superoperator.com
Search:    Site Home >> About Us >> Privacy of Info >> Terms of Use >> Place Your Link >> Submit Article   
Add Url
 
 

Business & Services

 

Eating & Drinking

 

Teens & Kids

 

Recreation & Entertainment

 

Games & Play

 

Vehicles & Automotive

 

Computers & Software

 

Home Family & Garden

 

Investment & Finance

 

Travel & Vacation

 

People & Society

 

Fitness & Health

 

Law & Politics

 

Estate & Realty

 

Shopping & Auction

 

Self Help

 

Creative Arts

 

Healthcare & Medicine

 

Academics & Education

 

Technology & Science

 

Jobs & Employment

 

Sports & Adventure

 

Events & News

 

Relationship & Lifestyle


 

Site Home » Events & News » Arts & Humanities
 

Masking European Animism

 
Author: Angelique Van Engelen
 

The ancient peoples of Europe were more fond of masks and religious ritual than you would suspect if you saw Europeans today. Mask wearing and shamanism was part and parcel of everyday life in ancient Western European tradition, say researchers.

There are stories abound about African and North American tribal shamans but not a lot is known about ancient European peoples involvement with masked ritual or the practice of magic. That is why finding out about similarities between the ideas behind masks from around the world and those originating from European soil, is a discovery of intriguing and real beliefs.

The less obvious link of European societies with shamanism or religious ritual than for instance the North American native Indian customs or magic activity in the past is due to the more sanitised way Europe has developed because of church interference in peoples lives. The church dominance virtually stamped out any pagan ritual.

It was not until after 1960, when the Americans experienced a revival of the interest in shamanism, that much has become known about the European version of the practice of magic and mask wearing. There is more verifyable information about the true roots of Western European civilisation than initially suspected.

The spirit if not the exact practise of shamanism has been passed on through Europe's generations, one authority on the subject, Leigh Ann Hussey, believes. The earliest recordings of ceremonies involving masks were found in the caves of the Trois Freres (Three Brothers) in France where paintings of a Paleolithic scene depicting European animism of the first order. Ian Bracegirdle, a mask expert, describes the cave: A central figure stands wearing the head and antlers of a deer. He stands, shaman like, surrounded by animals.

Animals that are important to the culture he represents. Some of the animals no longer exist in this area. Ibex, reindeer, bison, stag and horses. The shaman, for that is what he seems to be, stands, a human figure amongst the potential food. It is believed that the paleolithic cave served as a place where hunters were initiated. The sorceror or shaman was symbol to sympathetic magic. He wore ears and horns of a stag, the eyes and beak of an owl, the bearded face of an old man, the tail of a wolf, the paws of a bear and the legs of a dancing shaman. He stood in front of painted hunting murals. The Shaman served as mediator between humans and their venerated animal kin.

This is pretty much the best evidence in tangible form that we have of our ancestors animistic beliefs. It dates back 10,000 years and is accompanied by an abundance of myths and stories showing our ancestors had plenty of similar ideas. A close analogy exists in the stories of Kernunnos, forest god of the later Celts. The masks express animism to some extent.

His information is confirmed by Ms Hussey, who went on a hunt in European shamanism and found when she examined ancient sources, that she did not need to borrow from other traditions. It is clear that tribal Europe had as strong a shamanic tradition as, for example, any of the American Indian tribes, she said.

Summing up the general symbolism that unites masks from around the globe, Bracegirdle says that there are many striking similarities between the ancient cultures of the Pacific West Coast of North America and the tribal traditions of Africa. Symbols that all these cultures share are relating to fertility, the hunted animal, ancestors, initiation into rites, circumcision, cannibalism real and symbolic, healing and crossing over into the spirit world for guidance and healing powers or to appease the gods or ancestors are the accompanying ideas behind masks.

Not a lot has been passed on from generation to generation in any much recognisable form or shape, but among the most powerful links is the seasonal nature of many traditions we still know about. In the UK, the Green man and the Hobby horse are two potent examples. To me there is a tremendous link which is bound up with the very nature of the people we are and how we have developed. Our formative roots live in our societies now, believes Bracegirdle.

The links to ancient beliefs can also be found in many European languages. When we say in English that we are going berserk, we even directly refer to the shamanic state of extasy. The adjective comes from the noun berserker, or berserk, the Old Norse for wild warriors or champions. Ber referring to bear and serkr to shirt or coat.

These berserkers became frenzied in battle, howling like animals, foaming at the mouth, and biting the edges of their iron shields as if they acted in a Nike commercial. Berserker is first recorded in English in the early 19th century, long after these wild warriors ceased to exist. This is illustrative of how the tradition seemingly interrupted, still lived on.

Similar "Bear Doctors" stories have been found among California tribes. In some cases, the Berserkr or Ulfserkr would even eat the heart of the bear or wolf to gain its power. Another feast of hearts occurs in the seir trance, as described above.

Not a lot was known about Western shamanism until it hit the limelight in the 1960 and the undoubted expert in the field is the late Mircea Eliade, a religion historian who taught at the Sorborme in Paris and later at the University of Chicago.

He described Shamanism, or witchcraft as it is referred to also, as not a religion but more as a technique. Shamanism, he says, is not strictly medicine men/women, magicians, or healers. This is the conclusion of extensive studies of the phenomenon around the world in his book Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy.

He believes that shamans are not the same as priests; they may have coexisted with priests or even have fulfilled priestly functions as well as shamanic ones. A shaman was more a mystic than a priest or a minister. A shaman was not "possessed", as many people now believe, says Eliade. Neither was the shaman a medium or trance channeler. Shamans control the spirit beings with whom they work, or at least they do not surrender to them. Like a medium or channeler, a shaman may appear unconscious when working, but upon returning, the shaman can tell where he or she has gone, he says.

The shaman is not the instrument of the spirits. Traditional shamans cure people through their trances, accompany the souls of the dead to the Otherworld, and communicate with the gods. "This small mystical elite not only directs the community's religious life but, as it were, guards its 'soul."

Modern day processions where you can still see old masks being worn include processions in which giants and witches are displayed. These and other masquerades are among the more powerful tangible links we still have to ancient witchcraft ritual.

In well known childrens stories and folklore narrative, the links are also obvious. Dragons for instance are examples creatures pervading every alley you can imagine of old folklore and mythology, straight into modern times stories. Descriptions of the beast's benevolence vary from the playful Puff (of Peter Yarrow's song) to the sinister Smaug in J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Hobbit". Babylonian legends portray the Queen of Darkness as a multi-headed dragon - Tiamat. Walt Disney's Sleeping Beauty features a battle between Prince Phillip and the evil Maleficent about a curse than can only be broken by three fairies. Likewise, the Germanic myth "Die Nibelungen" climaxes with the battle between Siegfried and the giant Fafnir, who has transformed himself into a dragon in an effort to become more frightening.

Our reaction to the physical characteristics of the dragon is another element that we share with and which connects us to our ancestors. Around the world the beasts are typically depicted as huge lizards, larger than elephants on average. Long fangs are generally accepted as are twin horns of varying length. Western cultures generally include large bat-like wings giving the dragon the capability of flight. But eastern dragons, usually wingless, use a more magical means of flying. Eastern dragons also tend to be more snake-like in nature, albeit with front and rear legs.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
7 Tips For Using Audio On Your Website
 
Middle East Media Pro-Hizbollah Fabricating Stories
 
Bring It On!
 
2005: The Year In Review
 
Illegal Aliens - Halt the Flood Now - an Essay
 
Your Stars 2
 
Job Layoffs: Are We The Problem?
 
Are You Making These News Release Mistakes?
 
How Iranian crisis can be resolved?
 
Understanding Third World People and Environmental Issues They Face
 
 
 
 

New Tax Laws Would Wipe Out True Poverty - 1964 Editorial

The Robin Hood myth dies hard. The taking from the rich to relieve the poor seems so logical on the ... - Lindsey Williams
 

A Short Biography on Some of Europe's Most Loved and Hated Monarchs - Pt 3 King Ludwig II

During the last thousand years, European Monarchs have ruled Europe and the world with an iron fist ... - Stuart Bazga
 

An Overview of Nuclear Energy

In the effort to get away from our oil and coal dependency, nuclear energy is getting attention agai ... - Richard Chapo
 
 

Traditional Newspapers versus Internet News

Why should you read a newspaper printed on a hard-copy while the internet is so convenient? - R Jones
 

Guardian Angels ? Do We All Have Guardian Angels

Angels are mentioned in both ancient and modern sacred (and profane) writing, and the word itself is ... - Sacha Tarkovsky
 

How Can This be a Shocker?

Why we cannot discuss politics and religion in polite company. What we should do so we can. - Evelyn Cole
 

New Embryonic Stem Cell Method Might Split Supporters?

Not For The Catholics - Eric Engel
 

Giant Tsunami Coming to Atlantic Seaboard on or About May 25?

Perhaps you may not have heard of the Comet which is passing by Earth which has been fragmented into ... - Lance Winslow
 
 
Site Home >> Privacy of Info >> Terms of Use
© 2008 www.superoperator.com All Rights Reserved.