Pagan Goddesses in the Early Germanic World: Eostre, Hreda and the Cult of Matrons
By (Author) Philip A. Shaw
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bristol Classical Press
1st December 2011
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
293.211
Paperback
128
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 9mm
221g
This book considers evidence for Germanic goddesses in England and on the Continent, and argues that modern scholarship has tended to focus too heavily on the notion of divine functions or spheres of activity, such as fertility or warfare, rather than considering the extent to which goddesses are rooted in localities and social structures - such local religious manifestations are more important to Germanic paganisms than is often supposed, and should caution us against assumptions of pan-Germanic traditional beliefs. Linguistic and onomastic evidence is not always well integrated into discussions of historical developments in the early Middle Ages, and this book provides both an introduction to the models and methods employed throughout, and a model for further research into the linguistic evidence for traditional beliefs among the Germanic-speaking communities of early medieval Europe.
It offers a fresh and productive method for examining fragmentary data for Anglo-Saxon (and, by implication, other pre-Christian) religion. It is a welcome contribution and should find a place in university libraries and on the shelves of early medievalists in general. -- Carole M. Cusack, University of Sydney * The Historian *
Philip A. Shaw is Lecturer in English Language and Old English, University of Leicester.