Whether as the mothers of the Norse God Heimdall, Morgan and her sisters on Avalon, the nine sisters at the heart of the founding myth of the Gikuyu of Kenya, or witches battling with the Irish St Patrick, stories of nine women, often attending a goddess or linked to a heroic or divine male, exist across much of our world. Triggered by a local story still told in his native Dundee, Stuart McHardy has traced what seems to be memories of groups of nine women, most likely some kind of priestesses, across much of Europe and as far as Siberia, Korea, India and Africa. Whether as Pictish saints, Muses, Valkyries, Druidesses or witches, the tales of these groups of nine women transcend a vast range of cultural and linguistic boundaries. The painting of nine women dancing round a priapic male in a Catalonian cave painting over fifteen thousand years old suggests these groups may well have been one of the oldest cultural institutions humanity has known.
MacPherson's Rant : and Other Tales of the Scottish Fiddle
Stuart McHardy
bookPagan Symbols of the Picts
Stuart McHardy
bookThe Nine Maidens : Priestesses of the Ancient World
Stuart McHardy
bookThe Silver Chanter : Historical Tales of Scottish Pipers
Stuart McHardy
bookThe Quest for the Nine Maidens
Stuart McHardy
bookThe White Cockade : Historical Tales of the Jacobites
Stuart McHardy
bookA New History of the Picts
Stuart McHardy
bookThe Well of the Heads : Historical Tales of the Scottish Clans
Stuart McHardy
bookSchool of the Moon : The Highland Cattle-raiding Tradition
Stuart McHardy
bookScotland's Future Culture: Recalibrating a Nation's Identity
Stuart McHardy
bookThe Wey Forrit: A Polemic in Scots
Stuart McHardy
bookScotland's Future History
Stuart McHardy
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