Oxford

Bob Trubshaw

The earliest history of Oxford reveals that the long peninsular of land at the confluence of the rivers Cherwell and Thames was used as a barrow cemetery in bronze age times – a linear barrow cemetery being situated on what is now the University Parks cricket ground, with other barrows throughout the town. However, unlike nearby Abingdon and Dorchester, Oxford was not developed in the Roman period [2]. No reason has been put forward although it is assumed that the ford was known and used at that time. Perhaps the Thames and the Cherwell formed the boundaries of three Celtic tribes (the Dubunni, the Atrebates and the Catuvellauni) leaving the peninsula as ‘liminal space’ or ‘no man’s land’. Typically, the Celts placed shrines at the boundaries of their territory, on such areas of no man’s land, the ‘placeless places’. Although no evidence has been discovered of a Celtic shrine at Oxford, the idea tantalises me as it would fit the geography and might also account for the lack of Roman settlement. For lack of any better alternative, perhaps this shrine was situated at what is now the holy well of St Frideswide at Binsey (164:485081) – see [3] for a description.

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Dragon Zodiac corrispondence

ARIES

Colour: Red
Planet: Mars
Element: Fire
Stone: Diamond
Flower: Geranium
Description: Energetic, impatient, lacking in foresight, short tempered, sarcastic, witty, lucky, demanding, sharp minded, cutting, egocentric, adventuresome, feisty

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Baba Yaga: A Demon or A Goddess?

by Freya

 
Growing up in Kiev, Ukraine, I loved reading and listening to fairy tales. These stories, filled with Slavic flavor, were opening up a new world for me, a world where one is to learn lessons and always to succeed, a world in which no matter how many hardships and terror a good character goes through, he or she always succeeds, a world in which a goodness always defeats an evil. Being my hide-away from the harshness of reality, that world was very much sought by me at all the times. Yet, this world absolutely needed to have a few definite characteristics to serve its purpose: the fairy tales I loved to read and re-read had to have Baba Yaga as one of its evil characters. The more evil this character was, the scarier her description, the more vicious her behavior, the better I liked the fairy tale. So who was this Baba Yaga character and what was it in this evil creature that drew me to read and re-read multiple fairy tales, in which I was seeking a camouflage from reality?

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Janis

by Aldis Putelis

 
Janis is a problematic deity, as he is mentioned only in close relation with the festival of Midsummer’s Night and therefore the name could be an adaptation of the Christian John the Baptist. Still, the festival is completely non-Christian, including ritual bonfires, as known in many cultures, some traces of the cult of phallus can be found as well. Janis is one of deities to whom the description ?Dieva dels? is attributed, still it is an marginal phenomenon. The main action of Janis is coming once a year to grant fertility and fortune, he must be treated properly therefore. There are attempts to explain the image astronomically – as a constellation seen mainly around the summer solstice. Generally all the customs show the features of a passage rite, the threshold event between two cycles, when the original chaos must be turned into cosmos again, therefore the magic activities to prevent the evil entering the house and causing permanent damage.

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