Jeff Russell
Why a Heathen Rosary?
Page Summary
Active Entries
- 1: A Request: Help with Dream Interpretation
- 2: [Open Post] Heathen Open Post
- 3: [Main Blog Post] [Book] Thoughts on A Short History of Ethics
- 4: Ask Me (Just About) Anything
- 5: [Main Blog Post] [Book] Blessing: the Art and the Practice
- 6: Divination Offering - Rune or Ogham Reading Through the End of the Year
- 7: [Main Blog Post] Looking Back on 2024 and Forward to 2025
- 8: [Main Blog Post] How the Cost of Freight Has Shaped the World
- 9: [Main Blog Post] [Heathen Rosary] Draft "Hail Holy Forebears"
- 10: [Main Blog Post] [Book] Thoughts on Shadow Tech
Style Credit
- Base style: Patsy by
- Theme: Clay Deco by
Expand Cut Tags
No cut tags
no subject
Date: 2022-09-27 03:15 pm (UTC)Oh, and before I forget, besides the magnum opus of the Grimms, any recommendations for sources of Germanic folklore to check out? I have Lecouteux's Encyclopedia of Norse and Germanic Folklore, which does a good job of giving more "folklore" than Simek's Dictionary of Northern Mythology, but other than a few books of fairy tales and Anglo-Saxon poetry (like "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight"), I don't have a ton of the tales themselves.
One element of your comment I find rather interesting is putting the Rosary in the context of a "Christian veneer over Heathen themes and symbolism" - honestly, that's not an idea I had considered, other than the Spenglerian assertion that the prominence of Mary in Western European Catholicism was a clear Faustian upwelling in the Magian pseudomorphosis of Christianity. I hadn't delved much into the history/origin of the Rosary beyond the basics, but it might be interesting to try to work out if there might have been any earlier practices that influenced it.
If anything, as I've read works like The Secret of the Rosary, I've been inclined to accept more or less at face value the claims of visions, visitations, and miracles attributed to the Rosary by its Catholic proponents and to see that as proof that this particular approach has a lot to recommend it structurally and behaviorally, but as practiced by Catholics, it is obviously very tightly attuned with Mary, and to a slightly lesser extent, Jesus.
At any rate, thanks very much for the food for thought, and I'll try to track down that Merseburg charm article.
Cheers,
Jeff