Awen: The Quest of the Celtic Mysteries

by Mike Harris

Paperback, 2011

Status

Available

Call number

299.16

Publication

Skylight Press (2011), Paperback, 266 pages

Description

It was the Celtic bards who laid down the foundation of inner wisdom that has come down to us as Arthurian legend, passing their traditions to the Arthurian romancers of the 12th and 13th centuries. Thus the Celts provide an immediate bridge that leads to a very ancient world. Focusing on the Brythonic Celtic material and the "Taliesin" cult whose lineage preserved the mysteries through the Mabinogion and other texts, Awen: the Quest of the Celtic Mysteries reveals the sources of the British sacred tradition right back to the Neolithic and Bronze Ages, and, as some believe, further back still to even more ancient sources. Awen is a Welsh word often translated as "inspiration." However, in its fullness it has a much deeper meaning, an irradiation of the soul from paradisal origins. In the context of the Celtic folk-soul it casts the paradisal pattern by which the people and the land were harmonised. Through the aligned symbolism of the goddess, the sacred king and the stars, a compelling picture is built of a thriving mystery tradition which marries the constellations to the landscape, exploring as an example the interwoven five-fold and seven-fold stellar geometry of Moel ty Uchaf stone circle in North Wales, and the stellar alignments on the landscape of Cadair Idris.… (more)

Language

Physical description

266 p.; 5.98 inches

ISBN

190801136X / 9781908011367

Local notes

Spans the Celtic Tradition from historical facts of early cultural influences within the land through to the less known Atlantean influences which lie at the base of the Druidic Tradition. Subjects covered include Divine Kingship; the Templars and Gnosticism; Arthurian Legends encompassing Merlin and the Grail Myths; the bards (Aneirin, Taliesin and others) and their function carrying on the stories and atmospheres of old; and even approaches the subjects of Qabalah and the Temple of Jerusalem.
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