bull, the Minotaur, of Crete. He was in human form
with a bull's head and horns, and was worshipped with sacred dances and
human sacrifices. He was said to be the offspring of a foreign "bull" and
the Cretan queen, who at the marriage appeared in the guise of a cow, in
other words, she was robed and masked as an animal like the dancing god of
Ariège. The representations of the combat between Theseus and the Minotaur
show the latter as entirely human, with a bull's mask (plate iv. i).
Theseus is sometimes represented with the flowing locks of the Cretan
athlete; this suggests that the slaying may have been a Cretan custom, the
man representing the Minotaur being killed in a battle in which, masked as
he was, he could be no match for his antagonist. Frazer has pointed out
that Minos went to Zeus every nine years, and has suggested that this was
a euphemism for the sacrifice of each ruler at the end of that term of
years. In the Theseus legend the interval of time was seven years, but the
rest of the story so closely resembles other accounts of the sacrifice by.
combat that it cannot be disregarded; Theseus did not put an end to the
custom, he merely relieved Athens from sending the yearly victims, who,
like the children stolen by the fairies, had to "pay the teind to hell"
with their lives.
The sanctity of the ram in the Aegean in the early Bronze age is shown
in the legend of Helle and Phrixos. They were the children of the family
who were set apart as victims when human sacrifice was required. The
sacrifice of Helle was consummated by drowning, but Phrixos escaped by
means of the divine animal, which he afterwards sacrificed, possibly as a
substitute for himself. The story of Jason's expedition suggests that the
fleece had a divine connotation, and that its value was greatly in excess
of the intrinsic worth of the gold.
Of the horned gods of the mainland of Greece Pan is the best known to
the modern world, yet he is put one among many, horned deities of the
eastern Mediterranean (plate IV. 2). His universality is shown by his
name, which points to a time when he was the only deity in his own
locality. All representations of him are necessarily late, after the fifth
century B.C.; but even in the earliest forms his characteristics are the
same, the long narrow face, the pointed beard, the small horns, and the
goat's legs. Scenes of his worship show him followed by a dancing
procession of satyrs and nymphs, while he plays on the pipes which bear
his name. His appearance should be compared with the little dancing god of
the Palaeolithic people (plate II), and also with the figure of Robin
Goodfellow (plate X). As a godling beloved of the people he is like Enkidu,
whom he also resembles in having hoofs. Though our knowledge of him dates
only to the late Iron-age, his worship is obviously of high antiquity, and
he appears to be indigenous in Greece.
Another horned god of Greece was Bull Dionysos, who, like the Minotaur
of Crete, was slain. Dionysos was said to have been brought into Greece
from the north; his cult would therefore be a foreign worship, which fact
shows that outside Greece, in the countries which have no written record,
the belief in a homed deity prevailed in the Iron-age and probably even
earlier.
A few rock carvings in Scandinavia show that the horned god was known
there also in the Bronze age. It was only when Rome started on her career
of conquest that any written record was made of the gods of western
Europe, and those records prove that a horned deity, whom the Romans
called Cernunnos, was one of the greatest gods, perhaps even the supreme
deity, of Gaul. The name given to him by the Romans means simply The
Horned. In the north of Gaul his importance is shown on the altar found
under the cathedral of Notre Dame at Paris. The date of the altar is well
within the Christian era; on three sides are figures of minor gods
represented as small beings, on the fourth side is the head of Cernunnos
(Plate 4), which is of huge proportions compared with the other figures.
He has a man's head, and like the Ariège figure he wears stag's antlers,
which are further decorated with rings; these may be hoops of withy or
bronze currency-rings. Like his Palaeolithic prototype he is bearded. This
altar shows that, in accordance with Roman artistic ideas, the divine man
was not masked, he wears the horns and their appendages fixed on his head.
The altar appears to have been dedicated in a temple so sacred that the
site was re-used for the principal temple of the new faith. Cernunnos is
recorded in writing and in sculpture in the south of Gaul, in that very
part where the Palaeolithic painting of him still survives. It is highly
improbable that the cult of the Horned God should have died out in
south-western Europe in Neolithic times and have remained unknown through
the Bronze and Iron ages, only to be revived before the arrival of the
Romans. It is more logical to suppose that the worship continued through
the unrecorded centuries, and lasted on as one of the principal Gaulish
cults till within the Christian era. Such a cult must have had a strong
hold on the worshippers, and among the illiterate, and in the less
accessible parts of the country it would linger for many centuries after a
new religion had been accepted elsewhere.
In considering the evidence from Britain the proximity of Gaul to this
country and the constant flux of peoples from one shore to the other, must
be taken into account. What is true of Gaul is true of Britain, some
allowance being made for the differences caused by the effect of another
climate on temperament and on conditions of life.
Our chief knowledge of the horned god in the British Isles comes from
ecclesiastical and judicial records. As these were made exclusively by
Christians, generally priests, the religious bias is always very marked.
The worshippers themselves were illiterate and have left no records of
their beliefs except in a few survivals here and there. The earliest
record of the masked and horned man in England is in the Liber
Poenitentialis[4] of Theodore, who was Archbishop of Canterbury from
668 to 690, and ruled the Church in England with the assistance of Hadrian
the negro. This was a time when——if we are to believe the ecclesiastical
chroniclers——England was practically Christianised, yet Theodore
fulminates against anyone who "goes about as a stag or a bull; that is,
making himself into a wild animal and dressing in the skin of a herd
animal, and putting on the heads of beasts; those who in such wise
transform themselves into the appearance of a wild animal, penance for
three years because this is devilish". Three centuries later King Edgar[5]
found that the Old Religion was more common than the official faith, and
he urges that "every Christian should zealously accustom his children to
Christianity."
The great influx of heathen Norsemen, under Sweyn and Canute into
England and under Rollo into France, must have been a terrible blow to
Christianity in Western Europe, in spite of the so-called conversion of
the rulers. Though the New Religion steadily gained ground, the Old
Religion regained many "converts", and more than one ruler held firmly to
the faith of his fathers. This was markedly the case among the East
Saxons, the most powerful kingdom in the seventh and eighth centuries. The
East Saxon kings must have been peculiarly irritating to the Christian
missionaries, for the rise and fall of the two religions alternately is
instructive. In 616 Sebert, the Christian king, died and was succeeded by
his three sons who maintained the Old Religion and drove out the
Christians. The new religion apparently gained ground later, for in 654
their successor was "converted". Ten years after, in 664, King Sighere and
the greater number of his people threw off Christianity and returned to
the ancient faith. Even when the king was not averse to Christianity he
was apt to act in a disconcerting manner by trying to serve two masters.
Thus, according to Bede, King Redwald had "in the same temple an altar to
sacrifice to Christ, and another smaller one to offer victims to devils".
At the end o f the ninth century the whole of the powerful kingdom of
Mercia was under the sway of the heathen Danes; and Penda, one of the
greatest of the Mercian rulers, refused to change his religion and died,
as he had lived, a devout Pagan.
The same difficulties occurred elsewhere. In Normandy Rollo, after his
conversion, gave great gifts to Christian churches, but at the same time
sacrificed his Christian captives to his old gods. Scandinavia, always in
touch with Great Britain (Norway held the Hebrides till 1263),
successfully resisted Christianity till the eleventh century. Sweyn, the
son of Harold Bluetooth, was baptised in infancy, but when he became a man
he reverted to the old faith and waged a religious war against his
Christian father; and as late as the end of the thirteenth century a
Norwegian king was known as "the Priest-hater".
There is no doubt that the records are incomplete and that if all the
instances of renunciation of Christianity had been as carefully recorded
as the conversions it would be seen that the rulers of Western Europe were
not Christian except in name for many centuries after the arrival of the
missionaries. Until the Norman Conquest the Christianity of England was
the very thinnest veneer over an underlying Paganism; the previous
centuries of Christian archbishops and bishops had not succeeded in doing
more than wrest an outward conformity from the rulers and chiefs, while
the people and many of the so-called Christian priests remained in
unabated heathenism.
That the worshippers regarded the so-called "Devil" as truly God is
clearly seen in the evidence even when recorded by their fanatical
enemies. In more than one case it is remarked that the witch "refused to
call him the Devil", and in many instances the accused explicitly called
him god. The following instances are not exhaustive, they cover a century
and are taken from the actual trials as well as from the generalisations
of those writers who heard the evidence at first-hand and had themselves
tried many cases. Danaeus[6] was such an author, he wrote in 1575 that the
"witches acknowledge the Devil for their god, call upon him, pray to him,
and trust in him", and that when they go to the Sabbath "they repeat the
oath which they have given unto him in acknowledging him to be their God".
Of the Aberdeen witches, tried in 1596[7] Agnes Wobster was accused of
having dealings with "Satan whom thou callest thy God"; Marion Grant
confessed that Christsonday was the name of the Divine Personage, "Christsonday
bade thee call him Lord, and caused thee to worship him on thy knees as
thy Lord". Boguet,[8] the Inquisitor, who records with unction that he
tried and executed many witches in France in 1608, states that "the
witches, before taking their repast, bless the table, but with words full
of blasphemy, making Beelzebub the author and protector of all things". De
Lancre,[9] the Inquisitor in the Pays de Labourd (Basses Pyrénées), wrote
in 1613 that there was "a great Devil, who is the master of all, whom they
all adore"; he also recorded the evidence of one of his victims,[10] "the
Devil made them believe that he was the true God", and he gives as a
general statement[11] "our witches for the most part hold these Demons as
Gods". In Orleans in 1614[25] "they say to the Devil, we recognise you as
our Master, our God, our Creator". At Edmonton in 1621 Elizabeth
Sawyer[12] confessed that "he charged me to pray no more to Jesus Christ,
but to him the Devil." In Lancashire in 1633 Margaret Johnson[13] "Met a
spirit or devil in a suit of black tied about with silk points", he
instructed her to call him Mamilion, "and in all her talk and conference
she called the said Mamilion her god". Gaule, making a general statement
about witch-beliefs and practices in 1646,[14] says that the witches
"promise to take him for their God, worship, invoke, obey him". Of the
Essex and Suffolk witches, whose trials made such a stir in 1646,[15]
Rebecca West "confessed that her mother prayed constantly (and as the
world thought, very seriously) but she said it was to the Devil, using
these words, Oh my God, my God, meaning him and not the Lord".
Ellen Greenleife also "confessed that when she prayed she prayed to the
Devil and not to God". Widow Coman[16] "did acknowledge that she had made
an agreement with him and that he was her Master and sat at the right hand
of God". The author of the Pleasant Treatise of Witches , whose
violent hatred towards those unhappy beings is only equalled in bitterness
by that of the Inquisitors, states in 1673 that at the Sabbath "they make
their accustomed homage, Adoring and Proclaiming him their Lord". In the
same year at Newcastle-on-Tyne[17] Ann Armstrong testified that she had
heard Ann Baites "calling him sometimes her protector, and other sometimes
her blessed saviour"; and that "he was their protector, which they called
their God". The Salem witch, Mary Osgood, in 1692, said[18] that "the
Devil told her he was her God, and that she should serve and worship him".
Such a mass of evidence shows that till the end of the seventeenth
century the Old Religion still counted large numbers of members. The issue
has been confused, perhaps purposely, by the use of the word Devil
in its Christian connotation, for the name of the God, and by stigmatising
the worshippers as witches. The consequence is that the pagan people are
now regarded as having worshipped the Principle of Evil, though in reality
they were merely following the cult of a non-Christian Deity.
The first recorded instance of the continuance of the worship of the
Horned God in Britain is in 1303, when the Bishop of Coventry was accused
before the Pope of doing homage to the Devil in the form of a sheep.[19]
The fact that a man in so high a position as a bishop could be accused of
practising the Old Religion shows that the cult of the Horned God was far
from being dead, and that it was in all probability still the chief
worship of the bulk of the people. It should be also noticed that this is
one of the first British records in which the old God is called the Devil
by the Christian writers of the Middle Ages.
It is possible that the bishop's high position in the Christian
hierarchy saved him from punishment, for in the case also of the Lady
Alice Kyteler in 1324 her rank as a noble saved her when she was tried
before the bishop of Ossory for her heathen practices.[20] The bishop,
however, had sufficient evidence to prove his case and sufficient power to
burn the lady's poorer co-religionists, though not herself.
Herne the Hunter, with horns on his head, was seen in Windsor Forest by
the Earl of Surrey in the reign of Henry VIII, and after that period it
was a favourite accusation against all political enemies that they were in
league with "the foul fiend" who appeared to them in human form horned
like a bull or a stag. Thus John Knox was said to have held converse with
the devil in the Cathedral churchyard at St. Andrews.[21] There is still
extant a record that Cromwell made a pact for seven years with the Devil
on the night before the battle of Worcester, and he not only won an
overwhelming victory but died that very day seven years later in the
middle of the worst thunderstorm within human memory; which was proof
positive of the truth of the story in the minds of the Royalists.[22] On
the other hand the Royalists in Scotland were believed to have sold
themselves to the Evil One. The bishops were said to be cloven-footed and
to cast no shadows, and those justices of the peace appointed to try the
political prisoners were seen often talking in a friendly way with the
Devil.[23]
This uninterrupted record of belief in a horned deity Shows that
underlying the official religion of the rulers there still remained the
ancient cult with all its rites almost untouched.
In the depositions of the witches at the trials the Horned God is very
prominent at the great assemblies. The horns and animal disguise were his
"grand array", but in his ordinary intercourse with his flock the
Incarnate God appeared in the dress of the period. Here again the
congregation would see no difference between their own and the Christian
priest, who also wore special vestments when performing religious
ceremonies. This alteration of costume is specially noted by de Lancre,[24]
"It is always observable that at any time when he is about to receive
anyone to make a pact with him, he presents himself always as a man, in
order not to scare or terrify them; for to make a compact openly with a
goat smacks more of the beast than of a reasonable creature. But the
compact being made, when he receives anyone for adoration he usually
represents himself as a goat".
The evidence that the Devil appeared as a man to a possible convert is
found continually, and it is very obvious that he was actually a human
being. Thus in 1678[25] the Devil appeared as a man to Mr. Williamson, a
school-master at Coupar; he gave Mr. Williamson a dinner, and meeting him
again in London treated him again. In 1682[26] Susanna Edwards, a
Devonshire witch, stated that "about two years ago she did meet with a
gentleman in a field called the Parsonage Close in the town of Biddiford.
And saith that his apparel was all black. Upon which she did hope to have
a piece of money of him. Whereupon the gentleman drawing near unto this
examinant, she did make a curchy or courtesy unto him, as she did use to
do to gentlemen. Being demanded what and who the gentleman she spoke of
was, the said examinant answered and said, That it was the Devil." These
are only two instances out of very many.
The forms in which the disguised god appeared were bull, cat, dog,
goat, horse, sheep, and stag. It is noteworthy that the goat and sheep do
not occur in the British Isles except in the case of the Norman Bishop of
Coventry; they belong almost entirely to France and Germany. In England,
Scotland and the south of France the usual animal disguise was the bull or
the stag; but nowhere is there a record of the head of the religion
appearing as an ass, or a hare, though the hare was the most common
transformation of the witches; in late times, in France and Germany he is
occasionally a pig. In Guernsey there is a record of a peculiar disguise,
when in 1617 Isabel Becquet[27] went to the Sabbath at Rocquaine Castle
and there saw the Devil in the form of a dog with two great horns sticking
up, and "with one of his paws (which seemed to her like hands) took her by
the hand: and calling her by her name told her that she was welcome."
In all cases of the Devil as an animal the evidence of the witches
shows that it was undoubtedly a disguise. Besides the dog with horns and
human hands mentioned above, there are numerous other instances. At
Angers[28], in 1593 the "Black Man" transformed himself first into a goat
and then into a young bull; in Guernsey[29] in 1563 he was a large black
cat who led the dance; in 1616 at Brécy[30] he was a black dog who stood
on his hind-legs and preached; at Poictiers in 15743, he was a goat who
talked like a person; at Avignon[32] in 1581, when he mounted on an altar
to be adored "he instantly turns himself into the form of a great black
goat, although on all other occasions he useth to appear in the shape of a
man." In Auldearne[33] in 1662 "sometimes he would be like a stirk, a
bull, a deer, a roe, or a dog."
It is only necessary to look at the figure of the dancing god of Ariège
(plate I) to see that in all the medieval cases we are dealing with a man
in some kind of disguise. The description given by Agnes Sampson, one of
the leaders of the North Berwick witches, of the so-called Devil of her
coven would apply equally well to the Ariège figure. "His face was
terrible, his nose like the beak of an eagle, great burning eyes, his
hands and legs were hairy, with claws upon his hands, and feet like the
griffin."[34] Yet there is probably not less than eight thousand years
between the painting and the recorded description. Again in a scene of
worship on an Egyptian papyrus of the XXIInd dynasty, about the tenth
century B.C., a woman is depicted in the act of praying to her god (plate
vi). But the description given by Isobel Gowdie in 1662 of a ceremony
performed by herself and her coven would apply to the scene on the
papyrus, "When we had learned all these words from the Devil, we all fell
down upon our knees, with our hair down over our shoulders and eyes, and
our hands lifted up, and our eyes steadfastly fixed upon the Devil, and
said the foresaid words thrice over to the Devil".[35] The flowing hair
and the uplifted hands and eyes, as well as the horned god, are alike in
both Egypt and Scotland. No-one would hesitate to say that the Egyptian
lady was engaged in the worship of her god, who was symbolised to her in
the figure of a goat, yet most people of the present day are horrified to
think that less than three centuries ago a similar worship of a "heathen"
god was still practised in the British Isles.
The ritual masking of the Incarnate God or his priest is found in many
places after the Palaeolithic period. Beside the dancing god there are the
little masked and horned figures. I have already called attention to these
in their geographical and chronological order, but it is important to note
that figures of maskers and the masks themselves still survive. On the
so-called Hunting Palette of predynastic Egypt[36] the figure of a man
disguised as a jackal and playing on a flute suggests the black-dog
disguise of the European Devil. A jackal mask belonging to the XXVIth
dynasty, about the seventh century B.C., is made of pottery and is
intended to be worn over the head (plate vii. 1). The method of wearing it
is shown in the procession of priests at Denderah, where the masked priest
has to be led by one of his fellows (plate III. 2). This jackal-mask
should be compared with the "Dorset Ooser" (plate VII. 2), which was
stolen from its Dorsetshire owners within the last thirty years. The Ooser
was of painted wood, and, like the Egyptian example, was worn over the
head, the wearer being at the same time wrapped in an oxskin. The
combination of the horned mask and the animal's skin show too close a
resemblance to the Palaeolithic prototype to be accidental. In the Ooser
we have the last remains of that most ancient of all recorded religions,
the worship of the Horned God.
The name of the great Pagan deity varied according to the country in
which the cult was followed. In the Near East the names were recorded from
very early times; the name of the Indian deity cannot yet be read, but the
traditional name still survives; in Greece and in Crete the record is
later than in Egypt and Babylonia. In Western Europe, however, it was not
till the Roman domination that any written records were made; therefore it
is only by tradition and an occasional Roman inscription that the names of
the homed god are known to us. The great Gaulish god was called by the
Romans Cernunnos, which in English parlance was Herne, or more
colloquially "Old Hornie". In Northern Europe the ancient Neck or Nick,
meaning a spirit, had such hold on the affections of the people that the
Church was forced to accept him, and he was canonised as St. Nicholas, who
in Cornwall still retains his horns. Our Puck is the Welsh Boucca,
which derives either directly from the Slavic Bog "God" or from the
same root. The word Bog is a good example of the fall of the High God to a
lower estate, for it becomes our own Bogey and the Scotch Bogle, both
being diminutives of the original word connoting a small and therefore
evil god.
Many of the names of the Devils appear to be diminutives. Thus among
the group of Alsatian witches tried between 1585 and 1630,[37] the names
for the Devil (i.e. the God) were Hämmerlin, Peterlin, and Kochlöffel. The
first of these may mean a yellowhammer, always regarded as the Devil's
bird, but as the name is also given as Hammer it is suggestive of a
diminutive of an epithet of Thor; Peterlin may be the Christianised form
of a local deity; for Kochlöffel (Cooking-spoon) I can offer no
explanation except that it may be a mispronunciation of a traditional
name. According to de Lancre the name of the Basque god was Jauna or
Janicot.[38] The latter he regarded as a diminutive and says that it means
"petit Jean", and was applied by the witches of the Basses Pyrénées to
Christ; a man-witch at Orleans also spoke of the host as "un beau Janicot."[29]
It may however not be a diminutive, but a form of Jauna with the ending
Cot "God", as in the Northern Irmincot. In modern times the god, who
has now degenerated into a sprite, is known by the Basques as Basa-jaun,
the equivalent of Homme de Bouc, Goat-man[40] which brings the
whole of the early religion of the Basques into connection with the Horned
God. De Lancre notes that the witches, when "in the hands of Justice" used
the name Barrabon[41] to signify either their own or the Christian God,
Barrabon[42] being also the name of a witch-god in Belgium.
A peculiar name, which occurs both in Great Britain and France is
Simon; it was used for either the Grandmaster or for the familiars which
were also called devils. It is possibly a diminutive like the
Mamilion of Layamon's Brut (ll. 16790-5), or the Amaimon and
Barbason of which Falstaff says, "they are devil's additions, the name of
fiends." But there is another possible explanation. The early Christian
Fathers refer to a statue to Simon set up in Rome in the reign of Claudius
by the Roman people. The base of this statue has been found, and on it is
a dedication to the ancient Sabine god, Semo Sancus. This important deity
was the god of fertility as his name, Semo, implies; and as such the name
might well have spread to Gaul and Britain with the Roman conquerors.
Later, when Christianity was brought to England by foreign missionaries,
the tonsure of the British Christian priesthood was stigmatised by the
Augustinians as "the tonsure of Simon Magus". That the Biblical Simon
Magus ever reached Britain is excessively unlikely, but the tonsure of
priests was a heathen custom before it was adopted by Christianity, and
the name given to the local tonsure in England is suggestive of the name
of a heathen god.
The Aberdeen witches, tried in 1597,[43] called their Grandmaster "Christsonday".
Andro Man confessed "that Christsonday came to him in the likeness of a
fair angel and clad in white clothes, and said that he was an angel, and
that he should put his trust in him and call him Lord and King." And
again, "The Devil thy master, whom thou callest Christsonday and supposest
to be an angel and God's godson——albeit he has a thraw by God and sways to
the Queen of Elfin——is raised by speaking the word Benedicite and
is laid by speaking the word Maikpeblis. Suchlike thou affirmest
that the Queen of Elfin has a grip of all the craft, but Christsonday is
the goodman and has all power under God." I suggest that the name
Christsonday is a confusion of Christus Filius Dei, i.e. Son Dei, Dei
being considered as a personal name by the ignorant worshippers. In the
same way the Devil of Dame Alice Kyteler Was called in the Latin record
sometimes Robin Artisson, sometimes Robinus Filius Artis. The magical word
Maikpeblis is probably, like Kochlöffel, a confused rendering of a
traditional name.
The name of the god in Guernsey was Hou. This is clearly indicated by
the version of the witch song or hymn quoted by Bodin in 1616,[44] where
his "diable" is the equivalent of the Guernsey Hou. Bodin's version is, "Har,
har, diable, diable, saute ici, saute là, joue ici, joue là"; the
Guernsey version runs, "Har, har, Hou, Hou, danse ici, danse là, joue
ici, joue là". The names of many of the smaller islands of the Channel
Island group are compounded with the name of this obscure half-forgotten
deity; Li-hou, Jet-hou, Brecq-hou, are instances. It is possible that the
Welsh god, Hu Gadarn, Hu the Mighty, may be connected with the Guernsey
deity. The name does not occur till the fifteenth century when it appears
in a hymn, in which he is plainly called god. In view of the fact that the
name is that of a "devil" and that it is compounded with other elements in
place-names, it seems not improbable that the god of the Old Religion
survived in Wales where the Christian Church did not persecute. It is an
interesting suggestion that the Har in the witch song is the same as the
cry of Haro used in Guernsey as a cry for help against injustice.
The most interesting of all the names for the god is Robin, which when
given to Puck is Robin Goodfellow. It is so common a term for the "Devil"
as to be almost a generic name for him "Some Robin the Divell, or I wot
not what spirit of the Ayre".[45] Dame Alice Kyteler called her god, Robin
Artisson, and the Somerset witches[46] cried out "Robin" when summoning
their Grandmaster to a meeting, or even when about to make a private
incantation; in the latter case they also added the words, "O Satan, give
me my purpose", and then proceeded to divine by the animal which appeared.
A fact, noted by many writers and still unexplained, is the connection
between Robin Goodfellow and Robin Hood. Grimm remarks on it but gives no
reason for his opinion, though the evidence shows that the connection is
there. The cult of Robin Hood was widespread both geographically and in
time, which suggests that he was more than a local hero in the places
where his legend occurs, In Scotland as well as England Robin Hood was
well known, and he belonged essentially to the people, not to the nobles.
He was always accompanied by a band of twelve companions, very suggestive
of a Grandmaster and his coven. One of those companions was Little John, a
name which may be compared with the Basque Janicot. Robin Hood and his
band were a constituent part of the May-day ceremonies, they had special
dances and always wore the fairies' colour, green. He was so intimately
connected with the May-day rites that even as early as 1580 Edmund
Assheton[41] wrote to William ffarington about suppressing "Robyn Hoode
and the May games as being Lewde sportes, tending to no other end but to
stir up our frail natures to wantonness." In all the stories and
traditions of Robin Hood his animosity to the Church is invariably
emphasised, an abbot or prior was regarded as his legitimate prey. In one
of the oldest Ballads of this popular hero, there is a description of how
he went to be let blood by his cousin the prioress of a convent of nuns;
she treacherously left the wound unbound and he bled to death. Part of the
account shows, however, that his death was expected, for his route to the
priory was lined with people, mourning and lamenting for his approaching
death. The strong resemblance to the death-processions of Joan of Arc and
Gilles de Rais cannot be overlooked, the weeping praying populace are
alike in all three cases.
If then there were more than one Robin Hood at the same time in
different parts of the country his ubiquity is explained; the name would
then mean Robin with a Hood, and would be the generic appellation
of the god. In Chapter II I have called attention to the great importance
of the head-covering among the fairy folk, and in many of the witch-trials
the "Devil" is described as wearing a hood. The most celebrated historical
Robin Hood was the Earl of Huntingdon in the reign of Richard I, who being
himself a Plantagenet belonged by race to the Old Religion. I have pointed
out in my Witch Cult in Western Europe that more than one Devil can
be identified, but in the earlier times the identification becomes
increasingly difficult as the ecclesiastical writers do not record all the
facts. It seems possible that the companions of Robin Hood as the
Incarnate God also bore special names, for in the fifteenth century there
is a pardon to a chaplain which is so worded as to suggest this
possibility. "Pardon to Robert Stafford, late of Lyndefeld, co. Sussex,
chaplain, alias Frere Tuk, for not appearing before the King to answer
Richard Wakehurst touching a plea of trespass."[48]
The continuity of the Pagan religion through the medieval period cannot
be gainsaid when it is found surviving to the present day. I quote from an
article by the Rev. John Raymond Crosby, D.D., D.C.L., Ph.D., in The
Living Church for March 2, 1929, which states that the rites are still
to be found in Pennsylvania and are practised by people who have been in
America for five generations. The Witch "lives alone, with the traditional
black cat, in a small house filled with herbs, charms and the implements
of her profession. Her compatriots have a firm conviction that she,
together with her ancestors for untold generations, entered into a
definite compact with the Devil who in his proper person is the father of
all the children of the family. Certain other members of the sect, the
Elect Ones, are permeated with the Spirit of Good, and are regarded as
incarnations of the Divine Essence. It is the general belief that the
witches hold regular gatherings for the practice of magical rites and the
worship of the Evil Principle. They are reported to assume the form of
animals, generally black, and to be restored to their original shapes at
the rising of the sun. These meetings are illuminated by candles made of
human fat, which renders the celebration invisible to all except the
initiated." |