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Grimm's TM - Supplement Chap. 4 Sup.
p.
75. ) The holy wood by Hagenau is named in Chmel reg. Ruperti 1071, D.
Sag. 497. fronwald, Weisth. 1, 423. On the word bannwald conf. Lanz. 731:
diu tier (beasts) bannen. Among holy groves was doubtless the Fridewald,
and perh. the Spiess, both in Hesse, Ztschr. f. Hess. gesch. 2, 163. Friðesleáh,
Kemble no. 187. 285; Ôswudu 1, 69 is a man's name, but must have been
that of a place first. The divine grove Glasir with golden foliage, Sn.
130, stands outside Valhöll; Sæm. 140b says Hiörvarð's abode was named
Glasis lundr. p. 75. ) The adoration
of the oak is proved by Velthem's Sp. hist. 4, 57 (ed. Le Long, fol. 287):
Van ere eyken, die men anebede. In
desen tiden was ganginge mede tusschen
Zichgen ende Diest ter stede rechte
bi-na te-midden werde, daer
dede menich ere bedeverde tot
ere eyken (dat si u cont), die
alse een cruse gewassen stont, met
twee rayen gaende ut, daer
menich quam overluut, die
daer-ane hinc scerpe ende staf, en
seide, dat hi genesen wer daer-af. Som
liepense onder den bôm, etc. p. 77. ) 'Deos nemora
incolere persuasum habent (Samogitae) .......... credebat deos intra arbores
et cortices latere' says Lasicz, Hpt's Ztschr. 1, 138. The Ostiaks have
holy woods, Klemm 3, 121. The Finnic 'Tharapita' should be Tharapila.
Castrén 215 thinks –pila is bild, but Renvall says tharapilla = horned
owl, Esth. torropil, Verhandl. 2, 92. Juslen 284 has pöllö bubo, and 373
tarhapöllö bubo. With this, and the ON. bird in Glasis lundr, conf. a
curious statement in Pliny 10, 47: in Hercynio Germaniae saltú invisitata
genera alitum accepimus, quarum plumae ignium modo colluceant noctibus;
conf. Stephan's Stoflief. 116. p. 78 n.) Oscilla are
usu. dolls, puppets, OHG. tocchun, Graff 5, 365. They might even be crutches
hung up on the holy tree by the healed (Suppl. to 75). But the prop. meaning
must be images. On church walls also were hung offerings, votive gifts,
rarities: si hiezen diu weppe hâhen in die kirchen an die mûre, Servat.
2890. p. 79. ) A Celtic grove
descr. in Lucan's Phars. 3, 399; a Norse temple in Eyrbyggja-s. c. 4. p. 80. ) Giefers (Erh.
u. Rosenkr. Ztschr. f. gesch. 8, 261-285) supposes that the templum Tanfanae
belonged at once to the Cherusci, Chatti and Marsi; that Tanfana may come
from tanfo, truncus (?), and be the name of a grove occupying the site
of Eresburg, now Ober-Marsberg; that one of its trunci, which had escaped
destruction by the Romans (solo aequare he makes burning of the grove),
was the Irmensul, which stood on the Osning between Castrum Eresburg and
the Carls-schanze on the Brunsberg, some 4 or 5 leagues from Marsberg,
and a few leagues from the Buller-born by Altenbeke, the spring that rose
by miracle, D. Sag. 118. p. 80. ) To the isarno-dori
in the Jura corresp. Trajan's Iron Gate, Turk. Demir kapa, in a pass of
Dacia. Another Temir kapa in Cilicia, Koch Anabas. 32. Müller lex. Sal.
p. 36. Clausura is a narrow pass, like Qermopulai,
or pulai alone;
conf. Schott's Deutschen in Piemont p. 229. p. 85. ) As castrum was
used for templum, so is the Boh. kostel, Pol. kosciel for church. Conversely,
templum seems at times to mean palatium; conf. 'exustem est palatium in
Thornburg' with 'exustum est famosum templum in Thornburg,' Pertz. 5,
62-3, also 'Thornburg castellum et palatium Ottonis' 5, 755. The OS. rakud
is both templum and palatium. Beside 'casulae' = fana, we hear of a cella
antefana (ante fana?), Mone Anz. 6, 228. p. 85.) Veniens (Chrocus
Alamann. rex) Arvernos, delubrum illud quod Gallica lingua vassogalate
vocant, diruit atque subvertit; miro enim opere factum fuit, Greg. Tur.
1, 32. The statement is important, as proving a difference of religion
between Celts and Germans: Chrocus would not destroy a building sacred
to his own religion. Or was it, so early as that, a christian temple?
conf. cap. 39. p. 85. ) Expressions for
a built temple: 'hof âtti hann î tûninu, sêr þess enn merki, þat er nu
kallat tröllaskeið' Laxd. 66. sal, Graff sub v.; der sal, Diemer 326,
7. AS. reced, OS. rakud, seems conn. with racha, usu. = res, caussa, but
'zimborôn thia racha,' O. iv. 19, 38; conf. wih and wiht. Later words:
pluoz-hûs, blôz-hûs, Graff 4, 1053. abgot-hûs fanum 1054. The Lausitz
Mag. 7, 166 derives chirihhâ, AS. cyrice, from circus. O. Sl. tzerky,
Dobr. 178; Croat. czirkva, Carniol. zirkva, Serv. tzrkva, O. Boh. cjerkew,
Pol. cerkiew (conf. Gramm. 3, 156. Pref. to Schultze xi. Graff 4, 481).
The sanctuary, ON. griðastaðr, is not to be trodden, Fornm. sög. 4, 186;
beasts nor man might there be harmed, no intercourse should men with women
have (engi viðskipti skyldu karlar við konur ega þar, Fornald. sög. 2,
63.) p. 86. ) Heathen places
of worship, even after the conversion, were still royal manors or sees
and other benefices endowed with the estate of the old temple, like Herbede
on the Ruhr, which belonged to Kaufungen, D. Sag. 589. Mannh. Ztschr.
3, 147. Many manors (also glebe-lands acc. to the Weisthümer) had to maintain
'eisernes vieh, fasel-vieh,' bulls for breeding (p. 93). In Christian
as in heathen times, holy places were revealed by signs and wonders. A
red-hot harrow is let down from heaven (Sommer), like the burning plough
in the Scyth. tale (Herod. 4, 5), D. Sag. 58-9. Legends about the building
of churches often have the incident, that, on the destined spot in the
wood, lights were seen at night, so arranged as to show the ground plan
of the future edifice. They appear to a subulcus in the story of Gandersheim,
Pertz 6, 309-10; to another, Frickio by name, in the story of Freckenhorst,
where St. Peter as carpenter designs the figure of the holy house, Dorow.
i. 1, 32-3; conf. the story at p. 54 and that of Wessobrunn, MB. 7, 372.
Falling snow indicates the spot, Müllenh. 113; conf. Hille-snee, Holda's
snow, p. 268 n. 304. Where the falcon stoops, a convent is built, Wigand's
Corv. güterb. 105. The spot is suggested by cows in a Swed. story, Wieselgren
408; by resting animals in a beautiful AS. one, Kemble no. 581 (yr 974). p. 87. ) On almost all
our German mountains are to be seen footmarks of gods and heroes, indicating
places of ancient worship, e.g. of Brunhild on the Taunus, of Gibich and
Dietrich on the Hartz. The Allerhätenberg in Hesse, the 'grandfather-hills'
elsewhere, are worth noting. << Previous Page Next Page >>
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