Green Children of Woolpit 5: Parallels January 26, 2015
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalBeach must start with apologies. He promised four posts on the green children but he was not able to contain himself. Here, then, is a fifth dreamt up in the outer rings of fever in the last couple of days (flu now been ravaging for a week). Beach set himself a simple question: to what […]
Magonia #9: The Myth Continues June 21, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Actualite, Medieval, ModernAs access to information gets easier, and there was a huge-internet powered jump in the 1990s, then surely the information available to us should become more accurate, right? Easier to check facts, easier to be checked… Not a bit of it. As information becomes more accessible then more people have more access to information and […]
Magonia #8: The Comte de Gabalis and the Sylphs June 18, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Contemporary, Medieval, ModernThe Magonia series is now almost at an end. But Beach could not sink the sky boats without a reference to the Comte de Gabalis, one of the most hellishly strange books ever written (first edition 1670). The CdG is a seventeenth-century esoteric text, essentially a long discussion of the secret life of elementals: the […]
Magonia #7: Grimaldus and Chemical Warfare June 15, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalThere follows another extract from Agobard’s essay on thunder and hail. It is not actually linked in any way to Magonia: so why bother? Well, first, it is certainly bizarre and should be recorded on strangehistory. And, second, because many who have written on Magonia have undeservedly conflated the Tempestarii and this strange episode. A […]
Magonia #6: Leland Sings Magonia June 12, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval, ModernElizabeth Pennell writes in her memoirs of Charles Leland, the nineteenth-century folklorist and alleged bullshitter: He got well over the gout in the spring and summer of 1891, as he travelled by easy stages several weeks at Via Reggio, Geneva, Homburg to London for his last visit there. He went on with his Heine [the […]
Magonia #5: What’s In A Name? June 8, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalOne significant part of the Magonia puzzle that Beach has not yet troubled with is the name. Surely there should be a clue in those four syllables as to what Magonia really was? Well, there have been, suitably enough, four theories that have been put forward, over the years, to explain what the word ‘Magonia’ […]
Magonia #4: Sky Ships and Moebius Strips June 3, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalBack to Magonia. Agobard leaves no space for doubt: in early medieval popular tradition there are sky boats and these sky boats are connected with a magical land named Magonia. Now after reviewing the evidence for Agobard himself, a crusty old sceptic, and looking too at the folklore traditions about European hail medicine (Beach would […]
Magonia #3: The Tempestarii May 27, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalAfter a few days delay, back to Magonia… Agobard’s reference to Magonia is often quoted, in translations of variable quality. But far less attention is paid to his references in the same text (‘Contra insulsam vulgi opinionem de grandine et tonitruis’) to tempestarii or stormy-ones: In these parts [i.e. what is today southern France] almost […]
Magonia #2: Agobard of Lyons May 20, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : MedievalVery few people who write on Magonia, describe the author who has preserved that land’s memory, or at least there is rarely more than a courtesy nod in the direction of Agobard of Lyons. Let’s, for the sake of novelty, go into more detail here. Perhaps the first thing to say about Agobard of Lyons […]
Magonia #1: Introducing a Medieval Cloud Cuckoo Land May 17, 2013
Author: Beach Combing | in : Medieval‘Magonia’ is a word that sends thrills down many spines. It is, of course, the name of a magical medieval land hidden from mortal man. It has been jumped on by modern UFO researchers as an example of early contact: skyboats were said to fly out of Magonia. Jacques Vallée wrote Passport to Magonia (1969 […]