Co-editors: Seán Mac Mathúna John Heathcote
Consulting editor: Themistocles Hoetis
Field Correspondent: Allen Houglande-mail: thefantompowa@fantompowa.org
Diana
the Stag Goddess - Pictures The
Gaia Counterpart: The Green Man The
Green Man and the Green Woman The
Lodge of Herne: Herne the Hunter Resource
List A
Survey of the History of English Place
names Greenwood's
Map - List of Place Names STRAIGHT
WALKING by Paul Devereux At
the edge: Exploring new interpretations of past and place in
archaeology mythology and folklore The
Nemesis of the White Goddess London has many
Sacred
Sites. Some writers
have long believed that Greenwich and the surrounding area
contains many ancient sites such as the Maze at Maze Hill, a
possible stone circle at The Point, and the Gorsedd
or Great Seat on Blackheath Common. The area was closely
connected with the May Day festival, and it's likely that
Greenwich - "the green village" - derived it's name from it.
The area is also closely connected with the fertility rites
of the Horned God, Herne the Hunter, commonly known in this
area as the Green Man. The Isle of Dogs is said to have have
derived its name from Herne's dogs, who were known as the
dogs of the underworld, whose ghostly barks people claimed
were often heard at dawn or dusk through the mist. It is
likely that this island was closely connected with worship
of the stag goddess, Diana. Opposite the Isle of Dogs in
Rotherhithe is Cuckcolds Point, where from ancient times a
Horn Fair marched in honour of Herne the Hunter down to
Deptford and up over Blackheath Common to Charlton House,
reputed to built an an ancient Celtic site. Today, the Horn
Fair still happens every year in Charlton. Writing in Prehistoric
London in 1925, E O
Gordon said there was traditional evidence of two stone
circles and at least 4 mounds in London. Research by other
writers since then, has led to speculation that London had
at one point many Standing Stones and other places of
worship, which presumably were destroyed or had Churches
built on them from the time after the Saxon invasion of
Britain in the 4th century AD, and the subsequent Saxon
capture of the city in the 6th century AD. This is a summary
of the most commonly accepted sites: Built on the site of the
present St. Paul's cathedral, a lunar site traditionally
recognised as being ruled by the Moon Goddess and Goddess of
Hunting, Diana. Consequently it has also been closely
associated with the worship of the Stag and the Horned God.
According to legend, as recorded by in 1136, seventy years
after the Norman Conquest of England, a Welsh cleric named
Geoffrey of Monmouth completed a work in Latin which he
titled Historia Regum Britanniae, or History of the Kings of
Britain. This a detailed narrative which begins with the
Trojan diaspora which followed the fall of Troy. Geoffrey
said that King Brutus (who gave his name to Britain), was
guided by the goddess Diana to lead Britain's first
inhabitants to the island, arriving around 1100 BC. Thus, it
is worth speculating whether Brutus (Brwth) himself was
connected with the Pagan site which once stood on St. Paul's
Cathedral. The site is also connected with
the King Lud, who gave his name to the present day Ludgate
Circus and Ludgate Hill, on on which St. Paul's Cathedral
stands. Heli (Beli Mawr in the Welsh) in about the year 113
BC. Lud, the son of Heli (Beli Mawr), became King in 73 BC.
Lud rebuilt the city of London that King Brutus had founded
and had named New Troy, and renamed it Caerlud, the city of
Lud, after his own name. The name of the city was later
corrupted to Caerlundein, which the Romans took up as
Londinium, hence London. At his death, Lud was buried in an
entrance to the city that still bears his name, Ludgate. My
intuition tells me that Ludgate Hill was a scared site for
the Celts, probably because of it's connections with Brutus
and Lud. The destruction of the Pagan
temple at Ludgate Hill happened in 597 AD, when this sacred
site of the Celtic Britons had the first St. Paul's
Cathedral on Ludgate Hill - bulit by the Saxon King
Aethelbert of Kent. However, after Aethelbert and one of his
subordinate Kings Saeberht of Essex both died in 616 AD, the
people of London reverted back to Paganism, and leading
Christian clerics such as Mellitus where forced to flee the
city. It would be another fifty years before Christianity
once more took hold - meaning that London was a Pagan city
up until the 7th century AD. Apparently when the building of
the present St. Paul's cathedral began in 1675, architect
Sir Christopher Wren, discovered remains of the Stag Goddess
temple in the foundations of the previous Catherdral
destroyed by the Great Fire of London in 1666. Brihtsige's Stone, gave it's
name to Brixton, which is derived from Brixistane meaning
"at the Stone of Brihtsige" (The London Encyclopedia,
p 91). Further detail is provided in Brief
History of Brixton
by Alan Piper of the Brixton Society who gives the earliest
known reference to "Brixistane" as 1067, by when the name
attached to the north-eastern district or Hundred of the
County of Surrey - covering more or less the present London
Boroughs of Wandsworth, Lambeth and Southwark. The name
derives from "Brixi's stone", a pillar or stone erected by
Childe Brihtsige to mark the meeting place of the Hundred
court at the top of Brixton Hill, between its junctions with
what are now New Park Road and Morrish Road. The top of such
a hill was a typical for meeting places of the Celts - known
as a Gorsedd - and the Stone of Brihtsige was almost
definately - in my opinion - a continuation of
this. Maidenstone Hill, Greenwich,
the Stone of the Maiden. Gordon in Prehistoric London
also noted a number of locations with the name Maiden
Lane, which she said may have had a ceremonial role in
Celtic times. She argued that "Maiden" is a corruption of
the Sanskrit and Arabic term Maidan meaning "an open
place of public meeting" (The Aquarian Guide to London, p
116). The Stone of the Maidens is also the origin of
Maidstone in Kent, and the place name of
Maidenhead. The site of the the Maze at
Maze Hill Greenwich has
many geomantric and shamanistic sites, the original Maze
Hill, for example, was a almost certainly an initiation
centre, probably dating from pre-Christian times. Such sites
once existed all over the island of Britain. According to
Jack Gale writing in Other Meridians, Another
Greenwich, Morden College in Blackheath is believed to
have built a on maze "not unlike that on the slopes of
Glastonbury Tor". (1) One author E O Gordon described after
visiting the area, how the Maze is still visible in what
looks like a natural basin in which Morden College nestles.
She concluded that the physical features and the basins
contours indicated the site of the Maze: Another
possible site of a Maze was near The Point, on the edge of
Blackheath Common in a area once known as Troy Town.
According to Gale, this also may have been the site of
ancient maze. (Other Meridians, Another Greenwich,
Jack Gale, Adelphi, London, England, 1994, p 22). Now the site of the White Tower
in the Tower of London. This ancient and sacred site is said
to have been the burial site of Bran's Head. As Bran was the
crow god in Celtic mythology, the Raven's in the Tower are
all that remains of the worship of the sacred head of Bran.
It was thought that as long as Bran's Head was buried in the
White Hill facing France, Britain would always be safe from
invasion. However, in the 6th century AD, the Celtic
chieften Arthur Pendragon disinterred it claiming only he
would guarantee the safety this island. He removed Bran's
Head, and as had been predicted by Merlin, Celtic rule
started to collapse under Saxon invasion and was finally
wiped out in Cornwall and Wales by the 16th century. (The
White Goddess, Robert Graves). From a Welsh name signifying a
"High-place of worship". The ley line between here and the
White Hill in the Tower of London, is the Midsummer's day
azimuth - the line in which the Sun rise on Midsummer's
day. On the present site of a water
reservoir at the top of Pentonville, Kings Cross. This site
is connected with both Merlin and the worship of the sacred
head. On the ancient Isle of Thorns
or Thorney Island. This island was created where the River
Tyburn split (roughly on the site of the present Buckingham
Place) to form an island, on which stands today the Houses
of Parliament and Westminster Abbey. This site is
traditionally regarded as a Solar site, where in later times
before the Saxon conquest of Kent and London in the 6th
century AD, had been a place where the Druids made laws and
had a Tree College. It is no coincidence that this site was
of great significance to our Celtic forebears, and that
today it is the seat of the British government. The Thorney
Island was also a traditional, safe crossing point for
horses over the River Thames (hence "Horseferry" Road on the
old island today). Penny
Drayton writing in her article Toot
Hills says:
Tot Hill still stood in
Queen Elizabth I's time, as Nordon, the topographer of
Westminster, wrote 'Tootehill Street, lying in the west
part of the city, takes the name of a hill near it which
is called Toote Hill, in the great field near the
street.' Toot Hill is indeed shown on a 1746 map by
Rocques by a bend in Horseferry Road roughley where
Regency Palace now stands. The name survived in Tothill
Fields, the old tournament ground now part of of the
playing field for Westminster School in Vincent Square,
and Tothill Street, which aligns with the northern
transcept of Westminster Abbey. Alfred Watkins discovered
and described a pair of leys, one running down the middle
of Tothill Street, although his claims that the two
alignments crossed at Tot Hill does not match Rocques'
map, although there is no certainty that his cartography
was reliable. Jeff Saward has recorded
that there was a maze on Tot Hill, which was recorded as
restored in 1672 and traditionally a site for various
games of skill and agility, and a so-called Troy Game
(played every Sunday in Lent by knights on horseback) may
be first recorded in the sixth century. Sir Thomas Mallory, in
the fifteenth century, has Queen Guenevere inviting the
Knights of the Round Table to ride out early one morning
in May into the woods and fields beside Westminster. Such
specualtion about earlier activities here was kept alive
throughout the nineteenth and early twentieth century by
persistent specualtion of Tot Hill being a Druidic site,
although the origins of this fable have been lost in the
proverbial mists. Blackheath Common, now known
today as Whitefields Mount. It was here in 1381 that Wat
Tyler and his rebels gathered. Opposite Kennington Park. This
ancient site - where people had the right of public assembly
- is today a water fountain. In more recent times it was the
site of Chartist meetings and the starting point for Poll
Tax and Liverpool dockers demonstrations in more recent
times. Merlin's Caves, commonly known
as Chislehurst Caves. It has 9 druid alters and the site is
thought to be more than 8000 years old. According to The
Women's Encylopaedia of Myths and Secrets by B G Walker
(p 651), these caves were the most likely site of Merlin's
secret cave (On the Trial of Merlin: A Guidebook to the
Western Mystery Tradition. Deike Rich and Ean Begg, The
Aquarian Press, London, England, 1991). Merlin's Cave, underneath the
Penton and near a pub by the same name. This site, underneath
Blackheath Common, it contains an effigy of the Horned
God. Camberwell, South London. The
old word "Cam" means "cripple" (Cripple's Well's) in Welsh
indicating that the well had healing propetries, and
confirms that the site was sacred to the pre-Saxon Celtic
population of London. Alternatively, the Well could be named
after Camber (Camber's Well), on of the three sons of the
legendary first King of the Briton's - Brutus, who first
established the city of London in the 12th century BC. The
area has other connections with the early Britons in the
name Walworth, which means "enclosure of the Britons",
according to A. D. Mills in his Oxford Dictionary of
English Place Names (Oxford University Press, Oxford,
UK, 1998); Ladywell, South London. In
1986, Robert Smith published The Well of Our Lady
(The Ladywell Village Society, London, England, January
1986). In it, he shows how the sacred well was recorded as
early in local records as early as 1472. Smith notes that
there has been a Christian Church near the site for over a
1000 years, and that in the past, the well was dedicated to
St.Mary, and was visited by pilgrims on there way to
Canterbury. The dedication to St. Mary also fits in with the
many other examples of Christianity taking over Pagan sites
in this way. Sadly, the well is now covered by the road over
the bridge by the entrance to Ladywell station. Wells Park, South London, the
site of seven wells, of which one still exists on the site
of the demolished propetry of 26 Longton Avenue; Brideswell, Central London,
near St. Brides Church, Fleet Street, London. Clerkenwell, London; Chad's Well, Central
London
Picture by Dave SomersetStone Circles/Standing
Stones
The Temple of the Stag
Goddess, Diana, Central London
Brihtsige's Stone,
Brixton
The Stone of the Maidens,
Greenwich
The Maze at Maze
Hill
"Not
far from the entrance of Morden College, successive
ridges and depressions, faintly discernible, represent
the remains of a labyrinth pathway. An old survey of
the Manor of Greenwich shows that the familiar
thoroughfare of Maze Hill, led direct to the
maze".(1)
Mounds
The Bryn Gwyn, the White Hill,
Tower of London
The Llandin, Parliament
Hill
The Penton,
Islington
The Tothill,
Westminster
Arguably the most
auspicious toot hill is the one at Westminster, London.
Westminster Abbey and the Houses of Parliament are the
most-recent of a succession of palaces and churches which
date back to the post-Roman period. Indeed, the first
church here, dating to the seventh century, may have
taken advantage of the copious remains of Roman
buildings. The locality was known for many centuries as
Thorney Island, being an area of relatively solid ground
amid the marshes bordering the Thames. Additionally,
there was an artifical mound, known as Tot Hill.
Wat Tylers Mound,
Blackheath
Kennington Mound,
Oval
Sacred Caves
Merlin's Caves, Chislehurst,
Kent
Merlin's Cave, The Penton,
Islington, London
Jack Cades Cavern
Sacred Wells
Camberwell, London
Ladywell, London
Wells Park, London
Brideswell, Central
London
Clerkenwell
Chad's Well, Central
London