Chalice of the First SacramentPeredur and the Cult of the Severed Head- Roger Sherman Loomis, The Grail, From Celtic Myth to Christian Symbol The hero of the quest, Peredur, becomes the guest of a nobleman in a large castle. After Peredur severs a huge iron column with a sword (both of which are magically restored two out of three times), the nobleman reveals that he is Peredur's uncle.
The head, which replaced the grail in Chrétien's account, belonged to a cousin of Peredur's, as he later learns. The cousin was "killed by the sorceresses of Gloucester, who also lamed thine uncle". Peredur then fulfills a prophesy, kills the sorceresses and avenges his cousin.
Transplanted from his pagan Irish origin, Brân " has become King of the island of Britain, crowned in London and has acquired the Christian epithet bendigeid, 'Blessed'....He led an expedition to a foreign land and was victorious. Nevertheless, he was wounded in the foot with a poisoned javelin, and, though no causal nexus is mentioned, the islands of Ireland and Britain were rendered desolate. Brân commanded his followers to cut off his head and to travel with it, first to Harlech and then to the island of Grassholm. Obeying his commands, they spent seven years at Harlech, regaling themselves with meat and drink. Then, setting out for Grassholm, they found there a fair royal place, a great hall, overlooking the sea. That night they spent there without stint, and we may infer that they continued to feast, as they had at Harlech, for eighty years, in the company of the uncorrupted head of Brân. This was called the Hospitality of the Wondrous Head."
"Amongst the Celts the human head was venerated above all else, since the head was to the Celt the soul, center of the emotions as well as of life itself, a symbol of divinity and of the powers of the other-world."
In the cult of the severed head the ancient Celts believed "that the heads of vanquished adversaries should therefore be severed and preserved."
"In Britain human skulls were found in the fortifications at Bredon Hill and at Stanwick, and their position suggests that they had either been attached to poles beside the gateway or nailed onto the structure of the gate itself. Heads feature a great deal on native Celtic coins, being treated with typical Celtic fantasy, having distorted or non-natural features, huge eyes, and wild hair, and often showing tattooing on the cheeks and bearing, or being associated with, cult symbols such as the boar. Sometimes smaller heads are chained to a larger central head; some have horns, others are janiform (two-faced) or in triplicate."
The severed head "figures perhaps most prominently in the myth of Brân the Blessed, whose head, according to tradition, was buried as a protective talisman outside London [White Hill], face turned towards France. Not only did it protect the city from attack. It also ensured the fertility of the surrounding countryside and warded off plague from England as a whole."
"All the evidence for Celtic religion emphasizes the fundamental importance of the human head to early Celtic society. It was a prized trophy in battle; but much more than this it was a potent symbol of the total religious attitudes of the Celtic peoples. The head stood for divinity. It was the supreme conveyer of hospitality, the distributor of the divine feast. It had powers of prophecy, healing, fertility, speech, independent movement and incorruptible life. If was regarded as the essence of being, the seat of the soul, the symbol of evil-averting divine power. Its meaning for the early Celtic peoples is clear throughout their history - it can truly be said to contain the essence of their religious philosophy and to be the most distinctive and powerful of all their cults."
The Grail Knights and the Fairy Fortress- J.J. Collins, "Sangraal, The Mystery of the Holy Grail" The damsels go into another chapel, then reappear. Sir Gawain "seems to behold three angels where before he had beheld but two, and he seems to behold in the midst of the Grail the form of a child." On the third pass Sir Gawain "looks up, and it seems to him that the Grail is wholly in the air. He looks and there appears aloft a man nailed to a cross, and the spear was fixed in his side."
"...This continental romance reflects with extraordinary clearness archaic Welsh traditions which can hardly be detected at all in any other Grail text." Such traditions are obvious when Perceval sails across the sea to the isle of the ageless elders.
Once an island in a marsh sea, Glastonbury Tor, a conspicuous hill in Somerset, England, was reputedly the site of Caer Siddi, the Celtic Fairy Fortress.
At the castle is a great hall filled with riches - cloths of silk, a depiction of the Savior, tables of gold and ivory and folk "full of great joy and seemed to be of great holiness." Thirty three men in white garments with red crosses on their breasts washed at a rich golden laver before sitting down to feast.
Compare with the account in the following archaic poem:
One of the masters inquires about the Holy Grail and Perceval verifies that it is in the Fisher King's chapel. (In this account Perceval conquers the Grail Castle after his uncle dies.)
Joseph of ArimatheaThe Host, the 'Body of Christ', was now shown openly and lost all the mystery which had previously surrounded it. The result was that the mystique, the secrecy, was transferred to another object: to the Grail. A description such as that which Robert de Boron [below] gave of the Grail filled the gap exactly, even though, from the church's point of view, the Grail was in no way an object worthy of sanctity or veneration." - Johannes and Peter Fiebag, The Discovery of the Grail, translated from the German by George Sassoon
"There was...a legend of Joseph of Arimathea centuries before he was associated with the Grail. It started with historic fact, vouched for by the four gospels, namely, that after Christ died on the cross, a rich disciple of Arimathea named Joseph begged the holy body from Pilate, wrapped it in a linen cloth, and placed it in a new tomb. St. John's gospel adds that Nicodemus brought spices for the burial, and that is all we learn from the Scriptures.
"But in the large body of New Testament apocrypha which grew up one of the most widely know was the Evangelium Nicodemi. Here we read that during the trail of Christ before Pilate, Nicodemus, a ruler of the Jews, testified in His favor infuriated the accusers. After Joseph had deposited the body of the Crucified in the sepulcher, the Jews imprisoned him, but when on Easter day the door was opened, he was not to be found . Search was made at Nicodemus's advice, and Joseph was discovered at his home in Arimathea. Brought to Jerusalem he testified that at midnight of the Sabbath day, the prison in which he was confined rose into the air, and fell to the earth. The risen Christ appeared to him, lifted him up, and brought him to his house."
"The so-called Evangelium Nicodemi (Gospel of Nicodemus) had been in use in England as a basis for various Christian poems since the 8th century, and Joseph of Arimathea, who plays a leading role in it, became a favorite figure in the Passion Plays. Then about the beginning of the 11th century another apocryphon was translated into Old English: the Vindicta Salvatoris. Joseph of Arimathea then became a figure in western literature for the second time. Joseph always stood in close relationship with the apostle Philip and the evangelisation of England. Whether or not such a connection is justified or not is hard to judge. It is however conspicuous that 10th and 11th century manuscripts in the Georgian (or Gruzinian) language, originating in Palestine, translated into Greek, and probably based on a Syrian original, yet again characterize Joseph as the protagonist. Here, the story is told by Joseph himself, which is almost identical with Robert's: Christ's burial, Joseph's captivity, the appearance of the risen Jesus, and the collection of Jesus' blood. In this originally Syrian version, a sort of grail-slab [Grals-Tafel] is erected - as was done by a man named Petrus in Robert's version - and also a special sacrament was introduced. In 1974 Burdach came to the conclusion that a comparison of the two texts compels one 'to assume that the Joseph-legend known and loved in England in early times derives from a Syrian source, or at least partially through Syrian traditions'. In this Syrian version, however, there is no vessel resembling the grail. Therefore the essential grail part of the legend, deriving as has been shown from Celtic origins, should be considered separate from the Christian components such as Joseph of Arimathea and the collection of the blood." The story of Joseph and Nicodemus is recounted in the Interpolation in the First Continuation of Chrétien's Perceval which Loomis calls "the shortest and simplest account of Joseph's connection with the Grail and his voyage to Britain."
"Joseph caused the grail to be made and took it to Calvary, where he caught in it the blood that flowed down over the feet of the crucifed Jesus."
"The keeping of the soul-substance of God in a sepulchral vessel corresponds to a particular archetypical idea, which goes back to ancient oriental roots. She [Emma Jung] draws attention to the burials of African chieftains, at which bodily secretions from the corpse are collected and venerated as holy. Similar procedures took place at Ancient Egyptian burials, in which certain parts of the body were removed and put aside in special vessels. These vessels then contained the magical soul-substance of God, and it is not improbable that similar ideas were later carried over to the grail." The text continues as Joseph of Aramathea takes custody of the Grail.
"One of the most important and most puzzling texts about Joseph is the poem written by Robert de Boron, a Burgundian from near the modern Swiss border. Boron, which may have been his birthplace or his property, is a village near Montbéliard, and he tells us that he wrote under the patronage of a certain lord known to history, Gautier de Montbéliard, who departed for Italy in 1199, took part in the Fourth Crusade, and never returned."
"The first writer to make serious use of Christian legend in connection with the Grail was Robert de Boron, author of the metrical poem Joseph d'Arimathie."
"Many people believe that he [Robert] began his work before Chrétien, but only finished it after Perceval. Other authorities differ, holding that the entire body of Robert's work was written after Chrestian's."
"Robert introduces an entirely new group of persons, headed by one Brons, who is to be keeper of the Grail after Joseph's death and, springing out of this, in the introduction of a mission of conversion.
According Robert's Joseph d'Arimathie, "When on the third day, the Jews discovered that the body was missing, they accused Joseph of stealing it and threw him into a dungeon. They Crucified appeared to the prisoner in a blaze of light, presented him with the same vessel in which he had collected the holy blood, and told him that he was to have the guardianship of the vessel and would have only three successors, in token of the Trinity. Christ also instructed Joseph in the symbolism of the mass, and informed him that the vessel containing the divine blood was to be called 'calice'. Then the visitant departed."
"With his brother-in-law, Hebron or Bron, Joseph left Palestine for foreign lands. He founded the table and service of the Grail, which only those who believe in the Trinity and lead clean lives may attend, and there they have everything their hearts desire. An empty seat at the table, corresponding to the seat of Judas at the Last Supper, is reserved for a descendant of Bron (this is the Siege Perilous which Galahad would later fill). On the Grail table in a fish, the symbol of Christ, placed there by Bron, who in consequence is called the Rich Fisher." Robert de Boron dispatched Petrus (one of the sons of Bron) to the quot;vales of Avaron" - or Avalon, the low lying marshlands which surround Glastonbury Tor, England. Tradition states that the Tor is the entrance to Annwn, the Celtic underworld. In Arthur's time the Tor was an island unconnected by dry land - and strategically important because of its natural spring water. Boron, however, does not specifically mention Glastonbury.
Other authors which emphasize the Christian-religious aspect of the Grail include "Gautier de Dourdan (writing between 1190 and 1200), Manessier (1214-1220), Herbert von Mostreuil (before 1225), Perceval li Galios (around 1225), and the unknown author of the Grand St. Graal (after 1220). They all either continue Chrétien, or else adhere to Robert de Boron's version, adorning it with additional detail, and particularly emphasising the Christian elements of the grail story: that is, the grail as a chalice, and as the bowl with the blood of Christ."
The Estoire del Saint Graal is a long prose romance, which forms "the first member of the Vulgate cycle, but probably composed after the Lancelot and the Queste.
The current Christian version of the Grail states that Joseph of Arimathea brought the Last Supper chalice used to catch Christ's blood to Glastonbury, England. There the Grail was hidden at the bottom of Chalice Well. The Glastonbury Tor, a natural hill which rises high above the surrounding landscape, has a terraced double maze sculpted around it that leads to the top. The original meaning of "grail" is "saucer" and the root of "grail" is derived from "crater".
"...A riddling medieval Welsh poem entitled 'The Spoils of Annwn' tells how some of Arthur's men entered an enchanted fortress, Caer Sidi, the Spiral or Revolving Castle. Only seven returned; the number is reiterated and stressed. Some Celtic ritual at a maze shrine could underlie this poem."
The authors of the Estoire del Saint Graal and Perlesvaus both "dealt very freely with their traditional material and indulged in much pure fabrication, at the same time that they pretended to have the highest sanction for their veracity. Perhaps the author of Perlesvaus was...a mild case of schizophrenia, and so cannot be held to strict standards. As for the Estoire, its author, if sane, must have been aware that the Lord Jesus Christ had nothing to do with the story he himself told, and must be classed with Geoffrey of Monmouth and Baron Munchausen as the conscious purveyor of fiction under the guise of solemn truth." The Charter of St. Patrick, believed to have been forged about 1220 with official sanction of the Abbey at Glastonbury, gives a fabricated first hand account of St. Patrick finding a Christian community at the Tor. While St. Philip and St. James, the Apostles to Gaul and Spain, are mentioned as introducing Christianity to Britain, the name of Joseph of Arimathea is conspiculously absent.
"Since the legend of Joseph of Arimathea "was a continental product and was totally unknown to the monks of the abbey...we may imagine the surprise and bewilderment of these tonsured worthies when, say about 1240, a manuscript of the Estoire Del Saint Graal came into their hands, and they read an elaborately detailed rival account of the evangelization of Britain, which failed to give credit to St. Philip and St. James, mentioned neither Ynyswytrin [Glass Isle] nor Avalon, and which silenced all skepticism by the claim to be a faithful transcript of a work written by Christ's own hand and delivered by him to the author!" - a plain reference to the Estoire del Saint Graal. Thus began the process of interweaving the two variant versions, insular and continental, of the first mission to Britain. But many decades were to pass before the officials of the abbey began to take Joseph's coming to the Isle of Avalon seriously." - Roger Sherman Loomis, The Grail, From Celtic Myth to Christian Symbol Glastonbury traditions which appear to be of relatively recent invention include:
The first reference is a crude poem - c.1520 The first testimony that Joseph planted the tree - 1677 ·The Chalice Well where Joseph buried the Grail: The legend appears to be unknown until the early 1800's
The Nanteos Mansion near Aberystwyth, Wales, has also laid claim to the Grail Cup for over 300 years Richard Wagner reportedly visited Nanteos Mansion just before starting his opera 'Parsifal'.
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