Monday, February 25, 2019
The Meaning of Holy Grail
The Tradition The Holy grail was a vas used by Christ at the expire Supper. Given to his grand-uncle, St. Joseph of Arimathea, it was used by him to collect Christs blood and sweat sm all told-arm Joseph tended him on the Cross. After Christs death, Joseph was apparently impris unmatchabled in a argument tomb similar to the one he had given for the body of his grand-nephew. left(a) to starve, he was sustained for several years by the power of the grail which provided him with fresh food and drink every morning. Later, St. Joseph travelled to Britain with his family and several followers.He aimtled at Ynys Witrin (Glastonbury), but the grail was taken to Corbenic w here(predicate) it was housed in a spectacular castle, guarded always by the Grail Kings, descendants of Josephs daughter, Anna (Enygeus) and her husband, Brons. Centuries later, the mess of the Great Castle of Corbenic became forgotten. At the Court of King Arthur, however, it was prophesied that the Grail would on e day be rediscovered by a descendant of St. Joseph the best nick pay heed in the land, the only man capable of sitting in the shadowy Siege Perilous.When such a man arrived in the form of Galahad, the son of Lancelot, along with a miraculous, though brief, vision of the Grail itself, a demand to find this holiest of relics began. Through m each adventures and many years, the Knights of the Round Table cross Britain from one end to another in their search. Perceval (Peredyr) discovered the castle in a land that was sickly like its spear-wounded King. When entertained by this black cat or Grail King, however, he failed to ask of the grail and left empty-hand. Lancelot next reached Corbenic, but was prevented from entering because of he was an adulterer.Finally Galahad arrived. He was permitted main course to the Grail Chapel and allowed to gaze upon the great cup. His life became complete and in concert grail and man were lifted up to heaven. The Names The Holy Grail forwards et appears as simply a grail in the full treatment of Chretien de Troyes. The word is probably derived from the Old cut word graal meaning a broad and capacious dish or salver. Though usually vista of as being a cup or chalice, the Grail has and so been variously described as a platter, dish, a cornucopia, horn of mountain or even a book or a stone. The name of the Castle of Corbenic has competing explanations.Old Welsh Cors, meaning Horn, the Horn of Plenty as the Grail is sometimes described may have become missed with the Old French Corps, producing Corps-Benoit meaning Holy Body, ie. the Body of Christ. More likely, however, is the clue that Corbenic stems from Corbin-Vicus. The ending is almost certainly derived from the Latin for Settlement, while Corben is a French translation of the word Crow or Raven Bran in Welsh. This was to a fault a mans name and, as Brons, he appears as St. Josephs son-in-law, one of the first Grail Kings. Hence Corbenic was Brans Settlement.It may be identical to the alkali of Lancelots father, Caer-Benwick. Ancient Origins The quest for a divine watercraft was a fashionable theme in Arthurian legend long before mediaeval writers introduced the Holy Grail to British mythology. It appears in the Mabinogion tale of Culhwch and Olwen, but particularly well-known is the story of the Preiddeu Annwfn or Spoils of the Otherworld as recounted by Taliesin. Arthur and his warriors sail off to the Celtic Otherworld to capture the pearl-rimmed cauldron of Annwfn like the grail it was a conferrer of plenty, but also of prophecy.It was at last discovered at Caer-Siddi (or Wydyr), an island startle castle of glass, where it was guarded by nine divine maidens but the turn up perils were too much for even Arthurs men. The mission was abandoned and only seven-spot of their number checked home. Celtic Cauldrons were used in ceremonial feasting as early as the Late Bronze Age. Ritual deposits in Llyn Fawr (Glamorgan) include such wat ercrafts, though the best known example is the Gundestrup Cauldron constitute in the peat bogs of Jutland (Denmark). Highly decorated with portraits of many Celtic deities, this vessel would once have held up to twenty-eight and a half gallons of liquid.These finds intelligibly point to the religious importance of cauldrons, as found in the Arthurian stories and even older Celtic mythological parallels. The magic Otherworld vessel was the Cauldron of Ceridwen, the Celtic Goddess of Inspiration. She is remembered today in the archetypal horrid cauldron-stirring witch. She once set about brewing a drink of knowledge and wisdom for her hideous son, but her kitchen-boy, Gwion, accidentally tasted the concoction, preventing anyone else from benefitting from its affects. A great battle of wills ensued, for Gwion now held all the knowledge to escape the Goddess wrath.The two changed themselves into various animals in an attempt to sidestep each other before Gwion was swallowed whole as a scrap of wheat. He was eventually reborn as the great bard, Taliesin The cauldron accordingly reappears in the story of Bran Fendigaid (the Blessed), not only as a vessel of knowledge and plenty, but also of rebirth. The great Celtic warrior God, Bran, obtained his life-giving vessel from a giantess (or thinly veiled Ceridwen) who had been expelled from a Lake in Ireland. The Emerald Isle here personifies the Celtic Otherworld.The magic vessel would restore to life the body of any dead warrior placed within it a scene apparently visualized on the Gundestrup Cauldron. Brans sister marries the King of Ireland and they are given the cauldron as a wedding gift. However, when hostilities between the two countries break out, Bran travels across the sea to regain this dangerous prize. He is eventually successful, but is wounded by a poisoned spear and, like Arthur, only seven of his men return home. The name, the castle (already discussed), the wound, the mystic vessel, the journey B ran Fendigaid is clearly Brons, the Grail King, son-in-law of Joseph of Arimathea.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.