
Harz
Mountains, Germany {what do you see within?}
May
Eve
by
Steenie Harvey
® World and I Magazine, 2003
Wandering
through Germany's Harz Mountains, it's impossible not
to realize that you have entered a domain of enchantment,
a place where landscape conspires with legend to create
a Spookiness emanates from a bizarre rock formation
in the Brocken forests. sense of lurking mystery. A
terrain of craggy peaks, gloomy forests, and river valleys
banked by towering cliffs, the mountains remember folk
beliefs dating from pre-Christian times.
Straddling the former border between East and West Germany,
they are steeped in tales of witchcraft, magic, and
apparitions. Stories collected in the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries show that the region's mythic reputation
reached beyond Germany. From France to Scandinavia,
countryfolk traded fireside yarns of strange happenings
on the Brockenberg (Brocken Mountain), the Harz's highest
peak at 3,747 feet. Rumor had it that Europe's witches
gathered there on Walpurgisnacht, May Eve.
Still legendary throughout the Harz region, Walpurgisnacht
is rooted in the pagan Fr?hjahrsfest, or Spring Festival.
Directly opposite Allhallows Eve in the seasonal cycle,
it was once widely celebrated among all Germanic peoples.
Whereas North America associates witches and sorcery
with Halloween, April 30 is when things get spooky in
Germany. Legends tell of blue flames igniting above
buried treasure, ladies flying on broomsticks, and the
ghostly Wild Hunt pursuing the goddess Walpurga through
snowstorms and hail. "There is a mountain very
high and bare, whereon it is given out that witches
hold their dance on Walpurgis Night," writes folklorist
Jacob Grimm in his Teutonic Mythology about the Brocken,
sometimes shown on old maps as the Blocksberg. "Our
forefathers kept the beginning of May as a great festival,
and it is still regarded as the trysting time of witches."
Chillingly, he notes that witches invariably resort
to places where justice was formerly administered, or
blood was spilled: "Almost all witch mountains
were once hills of sacrifice."
Visiting the witches
When travelers don't act as if the Harz Mountains are
imbued with ancient magic, local tourist authorities
are dismayed. They do their utmost to evoke a sense
of otherworldliness. Even hotel brochures display a
logo depicting a crone riding a broomstick. In the days
leading up to Walpurgisnacht, shops do a brisk trade
in Harzhexen, miniature felt witch puppets that ride
straw broomsticks (hexen is the German word for witches).
Postcards, beer steins, and wooden carvings glorify
the season of the witch. Little old ladies cheerfully
pressure shoppers into pointy black hats, tarot cards,
and devilish horns that glow in the dark.
Huddled below the Brocken's granite bulk, the village
of Schierke attracts around six thousand Walpurgisnacht
revelers. The day begins with a parade of kindergarteners
dressed as witches and pitchfork-wielding devils. Festooned
with witch puppets, even the railway station joins in
the fun. The local steam train becomes a Hexenexpress,
chugging down from the Brockenberg's summit to Wernigerode--the
quintessential "fairytale" town of half-timbered
houses and gothic turrets.
In the village, an old apothecary's shop called Zum
Roten Fingerhut (the Red Thimble) is stocked with
Quedlinburg has over twelve hundred Fachwerk (half-timbered)
houses. supplies of Schierke Feuerstein, a potent spirit
concocted from a secret recipe of herbs and bitters.
A local druggist, Willi Druber, first brewed it in 1908.
The inscription on Herr Druber's grave warns travelers
to flee, before the amateur brewer rises from his tomb
and joins them for a drink.
Come nightfall, things start to resemble a casting session
for a horror movie, though the atmosphere is tongue
in cheek. Valkyries (virginal shield maidens), kobolds
(goblins), vampires, and witches come "dressed
to kill." The grassy expanse of Schierke's Kurpark
becomes a medieval fairground. Food, drink, and craft
booths are set around a giant bonfire, a pantomime is
enacted on a woodland stage, and a fireworks display
explodes in the midnight sky. In Schierke's rival for
May Eve celebrations, the village of Thale, a huge Walpurgisnacht
bonfire blazes on a plateau above the Bode River chasm.
This plateau is known as the Hexentanzplatz, the witches'
dancing place.
Women of the mountain
Although the Harz hilltops are buried in all seasons
beneath snowy eiderdowns, witching hour on May Eve is
the transitional time when winter becomes spring. Winter's
forces have made their final assault, and Dame Holda
must summon her witches or wisewomen to dance the snow
away. In m?chen (nursery tales), Dame Holda generally
appears as a benign figure, a combination of motherly
hausfrau, white lady or moon goddess, and sky goddess.
Also known as Frau Holle, she busies herself checking
that people aren't neglecting their household tasks.
In the preindustrial age, her main concerns were flax
cultivation and spinning. It's said that falling snowflakes
are a sign that Holda/Holle is shaking her featherbed.
It is interesting to recall that the Greek chronicler
Herodotus noted a link between snow and feathers and
that the Scythians, a nomadic people of what are now
the countries of Romania and Ukraine, believed the northern
lands were inaccessible because they lay under feathers.
According to legend, Holda often rides throughout the
countryside in a wagon, leaving gifts for those who
help her. Grimm's Teutonic Mythology relates how a peasant
carved a new linchpin for her wagon. Sweeping away the
wooden shavings, he found they had been transformed
into gold. Holda, however, can also ride the clouds.
From this arose a belief that witches travel in her
company. Yet it wasn't Holda who lent her name to Walpurgisnacht.
That honor is shared by a pagan deity and a Christian
abbess. As a spring festival, May Eve was originally
dedicated to Walpurga, a fertility goddess of woods
and springs, originally known as Walburga or Waldborg.
Interestingly, she shares many of Holda's attributes,
including a propensity for rewarding human helpers with
gifts of gold. And, just like Holda, Walpurga
Actors practice a play about Holda the Hexe for evening
festivities in Schierke. is also associated with spindles
and thread. These commonplace items took on a magical
significance on May Eve, when they were used for divination
and love spells.
E.L. Rochholz's 1870 folklore study, Drei Gaug?tinen
(Three Local Goddesses), describes Walpurga as a white
lady with flowing hair, wearing a crown and fiery shoes.
She carries a spindle and a three-cornered mirror that
foretells the future. In the layer cake of northern
European mythology, the symbols strongly suggest connection
to the Three Norns, or Fates. These demigoddesses spun
and wove the web of life, casting prophecies into their
triangular Well of Wyrd, which watered the tree of life.
For the nine nights before May Day, Walpurga is chased
by the Wild Hunt, a ghostly troop of riders representing
winter. Hounded from place to place, she seeks refuge
among mortal villagers. People leave their windows open
so the white lady of May, harbinger of summer, can find
safety behind the cross-shaped panes. Encountering a
farmer she implores him to hide her in a shock of grain.
This he does. The next morning his rye crop is sprinkled
with grains of gold.
Under Christian influence, Walpurga's rite of spring
was transformed into a day to drive out the forces of
pagan darkness, rather than the darkness of winter.
A Saint Walburga, now remembered on May 1, emerged in
the eighth century to battle with the old goddess. As
it did with the Celtic fire goddess Brigid, the medieval
church often elevated the elder deities to sainthood
in its attempts to suppress paganism and stifle older
rituals.
Despite many similarities, Walpurga and Saint Walburga
are entirely separate characters. Believed to have been
born around a.d. 710 in what was then the English kingdom
of Wessex, Saint Walburga was a missionary-abbess in
St. Boniface's Frankish church. She presided over a
community of monks and nuns in the German town of Heidenheim
and was canonized after her death in 779.
After Walburga's relics were interred at Eichstadt,
historical writings claim a miracle-working oil flowed
from her tomb. The saint thus gained a cult status,
and her relics were eventually sent to various churches
across Europe. In medieval times, Saint Walburga was
called upon to defend the faithful against witchcraft
and could offer protection against plague, famine, crop
failure, and the bites of rabid dogs. She is also the
patron saint of Antwerp in Belgium and was often invoked
to help sailors during storms.
Walburga's "protectress of crops" aspect suggests
an entanglement with the goddess Walpurga. Iconography
often depicts the saint carrying a sheaf of grain, the
usual symbol of fertility goddesses, not Christian abbesses.
Rochholz muses, "What kind of pairing is this,
the witches of the Brockenberg with a saint of the church,
under one and the same name!"
Phenomena up high
The scenes of Harz folklore have been enthusiastically
mined over the years. Brocken Mountain was where Goethe
set the witches' Sabbath scene in the story of Faust,
who sells his soul to Mephistopheles, the devil. The
peak also inspired the Russian composer Modest Mussorgsky
to write his nerve-jangling Night on Bald Mountain.
If tales of goddesses, witches, and diabolism weren't
enough, the Brockenberg also engenders a meteorological
phenomenon: the Brockengespenst, or specter of the Brocken.
Given the right atmospheric conditions,
May Eve begins with a parade of devilishly dressed youngsters.
the mountain can produce an eerie optical illusion.
As the sun sinks, the shadow of a walker cast from a
ridge becomes magnified and an enormous silhouette appears
on low-lying clouds or mist banks below the mountain.
Although it's only a shadow, the distant "specter"
appears to be walking at the same pace, doggedly tracking
the observer's path. On some occasions, rainbow-like
bands or rings may surround the shadow.
Science explains the Brockengespenst as the result of
the diffraction of sunlight by water droplets in the
clouds. The phenomenon has been seen in mountains all
over the world and is also known as an anticorona or
glory. The name Brocken specter came into use among
mountaineers after a climber fell to his death on the
Brocken. Not realizing that he was observing his own
shadow, the climber apparently lost his footing after
being startled by a rainbow-haloed figure emerging from
the mists. Of course, scientific theories weren't available
to the Harz miners and peasants from whom folklorists
such as Grimm, Rochholz, and Ey collected their tales.
Sightings of a giant spectral being with a ring of light
around its head would have helped confirm that the Brocken
belonged in the realms of the supernatural. In his Antiquary
of 1816, Sir Walter Scott recounts the tale of a charcoal
burner called Martin Waldeck who encountered the "tutelar
demon" of the Harz. A wild man "of huge stature,"
this demonic guardian seems to be another manifestation
of the Brockengespenst, albeit with overtones of a Green
Man--type vegetation spirit. His head and waist wreathed
with oak leaves, the giant haunts the lonely crags and
recesses of the mountains, carrying a pine tree torn
up by the roots.
Above Schierke, forest pathways snake through Brocken
National Park. Shrouded in mist, their gnarled limbs
dripping with moss and lichens, the trees seem to close
in behind the hiker. With names such as the Witch's
Altar and Devil's Pulpit, bizarre rock formations rise
from the forest floor. In the brooding green half-light,
the rocks take on a malevolent appearance, conjuring
up the story of the R?bezahl who leads travelers astray.
A male dwarflike figure who inhabits caves, the R?bezahl
wraps himself in a large cloak to hide his face. He
has the ability to control the weather, usually by summoning
gales and rain.
Medieval town
From the Rubeland Caves, where stalactites glitter as
wickedly as elfin swords, to the Teufelsmauer (Devil's
Wall) near Blankenburg, the Harz landscape could easily
have provided the blueprint for Tolkien's Middle Earth
fantasies. Its storybook towns are also likely to send
the imagination into overdrive. An architectural feast
of Rapunzel-style turrets, secret courtyards, and half-timbered
houses leaning at crazy angles, places like Wernigerode
and Quedlinburg seem to have slipped
In 1589, the ecclesiastical authorities of Quedlinburg's
St. Servatius Abbey sentenced 133 "withces"
to be burned at the stake. through a crack in time.
With its twelve hundred houses spanning six centuries,
Quedlinburg is particularly lovely, but some disturbing
history lies behind its fairytale facade.
In 1589, the ecclesiastical authorities of Quedlinburg's
St. Servatius Abbey sentenced 133 so-called witches
to death. Herbalism, folk healing, and anything that
smacked of heathen dabbling were crimes punishable by
execution, usually burning. Between the fifteenth and
seventeenth centuries, when witchcraft persecutions
were at their height, European "practitioners of
magic" paid the ultimate penalty.
Drought, crop failure, and sickness in animals were
invariably seen as evidence of spellcraft. Doctors diagnosed
witchcraft as the cause of convulsions and fits. The
church hierarchy also regarded such ailments as the
work of the devil's henchwomen. From Scotland to Italy,
witchcraft hysteria raged like wildfire across Europe.
Germany's bishops were particularly zealous in their
crusade to obliterate all traces of pagan practices--and
those who leaned toward them.
The Reformation rejected many Catholic teachings but
not those pertaining to witchcraft and demonology. Between
1623 and 1633, the prince-bishops of two Bavarian towns,
W?rzburg and Bamburg, ordered the burning of at least
fifteen hundred "witches" between them. The
victims of W?rzburg's bishop included his own nephew,
nineteen priests, and a child aged seven. One reason
why medieval Germany developed an obsession with stamping
out "witchcraft" may lie in the food that
was being eaten. If the weather is warm and damp, rye
(then a staple crop) can produce a poisonous fungus
called ergot. Hallucinations, fits, pinpricking sensations,
muscle spasms: the symptoms of ergotism are similar
to the effects of LSD, which itself is derived from
ergot. The nerve toxins in ergot of rye affect animals
as well as humans.
Europe's last major outbreak of ergot poisoning happened
in 1951, at Pont-Saint-Esprit in France. Contaminated
bread from the village bakery resulted in over two hundred
cases of illness and thirty-two of insanity, including
that of an 11-year-old boy who attempted to strangle
his mother. Four people died. Victims, whose delusions
included being attacked by tigers and snakes, often
had to be restrained with straitjackets. A few villagers
even believed that they were turning into wild beasts,
a fact that may explain the old werewolf legends. Despite
advances in medicine and a better knowledge of pharmacology,
some people still turned to the supernatural for explanations.
Walpurga, golden goddess of the grain, bequeathed her
followers a deadly legacy. It makes one wonder how her
namesake, Saint Walburga, gained a reputation for being
a protectress of crops. From past events, her protection
seems to have been woefully ineffective. I don't know
about rabid dogs, but the saint isn't much help when
it comes to seeing off Harz witches, devils,and werewolves
either. Well, certainly not the ones who turn out for
Walpurgisnacht celebrations below the dreadful Brockenberg.
Walpurgis Night Ritual http://www.theonewolf.com/faust91.html

©
Sacred Circles' Coven 2000 - 2007
All
right Reserved®.
Written
permission from original author is needed to reprint.
Articles within are used w/permission, or are originals.
We
do have some older pages have within that are with Author
Unknown? If you know of the original author, please
contact any one of us and we will give the Proper Credits.
Banners
and Graphics ©Copyrights are held by the original
aritist and designers.
http://sacredcirclescoven.com
**Site Maintained and Created by Lady Leona
Owned
Exclusively by Sacred Circles' Coven. Witch HPs Leona
Orginally
Founded Oct 15, 2002, Mother site Originally Founded
Aug 1, 2000.
©Copyrights
2000 - 2006.
All
Rights Reserved®.
Hosted
by BlueHost.com