Thursday, May 18, 2017

Harlequin

I don't know if I can tell you how I felt when I found this.  I was awestruck.  It gave me shivers.

I found a plant named for Harlequin.  It's an agave that grows in Mexico, and it was used for making rope like sisal.  But this plant also gives juice that can be used to make an alcohol similar to tequila.

So, the name of this plant is Agave fourcroydes.  It's name is Henequen in Spanish.  I found it when I was looking for information about the book, The Teachings of Don Juan, A Yaqui Way of Knowledge by Carlos Castenada.  My guess is that if I want to discover something about medieval shamanism,  then I need to read this book.

I don't know why I am doing this.  Is it because my mother wanted to be a priest?  Is it because I grew up in the feminist 1970's?  Maybe it's pure curiosity.  But I think it's something more personal than just curiosity, because I did not quit when I found parts of this pagan research turning away from ideals that are very important to me.  My religion is environmentalism.  And the pagans, with their love of fertility, make no sense to me in an age of 7 billions humans on the planet.  I am looking for a religion that tells us that we are not the pinnacle of evolution.  I want a story that tells us how to live in balance with nature.

The exciting stuff is on the Wikipedia page about Sotol, an agave alcohol that Native Americans may have been making for about 9000 years.  I think that the Spanish named an agave plant Henequin because they recognized how similar it was to their folklore of Harlequin.  Agave plants provide tools for hunting and fire making, and many other useful things.  I read with goosebumps about the murals found on the rock walls of the Fate Bell Shelter.

Thursday, May 11, 2017

What dragons symbolized in medieval Europe?

I'm building a new explanation for medieval dragons.  No idea if this is correct - I think dragons are really the drugs used in shamanism.

Poppy, dandelion, chicory, and wild lettuce: they all yield drugs like opium from the alkaloids in their latex.  I suspect that there were ancient peoples in Europe who knew plants as well as some rainforest shamen do now.

The difficult part will be figuring out what other plants might have combined with the latex bearing plants.

In another post, I'll make a list of clues to support my crazy assertion that dragons = drugs...

[This page is a stub.  More evidence is needed.]


...

Sunday, May 7, 2017

Dandelion Opium 2

I'm still trying to find evidence to tie the dandelion to the Taraskon - dragon of Provence and northern Spain.  I could be wrong, but I don't think so at this moment.

The scientific name of dandelion is Taraxacum officinale.  I gather that Latin name translates to Bitter Herb of the apothecary (officinales = of the pharmacy/apothecary.)  Also, the most ancient herbals, for example Avincenna's herbal, say that the dandelion is similar to chicory, used for insomnia.  That suggests a sedative to me...  Maybe, but I can't find any books that list dandelion used like opium.

But I did find a chemical analysis of the dandelion which listed the two chemicals found in wild lettuce.  We have trip reports from people who experimented with wild lettuce, ok so,  dandelion has 2 chemicals that might make a person stoned.  It seems that doctors used wild lettuce (in the 1800's?) when they could not get opium.

Some guy wrote that the Tarascon dragon is linked to a city named Taragon in Spain.  It was in French Wikipedia.  I'm keeping careful notes, which I can upload later if I find something worthwhile.  I searched a whole lot but found nothing directly connecting the dragon to the dandelion.  So, then I looked up the kitchen herb, tarragon, just in case I had the wrong plant or something. Trying to keep an open mind even if I'm wrong.

Looking at the list of chemicals found in tarragon, I'm impressed.  What if we gathered some dandelion latex and put it together with some essential oil of tarragon?  This combination reminds me of absinthe.  I remember reading that some crazy guys managed to make an ayahuasca (drug mixture) from 3 local plants in Italy.  Wondering what herbalism was known in ancient times?  They would have had access to plants that have gone extinct.  How did they ever learn which plants were safe to eat and which are poison?

...

Friday, April 21, 2017

Dandelion & Sir Gawain ?

Ok, ok, I have no evidence.  But just suppose that I'm correct:  that the Taraskon is a dragon who represents the dandelion as a terribly strong drug plant.

Yesterday I had maybe 2 tiny bits of evidence.  1).  The scientific name of the dandelion sounds the same as the name of this dragon, Taraxacum.  And 2).  There is an old name for dandelion listed as "Witch's Gowan" - it suggests a possible drug plant.

First thing that I thought of when I noticed that the dandelion is called the witch's gowan:  what is a gowan? And then, could that be the same word as Gawain?  Well, gowan seems to mean daisy or flower.  And, yes, Gawain seems to be the same word.  I'm not certain yet.

Ok, so if I'm correct then I have a new understanding of the story of Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. This is a work in progress so I might be wrong.  I think Sir Gawain and the Green Knight is about the dandelion as a source of drugs for shamanism.

It would be really exciting if it's true.  I have to do some more research.

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Dandelion Opium

What if dandelions are like opium?  Dandelion means Lion's Tooth --> lion's bite, what if dandelion latex can rip you apart just like poppies?

What puts you back together again if you were mad enough to poison yourself with dandelion?  Maybe you wait until the poison clears out of your system naturally?  Could a shaman of the ancient world use this plant to try to see the future?  Imagine if this dandelion opium was so powerful that only young people could survive it.  Eventually there could develope the tradition of a young woman leading a terribly dangerous plant spirit into town during a spring fertility ritual.  Everyone must have been praying for a good year and plentiful food...

So, I think that the Taraskon dragon is actually the spirit of the dandelion.  It would be lovely if I'm correct.  I'd like to say, "This changes everything."  Quite vain of me - sorry.

...

Thursday, April 13, 2017

Cucafera

I forget how I found this one.  I must get my technology sorted - I need to track back and see how I found stuff.  Well, I found a new kind of dragon.  I'll ask my friend if he's ever heard of this one.  If it's new to my dragon expert, I'm going to feel so smug!

Cucafera - a fantastic beast from the parade on the Holy Days in Tarragona, Spain.  Cucafera is a much loved fat dragon who coughs up candies for children in the parade.  In this next link, in French, I learned that Catalan speaking children play a game just like "Simon says...". Except in their game, it's the dragon, Cucafera says...

https://seuils.hypotheses.org/tag/cucafera   a blog in French about translation and paratranslation
This page mentions two other cities where the cucafera visits:  Tortosa and Morella, Catalan, Spain.

It may not make sense now, but all my recent blog posts are going in one direction.  I'm researching fertility beliefs in European art and history.  I'm reading again my favorite book, The Dancing Goddesses by Elizabeth Wayland Barber.  I hope to discover something, or add to her work.  Sometimes it's easy - there's tons of evidence just everywhere.  Then there's puzzles that I can't figure out - maddening, because I can see people who know the answers online but I can't talk to them (mostly for lack of a good translator.)

Cucafera is similar to the Taraskon - I wonder if they are the same thing?  I was fascinated to find (somewhere in Wikipedia) that the ancient Romans named a large region of Spain after the Taraskon. If you want details, write me a message.  I kept finding lovely examples of pre-Christian fertility beliefs.  I have no idea what to do with all this history.  I have enough for several more of these messy blog posts.  I have the impression that no one reads this.  I'm keeping careful notes because it may clarify art history, and change the history of women.  It's a dectective work for me, plus I feel great, exhilarated by it all.

Next I'll write a bit about islands.  I was looking for some way to tie Saint Marina into the story.  I found some ancient history relating to the islands of St. Marguerit and St Honorat near Cannes, France.

Monday, April 3, 2017

Capo di Ponte, Alps, Italy

Found  this while looking for something else - a church in Italy that seems to blend pagan and Christian traditions.  I'm fascinated because maybe there's a hint as to the names of the two creatures on each side in the Goddess Embroideries.  Who are Saints Faustina and Liberada?

http://www.rockartscandinavia.com/images/articles/santea10.pdf  link to see the church of Saint Faustina and Saint Liberada, located at Capo di Ponte, BS, Lombardy, Italy.

I had a hunch that Baba Marta might have something to do with water.  I was hoping to find a new meaning to the song, The Waters of March.  I guess maybe I was just wrong about that.

What if there were another name for Capo di Ponte?  Capo di Ponte is "Head of the Bridge" in English.  I'm no good at Italian, but I thought up a homonym, Cavo di Putti, "Cave of Cherubs."  I just made that up, ok.  But it should be named that.  They have caves.  I like to imagine that women went there in the Middle Ages to pray for safety in pregnancy.

In this blog, I'll try to be clear about which are facts, and which are not.

Along the way, I read about Saint Wilgefortis, the strange bearded lady of the 14th century in Germany.  It's entertaining.  The best part - she was called, Sante Debarrasse, which is Holy Riddance in French.  I'm not sure if it will work but I could pray for help getting rid of my mess.  It seems she helped people get rid of abusive men in medieval times.  I don't need that, but maybe I need a little help cleaning my basement...


...