Origins of Wizardry
by Henryk Szubinski
The Wizard Merlin and the earliest records of the ability of European man to use magic to displace through evolution from the Neanderthal to the Modern man by the one example of such an individual that was the savage ,or the wild man ,or the wood man.
Thus Merlin lived 3 lives as;
1) Merlin the savage
2) Merlin the wild man
3) Merlin the WOOD MAN.
as combined into the mastery of the SPIRAL of spiral shape and spiral mathematics as magic.
by Henryk Szubinski
The Wizard Merlin and the earliest records of the ability of European man to use magic to displace through evolution from the Neanderthal to the Modern man by the one example of such an individual that was the savage ,or the wild man ,or the wood man.
Thus Merlin lived 3 lives as;
1) Merlin the savage
2) Merlin the wild man
3) Merlin the WOOD MAN.
as combined into the mastery of the SPIRAL of spiral shape and spiral mathematics as magic.
Keltic spiral:
From Wikipedia
date , 15,11,2016
time, 11:30
The first element of woodwose is usually explained as from wudu "wood", "forest". The second element is less clear. It has been identified as a hypothetical noun *wāsa "being", from the verb wesan, wosan "to be", "to be alive".[1] The Old English form is unattested, but it would have been *wudu-wāsa or *wude-wāsa. It may be also mean a forlorn or abandoned person, congate with the German "Waise" and Dutch "wees" which both mean "orphan."
Terminology in the Middle Ages was more varied. In Middle English, there was the term woodwose (also spelled wodewose, woodehouse, wudwas etc.).[2][3] Wodwos[4] occurs in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (ca. 1390).[5] The Middle English word is first attested in the 1340s, in references to the "wild man" decorative artwork popular at the time, in a Latin description of an embroidery of the Great Wardrobe of Edward III,[6] but as a surname it is found as early as 1251, of one Robert de Wudewuse. In reference to an actual legendary or mythological creature, the term is found in the 1380s, in Wycliffe's Bible, translating שעיר (LXX δαιμόνια, Latin pilosi) in Isaiah 13:21[7]The occurrences in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight date to shortly after Wycliffe's Bible, to ca. 1390.[8]
Old High German had schrat, scrato or scrazo, which appear in glosses of Latin works as translations for fauni, silvestres, or pilosi, identifying the creatures as hairy woodland beings.[3]Some of the local names suggest connections with figures from ancient mythology. Common in Lombardy and the Italian-speaking parts of the Alps is the term salvan or salvang, which derives from the Latin Silvanus, the name of the Roman tutelary god of gardens and the countryside.[3]Similarly, folklore in Tyrol and German-speaking Switzerland into the 20th century included a wild woman known as Fange or Fanke, which derives from the Latin fauna, the feminine form of faun.[3] Medieval German sources give as names for the wild woman lamia and holzmoia (or some variation);[9] the former clearly refers to the Greek wilderness demon Lamia while the latter derives ultimately from Maia, a Greco-Roman earth and fertility goddess who is elsewhere identified with Fauna and who exerted a wide influence on medieval wild-man lore.[3] Slavic has leshy "forest man".
Various languages and traditions include names suggesting affinities with Orcus, a Roman and Italic god of death.[3] For many years people in Tyrol called the wild man Orke, Lorke, or Noerglein, while in parts of Italy he was the orco or huorco.[10] The French ogre has the same derivation,[10] as do modern literary orcs.[11] Importantly, Orcus is associated with Maia in a dance celebrated late enough to be condemned in a 9th- or 10th-century Spanish penitential.[12]
The term was usually replaced in literature of the Early Modern English period by classically derived equivalents, or "wild man", but it survives in the form of the surname Wodehouse or Woodhouse (see Wodehouse family). "Wild man" and its cognates is the common term for the creature in most modern languages;[3] it appears in German as wilder Mann, in French as homme sauvage and in Italian as uomo selvatico "forest man".[13]
The mention of "Woodhouse" as the place "Woodburough"Wiltshire , in the prehistory of UK and some mentions of the
"Forrest" as many kings have this as part of their names and Wizardry may apply to this as the various uses of
trees for ancient PAGAN medicines such as the bark and head ache cures while other flora types that symbolise the interactions
of the WIZARD with NATURE also have power. The fact that there appeared in this place the "SIRIUS DISCLOSURE SYMBOL" 1992
which combines the 3 lives of Merlin, the 3 definitions of a forest, and the 3 prehuman post human evolutionary
Genes.
from MERLIN; A Casebook
The mention of the Merlin as being the records of Merlin as named in the cases of 3 persons that represented the same person through about 300 years of early European history.
The fact that he was a WILD MAN may be found in the descriptive.
and then.....
So that I could locate the "Wild man", I had to search in archaeology and the writings of Early history by way of HERODITUS "Histories"
date , 15,11,2016
time, 11:30
The first element of woodwose is usually explained as from wudu "wood", "forest". The second element is less clear. It has been identified as a hypothetical noun *wāsa "being", from the verb wesan, wosan "to be", "to be alive".[1] The Old English form is unattested, but it would have been *wudu-wāsa or *wude-wāsa. It may be also mean a forlorn or abandoned person, congate with the German "Waise" and Dutch "wees" which both mean "orphan."
Terminology in the Middle Ages was more varied. In Middle English, there was the term woodwose (also spelled wodewose, woodehouse, wudwas etc.).[2][3] Wodwos[4] occurs in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight (ca. 1390).[5] The Middle English word is first attested in the 1340s, in references to the "wild man" decorative artwork popular at the time, in a Latin description of an embroidery of the Great Wardrobe of Edward III,[6] but as a surname it is found as early as 1251, of one Robert de Wudewuse. In reference to an actual legendary or mythological creature, the term is found in the 1380s, in Wycliffe's Bible, translating שעיר (LXX δαιμόνια, Latin pilosi) in Isaiah 13:21[7]The occurrences in Sir Gawain and the Green Knight date to shortly after Wycliffe's Bible, to ca. 1390.[8]
Old High German had schrat, scrato or scrazo, which appear in glosses of Latin works as translations for fauni, silvestres, or pilosi, identifying the creatures as hairy woodland beings.[3]Some of the local names suggest connections with figures from ancient mythology. Common in Lombardy and the Italian-speaking parts of the Alps is the term salvan or salvang, which derives from the Latin Silvanus, the name of the Roman tutelary god of gardens and the countryside.[3]Similarly, folklore in Tyrol and German-speaking Switzerland into the 20th century included a wild woman known as Fange or Fanke, which derives from the Latin fauna, the feminine form of faun.[3] Medieval German sources give as names for the wild woman lamia and holzmoia (or some variation);[9] the former clearly refers to the Greek wilderness demon Lamia while the latter derives ultimately from Maia, a Greco-Roman earth and fertility goddess who is elsewhere identified with Fauna and who exerted a wide influence on medieval wild-man lore.[3] Slavic has leshy "forest man".
Various languages and traditions include names suggesting affinities with Orcus, a Roman and Italic god of death.[3] For many years people in Tyrol called the wild man Orke, Lorke, or Noerglein, while in parts of Italy he was the orco or huorco.[10] The French ogre has the same derivation,[10] as do modern literary orcs.[11] Importantly, Orcus is associated with Maia in a dance celebrated late enough to be condemned in a 9th- or 10th-century Spanish penitential.[12]
The term was usually replaced in literature of the Early Modern English period by classically derived equivalents, or "wild man", but it survives in the form of the surname Wodehouse or Woodhouse (see Wodehouse family). "Wild man" and its cognates is the common term for the creature in most modern languages;[3] it appears in German as wilder Mann, in French as homme sauvage and in Italian as uomo selvatico "forest man".[13]
The mention of "Woodhouse" as the place "Woodburough"Wiltshire , in the prehistory of UK and some mentions of the
"Forrest" as many kings have this as part of their names and Wizardry may apply to this as the various uses of
trees for ancient PAGAN medicines such as the bark and head ache cures while other flora types that symbolise the interactions
of the WIZARD with NATURE also have power. The fact that there appeared in this place the "SIRIUS DISCLOSURE SYMBOL" 1992
which combines the 3 lives of Merlin, the 3 definitions of a forest, and the 3 prehuman post human evolutionary
Genes.
from MERLIN; A Casebook
The mention of the Merlin as being the records of Merlin as named in the cases of 3 persons that represented the same person through about 300 years of early European history.
The fact that he was a WILD MAN may be found in the descriptive.
and then.....
So that I could locate the "Wild man", I had to search in archaeology and the writings of Early history by way of HERODITUS "Histories"
The mention of BARBARIANS in the research of Heroditus as the Early ancient Europeans from about 400 BC to AD 900 . The last remaining BArbarian was then the "wild man" Merlin as the example of an European and the earlier evolution from the wild "Neanderthal" as such the prize for evolution goes to the winner and the winnings are related to the HOUSE of KINGS where the evolutionary step was cultivated.
This was how Merlin founded the kingdom of Arthur as the first king of Brittany.
This was how Merlin founded the kingdom of Arthur as the first king of Brittany.
Because Merlin represents the taming of the wild man within the modern man as he developed in Early European history, the fact that Merlin had 2 mothers may indicate the difficulty by which the "wood man" was made to be both savage and magician .
The modern and the pre modernity are related to the ;
1) lady of the white lake
2) the dark witch
from Wikipedia
date ,15,11,2016
time 12:36
Lady of the Lake is the titular name of the ruler of Avalon in the Arthurian legend. She plays a pivotal role in many stories, including giving King Arthur his sword Excalibur, enchanting Merlin, and raising Lancelot after the death of his father. Different writers and copyists give the Arthurian character the name Nimue, Viviane, Vivien, Elaine, Ninianne, Nivian, Nyneve, or Evienne, among other variations.[1]
Reconstructions of a woman's face from the Neanderthal age.
Theese may have been the care takers of the type of WILD MAN we see in MERLIN . These would be the earliest European witches and would, according to legend live in the vicinity to the lakes where they practiced their art of magic. That Woman evolved earlier and prior to the earliest European man would account for the difficulty to image this as being a man. But the indications are that the 3 names of MERLIN and his existance in 3 places in early history may help to define this ,not as true evolution but as the way that it was at these times, meaning this was magic whereby a more evolved woman or witch could give birth to a man that had totally different looks than his CRO MAGNUM predecessors. As such these jumps in evolution were MAGIC and one such individual , Merlin was said to have 3 directions of the spirals that gave birth to the FOREST MAN or the WILD MAN or the CIVILIZED SAVAGE.
Because Merlin was very clever, he also had 3 names that were his indications of the reference to nature such as, Magician, Wizard, Sorcerer.
Data suggests that the Neandethal women went extinct but my concept of magic bases the change of the women and their birth of Merlin as the magic where by the ancient woman could then use magic on herself to become another more advanced type of modern human. The facts that this was the "goddess tradition" and the fact that their magic was related to the Earth and the GAIA may give indications that these first steps into the awareness of evolution are still with us in the many methods of witches as white and dark.
image of neanderthal woman
The modern and the pre modernity are related to the ;
1) lady of the white lake
2) the dark witch
from Wikipedia
date ,15,11,2016
time 12:36
Lady of the Lake is the titular name of the ruler of Avalon in the Arthurian legend. She plays a pivotal role in many stories, including giving King Arthur his sword Excalibur, enchanting Merlin, and raising Lancelot after the death of his father. Different writers and copyists give the Arthurian character the name Nimue, Viviane, Vivien, Elaine, Ninianne, Nivian, Nyneve, or Evienne, among other variations.[1]
Reconstructions of a woman's face from the Neanderthal age.
Theese may have been the care takers of the type of WILD MAN we see in MERLIN . These would be the earliest European witches and would, according to legend live in the vicinity to the lakes where they practiced their art of magic. That Woman evolved earlier and prior to the earliest European man would account for the difficulty to image this as being a man. But the indications are that the 3 names of MERLIN and his existance in 3 places in early history may help to define this ,not as true evolution but as the way that it was at these times, meaning this was magic whereby a more evolved woman or witch could give birth to a man that had totally different looks than his CRO MAGNUM predecessors. As such these jumps in evolution were MAGIC and one such individual , Merlin was said to have 3 directions of the spirals that gave birth to the FOREST MAN or the WILD MAN or the CIVILIZED SAVAGE.
Because Merlin was very clever, he also had 3 names that were his indications of the reference to nature such as, Magician, Wizard, Sorcerer.
Data suggests that the Neandethal women went extinct but my concept of magic bases the change of the women and their birth of Merlin as the magic where by the ancient woman could then use magic on herself to become another more advanced type of modern human. The facts that this was the "goddess tradition" and the fact that their magic was related to the Earth and the GAIA may give indications that these first steps into the awareness of evolution are still with us in the many methods of witches as white and dark.
image of neanderthal woman
possible free energy systems that are Sirius disclosure symbol related to physical 1/3 circumference input into the 3 vectors and their fragmented blue triangles as reflective when the Celtic symbol is applied to the 3 spirals in rotation as the method to define the spirals outside this system by way of the motion of 2 blue spectra variables in rotation so that the SIRIUS SYMBOL will reflect these 2 spirals from the Celtic symbol back into the SIRIUS SYMBOL .