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Difference between revisions of "Wild Hunt"

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In some areas the '''Wild Hunt''' has been part of a fertility cult with the '''Huntsman/woman''' being wild spirits [[ghost]]s, which may explain their connection with animals, most notably the stag.
In some areas the '''Wild Hunt''' has been part of a fertility cult with the '''Huntsman/woman''' being wild spirits [[ghost]]s, which may explain their connection with animals, most notably the stag.


In other places the Hunter was not a '''God''', but the leader of the [[fairies]], such as [[Gwyn ap Nudd]] who was seen as the leader of the Welsh [[fairies]], the [[Tylwyth Teg]], who led the Hunt in Wales and the West of England.  
In other places the Hunter was not a '''God''', but the leader of the [[Fairy|fairies]], such as [[Gwyn ap Nudd]] who was seen as the leader of the [[Fairy|fairies]], the [[Tylwyth Teg]], who led the Hunt in Wales and the West of England.  


Toward the end of the Middle Ages, the '''Wild Hunt''' became more associated with [[witchcraft]].  
Toward the end of the Middle Ages, the '''Wild Hunt''' became more associated with [[witchcraft]].  
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*[[Odin]]’s name derived from the Old [[Norse Mythology]] ''Odhr''' which means ''Fury, ecstasy, inspiration'', ''Woden'' is similarly derived from the related Indo-European word - the Saxon ''Wod''.
*[[Odin]]’s name derived from the Old Norse Mythology ''Odhr''' which means ''Fury, ecstasy, inspiration'', ''Woden'' is similarly derived from the related Indo-European word - the Saxon ''Wod''.
Apart from thus showing why the Hunt is "Wild", and supporting ideas of ecstatic trance and spirit flight, this clue may lead us to a possible origin of the Wild Hunt. By donning animal skins or believing themselves transformed into animals by their rage [[Shapeshifter|Shapeshifting]], Berserkers can easily be seen as the hounds of [[Odin]]’s '''Wild Hunt'''.  
Apart from thus showing why the Hunt is "Wild", and supporting ideas of ecstatic trance and spirit flight, this clue may lead us to a possible origin of the Wild Hunt. By donning animal skins or believing themselves transformed into animals by their rage [[Shapeshifter|Shapeshifting]], Berserkers can easily be seen as the hounds of [[Odin]]’s '''Wild Hunt'''.  



Revision as of 11:41, 14 August 2006

Vision of the Wild Hunt by Agostino Musi (1515)

The Wild Hunt has been adopted several different myths. It is a very fascinating concept, portraying a pack of spectral hounds ghosts riding in the air foretelling death or disaster.

The dogs could be on their own or led by a hunter, as well as they could fly with ghosts, witches or fairies, depending on the related folklore, yet hunting for souls.


Description

In some areas the Wild Hunt has been part of a fertility cult with the Huntsman/woman being wild spirits ghosts, which may explain their connection with animals, most notably the stag.

In other places the Hunter was not a God, but the leader of the fairies, such as Gwyn ap Nudd who was seen as the leader of the fairies, the Tylwyth Teg, who led the Hunt in Wales and the West of England.

Toward the end of the Middle Ages, the Wild Hunt became more associated with witchcraft. Instead of saying that the Hunt was led by a spirit of God and featured many other spirits, it began to be said that witches participated in the Hunt and that their leader was either Satan himself or a demonic spirit.

This belief also seems to have become muddled up with the idea that witches rode in procession to Sabbats upon animals, or flew in the sky, and this idea became one of the major charges used in European witch hunts. As the old name was corrupted and its meaning lost, leadership of the Hunt was transferred to real or imaginary leaders of the past.


Origins

  • In Denmark the Hunt’s leader was the King Waldemar, hero of many tales or else King Christian II.


  • In XIX Century, in England, the huntsman might be any one of a number of local heroes or villains, usually of the landowning class, or a hunting squire such as Dando and his Dogs, also known as the Devil's Dandy Dogs, condemned to hunt forever, or someone who had otherwise achieved fame or notoriety, for example Sir Francis Drake and 'Wild Darrell', the Marcherlands it was Edric the Wild, and in the southeast it was associated with Herne the Hunter.

Though the ancient Herlething was forgotten under that name, beliefs connected with it long survived not only in traditions such as these concerning spectral huntsmen and their hounds, but probably also that of the sinister hell waine listed by Reginald Scot in his Discovery of Witchcraft, dated 1384, among common apparitions. Belief in the Hell, wain as the wagon in which were borne the souls of the dead survived until recently in Wales and the West Country, and seems to underlie the many reports of phantom coaches with headless horses from East Anglia and elsewhere.

More recently the myth of the Wild Hunt has been separated from its connection to demonolatry, and has become gradually incorporated in modern culture as a fantasy prop.


  • Modern Pagans have made Herne the Hunter on of their God and a powerful myth for men in particular.

Because of this masculine attributes as well as the wildness of nature he represents, Herne is often confused with the Green Man or the Lord of Misrule that belong to different myths.


  • In its Germanic manifestations the Harii painted themselves black to attack their enemies in the darkness. The Heruli, nomadic, ecstatic wolf-warriors, dedicated themselves to Wodan. Later the berserkers, brutal warriors that believed to be transformed into animals by rage, are most commonly associated with the cult of Odin from ninth century Norway onward.


  • Odin’s name derived from the Old Norse Mythology Odhr' which means Fury, ecstasy, inspiration, Woden is similarly derived from the related Indo-European word - the Saxon Wod.

Apart from thus showing why the Hunt is "Wild", and supporting ideas of ecstatic trance and spirit flight, this clue may lead us to a possible origin of the Wild Hunt. By donning animal skins or believing themselves transformed into animals by their rage Shapeshifting, Berserkers can easily be seen as the hounds of Odin’s Wild Hunt.


See Also


References

  • Eason, Cassandra A Complete Guide To Faeries & Magical Beings, Weiser, ISBN 1-578-63267-6
  • Mortensen, Karl A Handbook Of Norse Mythology, Dover, ISBN 0-486-43219-X

Links