File <bronze7.htm> ARCHEOLOGY>
Loki The Crafty
One of Woden's sons was the crafty
Loki of Viking tradition. He may well
have been venerated more highly in Woden-lithi's time, not as a crafty
ill-natured character, but as a skillful craftsman, for in the early Bronze
Age technical skills would be rare and highly valued. About 10 feet north of the main sun figure
at Peterborough there is an illustration of a galloping animal, and beneath
it an ithyphallic Fig. (Fig.
104 ), with the following text engraved: M-GN L-M-S L-K
L-A W-N W-V-GH
W-D-N (magna
lumis Loki lae wan Vighhya Slehefnir Wodena) "By sorcery, cunning and venom Loki won
the steed Sleipnir for Woden."
The word Slehefnir is
assumed to be the damaged section that lies beneath, to the right. Loki was credited by the Vikings with
having powers of persuasion that the skillful dwarves of the Mid-Earth could
not resist. Whenever Odin needed
something from the dwarves's factories, Loki was always sent to wheedle it
out of them. Similarly, when Thunor,
the thunder god, required a weapon to defend the Aesir, it was Loki who was
sent for, and who found means of providing it. King Woden-lithi's text states that a dwarf manufactured the
magic hammer named Mjolnir for Loki to give to Thunor. This inscription is given as [Fig. 119]. Loki, despite his malevolence, was a
skillful craftsman himself, and seems in this aspect to represent the
blacksmith god of the Greeks (Hephaistos) and the Romans (Vulcan). The Ancient Irish (noted as Celtic)
equivalent of the latter two deities was Goibhnui and he, like the
Graeco-Roman craftsman god, was lame.
If, therefore, we equate Loki with Goibhnui (Fig. 105), despite their
apparent differences in temperament, we should perhaps include here the
activities preside over by Goibhnui in his new roles in America. For, as the Ancient Irish settlers moved westward, they encountered
the Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep, and began
to harvest its wool by means of annual roundups. Goibhnui now became the presiding genius over the craft of
forming. Once the wool was shorn, it
passed under the aegis of the mother goddess. At suitable locations in the mountainous
areas of the Far West the ancient migrants from Ireland hunted the bighorn
and the antelope. In Nevada, however,
and also in British Columbia, there was an annual round up by shepherds, on
foot. The pictographs show them
carrying shepherds' crooks (Fig. 106a). it is probable that the long drystone
walls noted by Professors Robert F. Heizer and martin A. Baumhoff (1962) were
to facilitate driving the wild sheep into a confined area, where they were
shorn of wool. The various
pictographs (Figs.106a, 106b, 107, 108, 109 & 110), some of them
rebus ogam, depict sheep, and also other animals. The spinning of yarn and various parts of the vertical loom and
its associated tools (shed battens, loom-comb [replacing a reed], and frame)
are shown in pictographs given in ...[Figs. 158, 159, 160, 161, 163, 164, 165 & 166]. The methods appear to be the same as those
used by the present-day Navaho. In
Nevada Professor Fell was told of persistent legends that the region was formerly
in the possession of now-vanished people called
"sheep-eaters." The
technical farmer's words appearing on some of the inscriptions are in some
cases of Norsemen origin. This fact,
taken with the mixed Irish--Norsemen features of some of the mythological
inscriptions and the occasional use of Norse runes, can only mean that a contact occurred between the
Ancient Irish migrants of the Milk River (and also of Wyoming) and Norsemen
visitors or settlers. Tsiw
Mighty-in-Battle
In Anglo-Saxon and Norsemen
mythology, Tiw is
the son of Woden (Odin) and therefore a member of the
superior sky gods, though subservient to Woden. Two striking differences are evident in the mythology of King
Woden-lithi, which antedates the historical era from which Anglo-Saxon and
Norsemen mythology derives. First, the name of Tiw is rendered in
the ancient Germany manner, with an initial ts-sound (z of Old High
German), and so, like Thunor, Tsiw reminds us of the southern Teutons rather
than the Norsemen. Second, his image is by far the largest of the gods' after
the sun god and the moon goddess. He
is also shown as the tutelary deity of ships. The ship depicted beside his main image is not a warship,
however, but a trading vessel, with a deep capacious hull for cargo and
without the banks of oars of a naval ship.
it may well be Woden-lithi's own ship. By tradition Tiw was the god of
battle, and he presumably had that department of human aggression under his
charge in Woden-lithi's day also. His
major image lies some 30 feet west of the main sun figure at the Peterborough
site (Fig. 111). He is shown as a stoutly built man,
standing on the initial letter TS
of his own name, his right hand held aloft, his left arm with the hand
severed, the stump dripping blood. To
his upper left stand the letters of his title L-M-Y-TH, "maimed"
(Old Norse lamidhr). Beside him to his right lies the giant
wolf Wenri (Fenrir of Norsemen
mythology). According to Snorri, who
wrote in the twelfth century, Fenrir was one of the evil progeny of
Loki. He became a menace to the gods,
and Odin ordered him to be haltered.
Only Tiw was willing to attempt the task, and to achieve it he had to
pacify the wolf by placing his hand in its mouth, as an earnest [gesture]
that the halter would not in reality restrict him. When the truth appeared otherwise, Fenrir bit off Tiw's
arm. Obviously this myth was already
established in the early Bronze Age, since it is so clearly depicted here. According to philologists, Tiw is the same god as the Greek
Zeus. The Old High German name
Tsiwaz, like the name by which Woden-lithi knew him, resembles Zeus. His tasks included that of holding up the
sky. This he is shown doing in an
unlabeled premaiming situation in a petroglyph (Fig. 113) located 6 feet
west of the main sun figure [at Peterborough, Ontario]. In his role as a war god Tsiw has as
one of his symbols a battle-ax. In
Fell’s book Saga America he recorded
two iron battle-axes that had been discovered in America, though they seem to
be of Viking origin. One was found at
Cold Harbour, Nova Scotia, and the other (Fig.
114) at Rocky Neck,
on the Massachusetts coast. They were
formerly owned by William Goodwin, who first protected Mystery Hill, and they
are now in the Goodwin Collection in the
Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Connecticut. At the time when Fell prepared the
text for Saga America (1980) he had
not realized that the Tifinag alphabet is of Norse origin, and
consequently he was baffled by what appeared to be Norsemen axes engraved, as
these two are, with Tifinag letters.
Not expecting the alphabet to render Norse language, he
could find no Libyan match for the words the letters seemed to spell, and was
forced to record them in the book with the comment.... "The markings are
letters of the Tifinag alphabet of Libya, although the axes appear to be
Viking." Now that we can expect Norse language written
in the Tifinag alphabet, the decipherment is clear, and we can be sure that
the ax is indeed bears Norse writing. The
inscription shows that axes of this type were awarded as marks of honor by
Norsemen kings, and that even though they are products of the Iron Age, they
retain the ancient Tifinag as a persistent tradition from ancient times, as
do many royal gifts given in modern times.
The inscription may be transcribed as L-A-N S-M E-K-M
M-M S-M E-L, to be understood as Lae
sami ekjurn emum, sami eli, "Royal award for the honor of battle widows, and for the honor of
old age." That two such awards
have been discovered in North America and none apparently in the Scandinavian
countries themselves seems surprising. Woden-lithi associates Tsiw with
ships, as his dedicatory inscription shows, and this must indicate that at
the epoch when Woden-lithi lived, the god was regarded as a tutelary deity
for sailors. Since the king was himself
a sailor, it is natural for him to have given such prominence to his patron,
greater than that which he accorded to Woden or any of the other gods, save
only the sun god. No other references
have been found to Tsiw on American rocks, not indeed to find which god was
regarded as in charge of fishing. For
want of information on the subject, included here are some of the
inscriptions that relate to ships and to fisheries (Figs. 115, 116 & 117). Most of these are demonstrably Ancient
Irish in origin, some are unidentified, and merely depict ships of the Bronze
Age type. The illustrations have detailed
captions. However, it should be
explained that Ancient Irish custom, still to be found in Ireland within
living memory, required that the local chief of any community be granted a
tax comprising one tenth part of all catches of fish. The tithe was used by the chief for the
support, not only of his own family, but also of indigent females or widows
and fatherless children. (The
American gypsies, at least in the Northeast, still maintain a similar custom,
or did so up to [1972]... when Fell was collecting linguistic material from
the Boston gypsies.) The inscriptions that illustrate
these fishing practices come from the Tule Lake region, on the border
of Oregon and California. Although no
fishing is now carried out there, the local Indians and museum authorities
confirm that very great runs of fish used to occur in former times, and that
they were indeed caught in nets, as the inscriptions state. it is also of great interest that the unit
of measurement of fish by tally is called the M-S, to be read as Old Irish maois, the meaning of which is given in Patrick S. Dinneen's
Irish-English, English-Irish dictionary (2nd ed., Dublin, 1927, p. 709) as
"a hamper of 500 fishes." The lettering on the texts gives the
remaining details. These texts are
traced from photographs made at Tule Lake by Wayne and Betty Struble, who
detected the ogam and brought the site to Fell’s attention. Thunor The Thunderer
Third of the sons of Woden, and
fourth of the Aesir gods, we may note Thunor
(Thor of the Norsemen).
The form of his name suggests a north German rather than Scandinavian
affinity for Woden-lithi's tongue. Thunor was the name by which he was
known to the Anglo-Saxons, before the Vikings came to England. He is accorded much space on Woden-lithi's
rock platform [Peterborough, Ontario, Canada], and seems to have been one of the
major objects of veneration. About 24
feet south-southwest of the main sun figure.
He is depicted (Fig. 119) with his sword and hammer, but no text. He wears a high-peaked conical
helmet. Some 20 feet west of the main
sun figure his famous hammer is depicted, together with his personal name, M-O-L-N-R (Mjolnir). In the Bronze Age all famous weapons had
personal names, on the model of Siegfried's sword, Volsung. Images of the short-handled hammer,
usually not labeled, are seen all over the site. About 11 feet southeast of the main sun figure Thunor himself
is depicted (Fig. 120), helmetless, arms akimbo, his hammer beside him to the
right, and its name, M-L-N-R,
inscribed to the left. In a corrupt
spelling M-N-R the hammer appears
about 45 feet to the south-southeast of the main sun figure, beside a pair of
serpents, and to the right Thunor stands, demonstrating his mighty glove, one
of the sources of his power. As
conqueror of the sea giant Ymir (Himir of the Norsemen), he may have been
accorded special veneration by Woden-lithi's
mariners. He is shown with his high conical
helmet and his hammer also in a petroglyph composition (Fig.
123) centered at
about 15 feet northeast of the main sun figure. This shows Thunor at the outset of the final battle of the gods
against the forces of the underworld.
The giant serpent-dragon of Middle Earth lies to the right, coiling
its body, with a text composed of the dot-letters of the alphabet along its
length. The text that accompanies
this composition appears to be a continuation of the text given in Fig. 119, where a dwarf
is recorded to have made Molnir for Thunor.
This section reads: N-M TH-W-N-R M-L-N-R
H-K R-M L-K-K
L-W-K L H-W which may be
interpreted as Nema Thunor molni haka Orma likkja luk la hawa, "Thunor takes up Molni to strike at the
Serpent, its body lying coiled in the sea." (In Fig.
123 only the god and
his hammer, and the first three words of the text are shown.) The dragon defeated Thunor in the end,
leading to the ascent to Walhol, as recorded later in this section. As we have already seen, the ogam alphabet
that for so long has been supposed to be an exclusively Ancient Irish script
was in fact well known in Norsemen countries as early as the Bronze Age. This fact accounts for the otherwise
untranslatable ogam inscriptions that occur in the Western Plains and as far
west at the valley of the Milk River in Alberta, Canada. Here occur many petroglyphs cut in
soft bedrock; they are obviously not more than a few centuries old at
most. One such is shown in Fig. 124, where a
supernatural figure is depicted holding aloft what appears to be a rake. Indeed, the archaeologists who have
recorded these and similar inscriptions say just that. Now it so happens that the Ogam Tract written by the mediaeval
Irish monks describes a special kind of ogam called by them ogam
reic: literally "rake
ogam." It is not known in
Ireland as occurring in petroglyphs, nor indeed anywhere save in the
manuscripts written by the monks.
Thus the American petroglyphs are the first examples to be recognized
as archaeological artifacts. When Fell was first confronted with
these examples he naturally expected the language contained in the ogam
script to be people of ancient Ireland and related to Irish Gaelic. But the decipherment proved baffling, as
no Ancient Irish words known to him matched the concatenation of consonants
present in the rakes and in the associated finger ogam (also mentioned in the
Irish texts). After the presence of Norse inscriptions
was made clear by the Peterborough [Ontario, Canada] texts, the solution of
the mysterious rake ogam of the Milk River petroglyphs became evident. The letters are indeed ogam, but the
language is Norse, allied to Old Norse. As can be seen from Fig. 124, the "rake" represents the hammer Mjolnir and the god depicted is Thunor, here rendered as ogam T-N-R. As god of war the deity may be
presumed to rule-over the art of using weapons, whether for battle or for
hunting. Fig. 125 is an example of
many similar petroglyphs, in this case written in Ancient Irish language,
where hunting scenes are portrayed.
it is from Site 77 near Canal Flats in British Columbia, discovered by
John Corner. This is modern work, for
the medium in which it is executed is paint, exposed to the atmosphere;
another piece of evidence pointing to the long memory of the
Amerindians. The artist was a member
of the Takhelne tribe, with a spoken tongue of partly Ancient Irish
derivation." Please also see
Figs. 121 &
122. Mabona and Freyr-- The
Phallic Gods
King Woden-lithi seems to have
devoted less space on his platform to the Wanir, gods of the earth, than to the
other deities. Under the inscribed
word W-R-Y-aR (Freyar) he has depicted a phallic
god ... [eleven] feet west of the main sun figure. Beside Freyr is an up-ended ship, one of his symbols by
Norsemen tradition, though the connection with male fertility is not
immediately obvious. The hull of a
ship is perhaps here regarded as a phallic symbol. The interesting interconnection
between Ancient Irish and Norsemen gods, already noted in Fig.
92, under Lug, is
again evident in a petroglyph at Coral Gardens, near
Moneta, Wyoming, photographed by Ted Sowers of the Wyoming Archaeological
Survey. The Ancient Irish god Mabona
is shown below his symbol, a giant phallus and beneath is written his name,
in younger runes. Again we have
evidence of a later contact between the ancient American migrants from
Ireland and Norsemen of the period of Leif Eriksson. Much more obvious attention is given to
the worship of the power of the phallus as a fertilizer not only of women but
of Mother Earth herself, in the shape of the great stone phallic monuments
that the Ancient Irish and Norsemen peoples erected in Europe and that their
American cousins placed at corresponding suitable sites in the New
World. That these are, in some cases
at least, Bronze Age monuments is evidenced by the presence of ogam and
consain script, making reference to ancient pagan divinities and
rituals. Figs. 129 , 130, 131, 132, 133, 134, 135, & 137 illustrate typical examples in both Europe
and America...." The inferred
fertility rituals are discussed in America
BC. [Please also see Figs. 126 & 127]. That Mabo was preferred by the youth of America to his
Norseman equivalent Freyar is made clear by the much larger number of
inscriptions dedicated to the former, and usually written in Ancient Irish
ogam of the type called fringe ogam (...Fig. 1). A telling piece of evidence is seen at
Woden-lithi's site (Fig. 128), where the male fertility god is named in ogam as
Mabo. And the reason for the
preference of young for the Ancient Irish god of youth is his three spheres
of activity-- sex, sports, and music-- all of primary interest to the youth
of every country. In this first aspect, that of god of
male sexuality, the numerous stone phalluses and menhirs, erect or fallen, in both Europe and North America,
bear silent witness. Figs. 129, 130 & 131, show three European examples in France and Spain, and
North American examples appear in Figs. 132, 133, 134 & 135. Most of the American phalluses have fallen
into a recumbent posture. Those on
Phallus Hill, South Woodstock, Vermont, have since been transferred to the
museum of Castleton State College in Vermont. In New England, groups of phallic
stones were erected on the summits of hills (Fig. 137). Whether these were used as calendar
determination sites is not yet established. In British Columbia and in the Nevada
and Californian deserts, there occur inscriptions in ogam, in a Ancient Irish
language, relating to matings and the marriage bond (Figs. 138 & 139). In addition to the worship of Mabo as
a fertility god, interest in the various games and athletic sports under the
protection of Mabo, and brought by ancient colonists from Europe is manifest
in various petroglyphs (Figs.140, 141, 142 & 143). What may be the Ancient Irish ball game of camanachd seems to be
depicted in some cases. Running and
hurling the caber are other athletic subjects, and we know from historic
contacts in the nineteenth century that the Takhelne tribe of British
Columbia practiced a sport much resembling the Scottish caber-tossing. An inscription at Cane Springs, in Clark
County, Nevada, recorded by Professors Robert Heizer and Martin Baumhof,
carries fringe ogam (Fig. 143) that implies
that the game depicted can scarcely be separated from baseball, the latter an
invention attributed to New York State in modern times." [Please also
see Figs. 141 & 142]. The third aspect that Mabo assumes,
as the Apollo of the Ancient Irish, is that of the god of music.
This is succinctly referred to in a Takhelne pictograph (Fig.
144) discovered by John Corner near Robson, in
British Columbia as his Site 65, where the god has the head of a lyre, while
his outstretched arms make the letter m,
and his erected phallus an ogam b,
thus spelling his name. The lyre-faced
god appears in various inscriptions in Nevada (Figs. 145, 146 & 147), with remarkable fringe ogam inscriptions incorporated
into the petroglyphs as rebus forms.
The captions to the figures give details. Designs evidently influenced by these compositions enter into
the art of the Navajo and Apache tribes,
who entered the western territories as late in wanderers from eastern Siberia
(their language still retains many recognizable Turkmenian roots). It seems likely that these late invaders
dispossessed the Pueblo peoples and acquired many of their art forms, so that
the Navajo and Apache today are regarded as the foremost exponents of
Amerindian culture in North America.
In the process they seem to have acquired the Mabo rebus and converted
it into a new but similar style, expressing a wholly different tribal
mythology from that of the Ancient Irish from whom these figures originated. Dancing to music, the dancers holding
stag's antlers, is an ancient Irish cultural feature, also reflected in the
North American petroglyphs (Fig. 148). Amerindian musicians
possessed many different though simple types of musical instruments. But the petroglyphs depict a wider range
than was found in recent times and, in addition to the lyre, we see various
representations of the Ancient Irish harp, both the
large and the smaller kinds. The
associated ogam lettering, in a Gaelic language, is illustrated in Figs. 149 & 150, and the
captions explain this. Competitive
performances on these instruments may have been judged by priests (druids),
ensconced in seats like the curious stone ones that occur in New England (see
Fig. 151). The conclusion we reach, then, is
that Norsemen and Irish colonists in ancient time, even as early as
Woden-lithi's epoch, came to North America and influence done another and the
Amerindian neighbors they encountered, producing a rich culture with varied
strands. The inability of the
Norsemen people to establish bronze industrial sites in America led to the
disappearance of the great trumpets, the lurs, but the various instruments manufactured from turtle
shell and wood, such as the lyre and the harp, were capable of manufacture
here, and so survived almost to modern times. [ Continue with <bronze8.htm> ] |