In
my book The Serpent Grail, I had initially explored
the Arthurian legends to see what light they could shed on
the link between the Grail and the serpent, but I decided
I should now spare the time to take a brief look at the history
of Britain and the period in which King Arthur and then Robin
Hood supposedly lived. Most historians place the Arthurian
period in the fifth century AD, and so this is where I began
my historical journey to find the 'real Arthur.'
In about 402 AD,
Stilicho, the Vandal Regent of Rome, needed the remainder
of his troops back in Rome to defend the homeland against
the invading Goths. This left Britain militarily vulnerable
and weak, and by 410 the Anglo-Saxons were mounting a terrible
invasion that set the countryside alight. But why did the
Saxons delay their invasion? The answer lies within the extremely
clever way the Romans had previously cleared the country of
what they called 'barbarians' - i.e. those people who would
have either utilized inside intelligence to assist any invading
force or who would have undermined the existing rule.
"Britain was near
to death until Stilicho arrived, and that with the Saxons
defeated, the seas were safer and the Picts were broken, thereby
making Britain secure." So wrote the early Christian
poet and historian, Claudian, in 399 AD. Even the Welsh monk
Gildas (c.504570) described how "the legions came into
close contact with the cruel enemies and slew great numbers
of them. All of them were driven beyond the borders and the
humiliated natives rescued from the bloody savagery which
awaited them."
For eight years
then, between the Romans leaving and the Saxons invading,
it appears that Britain enjoyed a brief time of relevant peace.
This peace was shattered violently as the Saxons instigated
their bloody onslaught in the summer of 410. By winter, the
British 'civitates' had simply had enough of their Roman pretender,
Constantine III, and the old Roman system, and so they decided
to go it alone. However, the British message to the Emperor
Honorius left open a small in-road just in case they were
making a mistake. Britain wanted to stay in the Roman Empire,
not as subjects but as allies aiding each other with trade
and defense. So Britain became an autonomous state within
the Empire, especially after the sacking of Rome by Alaric's
Goths in 410.
This balance of
power continued, and in 417 AD the units of Comes Brittaniarum
partially reoccupied the Saxon forts along the south-east
coast. This British force comprised six units of cavalry and
three of infantry, a unique mobile field army whose method
of fighting was influenced by the Scythian warrior-elite who
had been brought to Britain by the Romans. These Scythians
also brought many of the serpent related traditions I had
previously found associated with Arthur in The Serpent
Grail including the worship of Uther/Zeus and the
plunging of the blood soaked sword into and out of the ground
as an offering to the Earth Goddess.
Following the
death of Honorius, Rome suffered badly at the hands of usurpers
and the final remnants of the Roman army vanished from Britain.
The exact date of their departure is not known, although Nennius,
the eighth-century Christian historian, tells us that Vortigern
had become King of Britain by 425 AD. This probably referred
to the southern regions and those parts of Britain previously
held by the Romans. Vortigern, it seems, filled the void that
Rome had left behind.
Whether there
is any truth in it or not, the Historia Brittonium states
that it was Vortigern who invited Hengist and Horsa, the Norse
warriors, to settle in Kent, only to later argue and fight
against them. The old system of Roman rule finally began to
crumble.
Vortigern's answer
to his new Norse problem was to invite yet more foreigners
to settle in the country, creating for them settlements called
foederati. Was this wise council on Vortigern's part?
It may just have been his only answer, and a Roman answer
at that, for the Romans had utilized this settlement procedure
themselves - albeit with a lot more class. The Romans had
also been powerful enough to keep these settlements under
control, and had more incentives to offer them in exchange
for their loyalty, whereas Vortigern had no other choice and
the new found settlers knew this.
Word then reached
Vortigern that the Picts and Scots were massing on the borders,
and he simply did not have the power to repel them. His tactic
was again Roman: bring in other Barbarians and get them to
fight each other. It seems, however, that rather than settling
warrior Barbarians on his coastlines in order to protect Britain,
Vortigern opened the floodgates to the land-hungry Saxons.
Vortigern was defeated by Hengist in 455, the lowlands were
put to the fire and the Britons fled the country, heading
for Spain and Armorica. The economy collapsed, and by 461
Vortigern the Great was dead.
There was a recovery
of British fortunes a decade or so later, when Ambrosius Aurelianus,
thought to be the son of a Roman consul, fought against the
Saxons. On Marlborough Downs in Wiltshire there is a huge
earthwork, built by a British chieftain between 29002500
BC and later used by the Romans and Saxons. Archaeological
evidence of battles from the 5th century clearly show evidence
that the Saxons were being repulsed and so we have actual
archaeological evidence to back the tradition and texts of
the battles of Ambrosius Aurelianus.
These same traditions
and texts then tell us of a great King called Arthur, who
upheld the pride of the British nation through various documented
battles. Many historians state that the true Arthur is elusive
in the texts of the time, but there are still hundreds of
Welsh texts that refer to Arthur and which have not yet been
translated into English. Not being a Welsh scholar, I unfortunately
have to leave this task to them, but we should remember that
there is more yet to learn.
This history of
the fifth-century Britons is interesting, but only partially
of interest in our search for the Grail. The Romans had brought
the Scythians to Britain, and these Scythians also brought
with them their cultural belief systems. They fought well,
and in all probability, aided the Britons with training in
their warrior ways.
The memory of
these cultural additions seeped into the British consciousness
and became British, Celtic, and eventually 'New Age.' This
very real struggle for power and for the defense of the realm
was an ideal backdrop to the mystery that is now called the
'Arthurian cycle.'
There probably
was an Ambrosius, an Arthur and a Vortigern, and they doubtless
fought great battles and overcame terrible troubles. But would
they have understood the idea of the Grail as the 'serpent
people' we discovered in our book would have understood it?
I doubt it. Of course, they would have been familiar with
stories of a legendary 'magical substance' that could help
soldiers recover, heal battle wounds, and 'resurrect' them
in great numbers. This understanding would have come from
what they had picked up from the myths which had been encoded
with the wisdom of the shamanic 'serpent people,' otherwise
known as the Shining Ones.
This magical substance
was 'mixed' in the sacred mixing-bowl, and Britain in the
fifth century was itself a great and wondrous 'mixing-bowl.'
Cultures from across the known world traveled to it. Exports
of British copper, lead, tin, and much more were shipped across
Europe and the Mediterranean. There is even evidence that
the ancient Egyptians visited our shores and that a Pharaoh's
daughter may well have settled in Ireland. Folklore tradition
also tells us that Joseph of Arimathea visited these shores,
and owned tin mines in Cornwall although this I seriously
doubt. If traditions such as these are far from truth, I had
to ask myself, why were these strange tales invented?
If, as it seems,
Britain was an important place, or even just as important
as say Gaul, then why could Britain not also be the new home
to the secret of the Grail? As we have shown in The Serpent
Grail, the Grail on the 'first level' or venom, is not
place specific. It is a secret held by all the civilizations
of the globe, called many things, but essentially the same
substance.
It was now time
to move forward historically from the 5th century history
to the medieval period. This was a time when the true symbolic
Arthur was formed. The Arthur who fought with dragons or serpents;
the Arthur who married his Guinevere - the Queen of Serpents;
the Arthur who would have a shape-shifting father named Uther,
another term for Zeus. This was also the time when another
character emerged who was also joined with a peculiar female
counterpart and who materialized from the mists of history
as a mythical hero. This hero was Robin Hood.
Etymologically
Robin comes from the Norman 'Robert,' a form of the
Germanic Hrodebert and it originally meant 'famous' or 'bright'
or even and more pertinently 'to shine.' This is and has always
been an indication of one who has achieved illumination or
enlightenment.
Robin Hood is
therefore the 'Bright Hood,' a similar name to the Naga serpent
worshippers or deities of India, with their illuminated serpent
or cobra hoods. As many have previously stated there are strong
links between the origins of Robin Hood and the Green Man,
who is also the ancient Egyptian god Osiris and the Greek-Roman
god Dionysus/Bacchus, and so we should hope to find something
of interest in the many stories surrounding this enigmatic
character.
It's no surprise
to also discover that the Templars are very much associated
with Robin, and many of the tales of Robin also match in format
those of King Arthur. In the popular retelling by Henry Gilbert
(Robin Hood, 1912) we find mention of a pig-like serpent.
Robin wants to know who the hermit of Fountains Dale is and
how the one named as 'Peter the Doctor' managed to cure people:
"Oh," said Nick
with a smile, "I meant no ill-will to Peter. Often hath his
pills cured our villeins when they ate too much pork, and
my mother rest her soul said that naught under
the sun was like his lectuary of Saint Evremond."
Peter the Doctor
speaks, "I deserve well of all my patients, but," and
his eyes flashed "that great swinehead oaf of a hermit
monk Tuck by name, and would that I could tuck him
in the deepest, darkest hole in Windleswisp marsh!
That great ox-brained-beguiled me into telling him of all
my good specifics. With his eyes as wide and soft as a cow's
he looked as innocent as a mawkin, and asked me this and that
about the cures which I had made, and ever he seemed the more
to marvel and to gape at my wisdom and my power. The porcine
serpent! He did but spin his web the closer about me to my
own undoing and destruction. When I had told him all, and
was hopeful that he would buy a phial of serpent's oil of
Jasper a sure and certain specific, my good freemen,
against ague and stiffness."
So Friar Tuck
is like a snake-pig and Peter the Wise Doctor hopes to sell
him "serpent oil." It is likely that Gilbert used the "serpent
oil" in the early nineteenth century as this peculiar substance
was quite fashionable at the time and no matter how hard I
searched I could not find Gilbert's source material.
There are elements
of the Robin Hood myth that relate to other legends. The 'tree
of life' is seen as 'Robin's Larder Tree,' supplying all that
could be required like the 'Horn of Plenty' or the 'cauldron'
of Celtic folklore.
Robin's link with
the 'Horned God' is also telling as he is Lord and Master
over the human 'animals' of the Forest and they are guardians
of their stolen treasure, like the hoarding, serpent Nagas
of Hinduism. They do good deeds for those who deserve them
and dastardly deeds to those who do not. The horned element
is also telling, as the horns were symbolic of enlightenment
or illumination, just as Moses is often depicted with horns
whereas the meaning is simply 'shining.' We must also remember
that Moses was taught in Egypt, the home of the Green Man
Osiris, and that Moses was the one who raised the Brazen Serpent
in the wilderness to heal the people of Israel.
In the connected
tales of Robin Goodfellow, the 'trickster of the woods' also
known as Puck, there is also the link of Sib, the fairy who
lives in the hillside and is linked as being a 'serpent spirit'
of healing. Robin falls in love with his lady of the waters
or Queen of Heaven (a title also given to Isis the sister/wife
of Osiris and also a title given to Guinevere) later to be
known as the Maid Marion (Marion/Mary coming from Mer = Sea/water/wisdom)
and in many ways is undermining the new Christian world that
forced itself upon this ancient mixture of paganism.
Puck incidentally
is thought to have a much older pedigree, being traced back
to an Irish Pan-like deity known as Pouka. Indeed,
Robin Goodfellow is said to be born of a human mother and
a god-like father in the form of Oberon (king of the fairies
and Ob meaning serpent.) He is also green like the 'Green
Man,' which is the special healing color attributed to many
things surrounding the serpent cult such as the Emerald
Tablet, the color of initiation into Gnostic mysteries associated
with the Masons, and the Green Glass of the Grail.
It is believed
by many that the crescent shape of Robin's bow recalls the
crescent moon and horns of the pagan 'Horned God,' as does
the horn Robin uses to call his people together. Even Little
John in the tale of Robin Hood and Sir Guy de Gisborne
is tied to a tree, being saved at the last minute by Robin
disguised as Sir Guy. As with most folklore there is symbolism,
myth, legend and probably some element of a real origin.
Robin Hood may
well have some aspects of his personality and acts in real
people, but most historians would steer away from stating
anything as fact. As Fran and Geoff Doel point out in their
book Robin Hood: Outlaw or Greenwood Myth, "the origin
of Robin Hood was obscure ... suggests a mythological or folklore
origin."
What we also find
however in some of the earlier tales is that Robin Hood and
Little John - like Jesus and John the Baptist - were equals.
Walter Bower, in the 15th century, said that Robin Hood together
with Little John and their companies rose to prominence. This
in itself points out that both Robin and John were seen to
each have their own followers very much like Jesus and John.
They are therefore and must be the 'twins' of Gnosticism,
like Castor and Pollux - the duality and balance.
Other elements
of Robin's life and especially his death show an ancient link:
"Curiously the
ballad of Robin Hood's Death also has a ritualistic element,
with foreknowledge and ritual 'banning' and a death by bleeding,
which is suspiciously close to the ritualistic dismemberment
of other European and Asiatic Springtime gods and heroes such
as Tammuz, Adonis and Osiris. The cognitive connections between
the outlaw and Robin the bird may be coincidental, but the
possibilities of a Greenwood myth underlying the later outlaw
traditions needs to be examined." (Doel, Robin Hood: Outlaw
or Greenwood Myth.)
Tammuz, Adonis
and Osiris are vegetation gods of greenness. Indeed Osiris
himself in the Pyramid Texts at Saqqara is called the
'Great Green' and often appears green skinned as a symbol
of 'resurrection and life.' The battle between Osiris and
Set seems all the more familiar now in the struggle that ensues
between Robin and his archrival the Sheriff of Nottingham.
Osiris becomes Horus when resurrected and we find that it
is Horus who is protected by the Wadjet snake the green
snake. Even in the way he dies there are links with older
mysteries. Robin is ritualistically bled to death like the
ancient pagan sacrifices. The deed is done by the Abbess of
Kirklees, who acts as the priestess in some ancient pagan
ritual. Could it be that the tales of Robin are more ancient
than previously believed? Could they really be tales of ancient
Egypt and even Sumeria? Passed down over millennia and altered
by time?
The fact remains
that Christianity was stomping all over old pagan beliefs,
rewriting tales that had existed for hundreds of years. But,
as the Christians were destroying cultural history, there
were those who defended it. The Masons of the period in which
Robin Hood grew to popularity were hiding their symbols and
pagan ideas in the framework and masonry of Churches across
Europe. Green Men sprang up in every sacred Christian place.
Strange characters seen hiding in foliage, peeping out like
messengers from the past.
These peculiar
and somewhat disturbing images to modern eyes are none other
than the characters from the pagan past - gods and deities
like Herne the 'Horned God' and many other images of Mother
Goddesses. The truth to the past of man's religious upbringing
can still be seen in the stonework of Christian churches and
Cathedrals, in places like Rosslyn Chapel and Lichfield Cathedral.
But not just in the stone. We must also look to the legends,
for as we can see the tales of Robin Hood are not only linked
to the ancient past they are also linked inextricably to the
tales of Arthur and his search for the Holy Grail with instances
like those of the knight Gawain decapitating the Green Giant
and mysterious images of a Green Knight. It is seen clearly
in the fact that the 'plays' of old, enacted by local people
and paraded through streets, have changed titles across time
and location. From the St. George (also associated with Osiris
and who was popularized by the Knights Templar) play to the
Robin Hood and Green Jack, from Wildman to Green George. The
basic story is the same, but the names change. Our past has
been hidden; our Gnostic heritage is untold; our birthrights
stolen by a jealous Church.
Philip
Gardiner is the author of The Serpent Grail: The Truth
Behind the Holy Grail, Elixir of Life and Philosopher's
Stone. Also, The Shining Ones: The World's Most Powerful
Secret Society Revealed, and the forthcoming Gnosis:
The Secret of Solomon's Temple Revealed. He is a researcher,
historian and propaganda expert based in the UK. He does Tours
via www.powerplaces.com
and his websites can be seen at www.gardinerosborn.com,
www.serpentgrail.com,
www.theshiningones.com
and www.philipgardiner.net
for more information. To contact the publishers go to www.dbponline.co.uk.
|