Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-p9bg8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T18:38:55.391Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Cosmovision and metaphor: monsters and shamans in Gallo-British cult-expression

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2017

Miranda Aldhouse Green*
Affiliation:
University of Wales College, Newport, UK
*

Abstract

The repertoire of cult-iconography produced in Gaul and Britain during the Iron Age and Roman periods contains a group of images that are a blend of human and animal forms. Such pieces are generally interpreted as depictions of divinities, but while it remains probable that they are expressive of cult perceptions, there is a need to re-evaluate their function and identity. The hybridity of the images suggests meanings associated with boundary-crossing, risk and the challenge to ‘normative’ concepts. It is argued here that such contradictive and liminal representations might be identified with transgression between earthworld and spiritworld, and that monstrous images perhaps express the identity of individuals who, within the context of ritual practice, habitually ‘moved’ between worlds, by means of trance and altered states of consciousness. It may be that, in the context of Gallo-British cosmologies, images with antler-head-dresses, horns or other animal attributes should be identified as shamans rather than as gods.

Le répertoire iconographique rituel de la Gaule et de la Grande Bretagne durant l'âge du fer et les périodes romaines contient un groupe d'images qui sont un mélange de formes humaines et animales. Ces pièces sont généralement décrites comme représentations divines. Or, bien qu'il reste probable qu'elles expriment des perceptions de culte, il faut réévaluer leur fonction de même que leur identité. L'hybridité des images suggère des interprétations associées à un passage de frontières, à la prise de risques et à un défi des concepts ‘normatifs’. Il est soutenu ici que ces représentations si contradictoires et liminales pourraient être identifiées avec la transgression entre le monde réel et le monde des esprits, et que ces images monstrueuses exprimeraient peutêtre l'identité d'individus se déplaçant habituellement entre ces mondes, à l'aide de la trance ou d'autres changements de conscience, dans un contexte rituel. Peut-être faudra-t-il, dans la cosmologie Gallo-Britannique, interpréter les représentations de coiffes à ramures, de cornes et autres attributs animals comme images de chamans plutôt que de dieux.

Zusammenfassung

Zusammenfassung

Das Repertoire der kultischen Ikonographie, das während der Eisenzeit und der Römischen Periode in Gallien und Britannien produziert wurde, beenhaltet eine Gruppe von Bildern, die eine Mischung aus menschlichen und zoomorphen Formen darstellen. Solche Stücke werden allgemein als Darstellungen von Göttern interpretiert, doch gibt es – obwohl es nach wie vor wahrscheinlich ist, daß sie Ausdrucksformen kultischer Wahrnehmung sind – Gründe, ihre Funktion und Identität neu zu bewerten. Die Mischformen in den Darstellungen legen Bedeutungen nahe, die mit dem Überschreiten von Grenzen und Risiko verbunden sind und ‘normative’ Konzepte in Frage stellen. Es wird dargelegt, daß solche widersprüchlichen und grenzhaften Erscheinungen mit dem Übergang zwischen der irdischen Welt und der Geisterwelt erklärt werden könnten, und daß monströse Abbildungen möglicherweise die Identität derjenigen Individuen ausdrücken sollen, die sich innerhalb ritueller Praktiken durch Trance und anderen Bewußtseinsebenen gewohnheitsmäßig zwischen den Welten ‘bewegt’ haben. Es könnte sein, daß im Kontext gallo-britischer Kosmologien Darstellungen mit Hirschgeweih-Kopfschmuck, Hörnern und anderen Tierattributen eher als Schamanen statt als Götter identifiziert werden sollten.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2001 Sage Publications 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Alekseev, A., 1997. Healing techniques among Evén Shamans. In Balzer, M.M. (ed.), Shamanic Worlds. Rituals and Lore of Siberia and Central Asia: 153164. Armonk, NY: North Castle/Sharpe.Google Scholar
Anati, E., 1961. Camonica Valley. London: Jonathan Cape.Google Scholar
Anisimov, A.F., 1963. The Shaman's tent of the Evenks and the origin of the Shamanistic rite. In Michael, H. (ed.), Studies in Siberian Shamanism: 84123. Toronto: Arctic Institute of North America, University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Aronsson, K.-Å., 1991. Forest Reindeer Herding AD 1–1800. Umeå: University of Umeå, Archaeology and Environment Monograph No. 10.Google Scholar
Bahn, P.G. and Vertet, J., 1997. Journey Through the Ice Age. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.Google Scholar
Bonenfant, PIERRE-PAUL and Jean-Paul, Guillaumet, 1998. La Statuaire Anthropomorphe du Premier Age du Fer. Besançon: Annales Litteraires de l'Université de Franche-Comte, No. 667.Google Scholar
Boon, G.C., 1982. A coin with the head of the Cernunnos. Seaby Coin & Medal Bulletin 769:276282.Google Scholar
Buxton, Richard, 1987. Wolves and werewolves in Greek thought. In Bremmer, J. (ed.), Interpretations of Greek Mythology: 6079. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Clottes, Jean and David, Lewis-Williams, 1998. The Shamans of Prehistory. Trance and Magic in the Painted Caves. New York: Harry Abrams.Google Scholar
Creighton, John, 1995. Visions of power: imagery and symbols in late Iron Age Britain. Britannia 26:285301.Google Scholar
Creighton, John, 2000. Coinage and Power in Late Iron Age Britain. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B., 1992. Pits, preconceptions and propitiation in the British Iron Age. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 11(1):6983.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B., 1993a. Danebury. London: Batsford/English Heritage.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, B., 1993b. Fertility, Propitiation and the Gods in the British Iron Age. Amsterdam: Vijftiende Kroon-Voordracht. Gehouden voor de Stichting Nederlands Museum voor Anthropologie en Praehistorie te Amsterdam Op. 26, November 1993.Google Scholar
Dayet, M., 1954. Le sanglier à trois cornes du Cabinet des Medailles. Revue Archéologique de l'Est et du Centre-Est 5:334335.Google Scholar
De Sélincourt, Aubrey trans., 1965. Herodotus. The Histories. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Devauges, J.-B., 1974. Circonscription de Bourgogne. Gallia 32:434.Google Scholar
DuBois, P., 1982. Centaurs and Amazons. Women and the Prehistory of the Great Chain of Being. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.Google Scholar
Duval, Paul-Mare, 1987. Monnaies Gauloises et Mythes Celtiques. Paris: Hermann.Google Scholar
Esperandieu, Emile, 1908. Recueil Général des Bas-Reliefs de la Gaule Romaine et Pré-Romaine II. Paris: Ernest Leroux.Google Scholar
Espérandieu, Emile, 1911. Recueil Général des Bas-Reliefs de la Gaule Romaine et Pré -Romaine IV. Paris: Leroux.Google Scholar
Espérandieu, Emile, 1913. Recueil Général des Bas-Reliefs de la Gaule Romaine et Pré -Romaine V. Paris: Leroux.Google Scholar
Espérandieu, Emile, 1915. Recueil Général des Bas-Reliefs de la Gaule Romaine et Pré -Romaine VI. Paris: Ernest Leroux.Google Scholar
Fagan, B., 1990. The Journey from Eden: The Peopling of our World. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Fitzpatrick, Andrew, 2000. Les Druides en Grande-Bretagne. In Guichard, V. and Perrin, F. (eds), Les Druides: 4749. Paris: Errance, L'Archéologue Hors Série No. 2.Google Scholar
Garland, Robert, 1995. The Eye of the Beholder. Deformity and Disability in the Graeco-Roman World. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Girard, R., 1977. Violence and the Sacred. London: Johns Hopkins University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grant, A., 1984. Animal husbandry in Wessex and the Thames Valley. In Cunliffe, B. and Miles, D. (eds), Aspects of the Iron Age in Central Southern Britain: 102119. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology Monograph No. 2.Google Scholar
Green, Christopher, 1965. A Romano-Celtic temple at Bourton Grounds, Buckingham. Records of Buckinghamshire 17:356ff.Google Scholar
Green, Miranda, 1986. The Gods of the Celts. Gloucester: Alan Sutton.Google Scholar
Green, Miranda, 1989. Symbol and Image in Celtic Religious Art. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Green, Miranda, 1996. Celtic Art. Reading the Messages. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.Google Scholar
Green, Miranda, 1997a. Images in opposition: polarity, ambivalence and ambiguity in cult-representation. Antiquity 71:898911.Google Scholar
Green, Miranda, 1997b. Exploring the World of the Druids. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Green, M.J., 1998a. God in man's image: thoughts on the genesis and affiliations of some Romano-British cult-imagery. Britannia 29:1730.Google Scholar
Green, M.J., 1998b. Crossing the boundaries: triple horns and emblematic transference. European Journal of Archaeology 1(2):219240.Google Scholar
Green, M.J., 1998c. Some Gallo-British goddesses: iconography and meaning. In Goodison, L. and Morris, C. (eds), Ancient Goddesses: 180195. London: British Museum Press.Google Scholar
Green, M.J., 1998d. Humans as ritual victims in the later prehistory of western Europe. Oxford Journal of Archaeology 17(2):169189.Google Scholar
Green, M.J., 2000. Animal iconographies: metaphor, meaning and identity (or why Chinese dragons don't have wings). Proceedings of the Tenth Theoretical Roman Archaeology Conference (TRAC). Oxford: Oxbow.Google Scholar
Green, M.J., 2001. The ram-horned snake in ancient European iconography: helper, guardian and boundary-crosser. Proceedings of a Conference of the Folklore Society, entitled Supernatural Helpers, School of Scottish Studies, University of Edinburgh, October 2000.Google Scholar
Henig, M., 1993. Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani. Great Britain, Vol. 1, Fasc. 7. Roman Sculptures from the Cotswold Region. London/Oxford: British Academy/Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Henken, Elissa, 1991. The Welsh Saints. A Study in Patterned Lives. Cambridge: D.S. Brewer.Google Scholar
Hill, J.D., 1995. Ritual and Rubbish in the Iron Age in Wessex. Oxford: British Archaeological Reports (BS) no. 242.Google Scholar
Hodder, I., 1987. The contextual analysis of symbolic meanings. In Hodder, I. (ed.), The Archaeology of Contextual Meanings: 110. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ingold, T., 1986. The Appropriation of Nature. Essays on Human Ecology and Social Relations. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Isbell, Harold, 1971. The Last Poets of Imperial Rome. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Jacob, S. S., Thomas, W. and Lang, S., eds. 1997. Two-Spirit People: Native American Gender, Sexuality and Spirituality. Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press.Google Scholar
Joffroy, R., 1979. Musée des Antiquités Nationales, Saint-Germain-en-Laye. Paris:Éditions de la Réunion des Musées Nationaux.Google Scholar
Jones, A., 1998. Where eagles dare. Landscape, animals and the Neolithic of Orkney. Journal of Material Culture 3(3):301324.Google Scholar
Kaul, F., Marazov, I., Best, J. and De Vries, N., 1991. Thracian Tales on the Gundestrup Cauldron. Amsterdam: Najade Press.Google Scholar
King, Helen, 1995. ‘Half-human Creatures’. In Cherry, J. (ed.), Mythical Beasts: 138167. London: British Museum Press.Google Scholar
Lambot, Bernard, 1998. Les Morts d'Acy-Romance (Ardennes) à La Tène finale: pratiques funéraires, aspects religieux et hiérarchie sociale. Etudes et Documents Fouilles 4: Les Celtes. Rites Funéraires en Gaule du Nord entre le VIe et le Ier siècle avant Jesus-Christ: 7587. Namur: Ministère de la Region Wallonne.Google Scholar
Lawrence, Elizabeth, 1994. Rodeo horses; the wild and the tame. In Willis, R. (ed.), Signifying Animals: Human Meaning in the Natural World: 222235. London: Routledge, One World Archaeology 16.Google Scholar
Lee, Alvin, 1998. Gold-Hall and Earth-Dragon. Beowulf as Metaphor. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Lejars, Thierry, 1994. Gournay III. Les Fourreawc d'épée: le sanctuaire de Gournay-sur-Aronde et l'armament des Celtes de La Tène moyenne. Paris: Éditions Errance.Google Scholar
Lejars, Thierry and Francx, Perrin, 2000. Des Tombes de Druides. In Guichard, V. and Perrin, F. (eds), Les Druides: 3739. Paris: Errance. L'Archéologue Hors Série No. 2.Google Scholar
Lorblanchet, Michel, 1989. From man to animal and sign in Palaeolithic art. In Morphy, H. (ed.), Animals into Art: 109143. London: Unwin Hyman, One World Archaeology.Google Scholar
Loring, S., 1997. On the trail of the caribou house: some reflections on Innu caribou hunters in northern Ntessinan (Labrador). In Jackson, L.J. and Thacker, P.T. (eds), Caribou and Reindeer Hunters of the Northern Hemisphere: 185220. Aldershot: Worldwide Archaeology Series, Avebury.Google Scholar
McCone, Kim, 1990. Pagan Past and Christian Present in Early Irish Literature. Maynooth: An Sagart.Google Scholar
Megaw, Ruth and Vincent, Megaw, 1989. Celtic Art from its Beginnings to the Book of Kells. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Meniel, Patrice, 1987. Chasse et élevage chez les Gaulois (450–52 av. J.C.). Paris: Editions Errance.Google Scholar
O'Catháin, Séamus, 1995. The Festival of Brigit, Celtic Goddess and Holy Woman. Dublin: DBA Publications.Google Scholar
Olmsted, G.S., 1979. The Gundestrup Cauldron. Brussels: Collection Latomus, Monograph No. 162.Google Scholar
Parker Pearson, Michael, 1999. The Archaeology of Death and Burial. Stroud: Sutton.Google Scholar
Parker Pearson, M. and Sharples, N., 1999. Between Land and Sea: Excavations at Dun Vulan, South Uist. Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press.Google Scholar
Parker Pearson, M., Sharples, N., and Mulville, J., 1999. Excavations at Dun Vulan: a correction. Antiquity 73(279):149152.Google Scholar
Perrin, Franck, 2000. Diviciacus, un druide. In Guichard, V. and Perrin, F. (eds), Les Druides: 4243. Paris: Errance. L'Archéologue Hors Série No. 2.Google Scholar
Planson, E. and Pommeret, C., 1986. Les Bolards. Paris: Ministère de la Culture/ Imprimérie Nationale.Google Scholar
Porter, J.R., 1993. Thresholds in the Old Testament. In Ellis Davidson, H. (ed.), Boundaries and Thresholds: 6575. Stroud: Katharine Briggs Club/Thimble Press. Priuli, A., 1988. Incisioni Rupestri della Val Camonica. Torino: Collana. Quaderni di Cultura Alpina.Google Scholar
Priuli, A., 1996. Le Più Antiche Manifestazioni Spirituali Arte Rupestre Paleoiconografia Camuna e delle genti Alpine. Torino: Collana. I Grandi Libri.Google Scholar
Rapin, A., 1988. Boudiers et lances. In J.-L. Brunaux and A. Rapin, Gournay II: Boucliers et Lances. Depôts et Trophées: 7142. Paris: Revue Archéologique de Picardie/Errance.Google Scholar
Richardson, R., 1993. Death's door: thresholds and boundaries in British funeral customs. In Davidson, H. (ed.), Boundaries and Thresholds: 91102. Stroud: Katharine Briggs Club/Thimble Press.Google Scholar
Ross, Anne, 1967. Pagan Celtic Britain. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Saint-Pierre, M. and Soldier, T.L., 1995. Walking in the Sacred Manner. Healers, Dreamers and Pipe Carriers – Medicine Women of the Plains Indians. New York: Simon & Schuster.Google Scholar
Shanks, M., 1996. Style and design of a perfume jar from an archaic Greek city state. In Preucel, R.W. and Hodder, I. (eds), Contemporary Archaeology in Theory. A Reader: 364393. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.Google Scholar
Shapiro, H.A., 1994. Myth into Art. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Sherratt, Andrew, 1991. Sacred and profane substances: the ritual use of narcotics in later Neolithic Europe. In Garwood, P., Jennings, D., Skeates, R. and Toms, J. (eds), Sacred and Profane. Proceedings of a Conference on Archaeology, Ritual and Religion, Oxford 1989: 5064. Oxford: Oxford University Committee for Archaeology Monograph No. 32.Google Scholar
Stead, Ian, Bourke, J.B. and Brothwell, D., 1986. Lindow Man. The Body in the Bog. London: British Museum Press.Google Scholar
Taylor, Timothy, 1992. The eastern origins of the Gundestrup cauldron. Scientific American 266(3):6671.Google Scholar
Thevenot, Emile, 1968. Divinités et Sanctuaires de la Gaule. Paris: Fayard.Google Scholar
Toynbee, Jocelyn Mary, 1973. Animals in Roman Life and Art. London: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Underhill, R.M., 1965. Red Man's Religion. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Veyne, Paul, 1983. Did the Greeks Believe in their Myths? An Essay on the Constitutive Imagination. Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Vitebsky, P., 1995. The Shaman. London: Macmillan.Google Scholar
Wheeler, R.E.M. and Wheeler, T.V., 1932. Report on the Excavation of the Prehistoric, Roman and Post-Roman Site in Lydney Park, Gloucestershire. Oxford: Society of Antiquaries of London.Google Scholar
Wood, Juliette, 1997. The horse in Welsh folklore: a boundary image in custom and narrative. In Davies, S. and Jones, N.A. (eds), The Horse in Celtic Culture: a Medieval Welsh Perspective: 162182. Cardiff: University of Wales Press.Google Scholar