Thursday 7 November 2019

Deities of Crossroads in Celtic Mythology



Crossroads were considered supernatural regions imbued with the power of the Otherworld by the druids and Celtic tribes in Britain, Ireland and Europe.

The intersection of roads was thought to be a mysterious place as a meeting place between the mortal world and the Otherworld. Crossroads were known among the Celts as the unearthly abodes of the pagan gods, goddesses and nature spirits.

Crossroads were viewed as spiritual places because the deities and spirits were able to travel across the thin boundary, or veil, that separated the two dimensions.

Offerings were made at cross-roads to appease the god, goddess or nature spirit who protected travellers and pilgrims as they passed over crossroads.

They sought the help of the guardian of the crossroads to keep them from harm and ensured they journeyed along the right road to their destination.

Other spiritual locations included” forests, seashores, crossroads, territorial boundaries, caves, river fords, wells, bridges, and burial grounds”.

Such places held inherent power and were likely sites to encounter deities, the dead, and other non-human entities. To this day, many believe that to build on such sites is to invite disaster on the enterprise”
[Eir - Chaos and Tripartite Order: http://homepage.eircom.net/~shae/chapter5.htm ).

The guardian of the cross-roads was a liminal deity. “A liminal deity is a god or goddess in mythology who presides over thresholds, gates, or doorways; “a crosser of boundaries”.

Special types include dying-and-rising deities, various agricultural deities, and those who descend into the underworld: crossing the threshold between life and death representing the most fundamental of all boundaries.”
[Wikipedia – Liminal Deity: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liminal_deity).

The spirituality of crossroads was recognised by the druids who often gathered where roads met during the festival of Samhain. The unseen forces of the Otherworld were at their greatest during Samhain.

The thin veil between the two worlds was lifted and souls of the dead and the divine beings of the Otherworld roamed among the living. The druids listened to the voices of the souls who passed away to gain ancient knowledge and wisdom.

Shrines and altars were built at crossroads by the Celts and the Romans during the era of the Roman Empire. The Romans believed cross-roads presided over by a god, goddess or protective spirit.


Hecate was the goddess of magic, door-ways and boundaries. She was the divine guardian of cross-roads in Roman mythology.

The goddess, Hecate, was thought to protect against evil spirits and the unhappy souls of the dead. Votive offerings were traditionally made to the goddess, Hecate, at crossroads during the new moon.

Roads and cross-roads were important during the Imperial Age of Rome because of trade. Merchants were anxious that they and their goods would suffer some form of misfortune as they journeyed along roads.

The legions and other military personnel also used roads extensively while guarding the provinces of the Empire. Soldiers were concerned about ambushes as they marched along roads.

Travellers and pilgrims feared bands of thieves and robbers. Shepherds and herdsmen dreaded attacks by wolves, bears and other wild animals.

Coffins and the dead were taken along roads and passed cross-roads during burials. Roads and cross-roads became associated with restless souls and nature spirits in many Celtic lands.

Some souls were thought to have escaped during their journey to their burial grounds. They remained bound to roads and crossroads for an eternity.

The “Sweet Track” in Somerset was an ancient burial road used during Neolithic times. Ghosts and phantoms have been seen for centuries along the “Lych Way” in Dartmoor.

Appeasing the deities and spirits who guarded cross-roads was beneficial to those who passed over them.

Cernunnos was the powerful horned-god of forests, fertility and abundance in the Celtic world. He was considered a liminal deity as lord of the Underworld and his dominion over nature in the mortal realm.

The nature god, Cernunnos, transformed into a deity of commerce and prosperity among the Celts, particularly in Gaul, during the era of the Roman Empire. Cernunnos was venerated as a guardian of crossroads because of he was a liminal deity of life and death.

Lugh, the Celtic god of light, guided travellers so they journeyed along the right path to their destination. He was also venerated as a protective deity of cross-roads among the Celtic tribes.

The QuadriviƦ were venerated as goddesses of crossroads, at Cherbourg in Normandy in north-western France.

The druids and Celts in Ireland placed large stones at cross-roads. The “Speckled Stone” in County Sligo marks the boundary of three roads. The magical qualities of the Speckled Stone included the ability to cure sick children.

Marker-stones at cross-roads were imbued with supernatural powers because they were thought to be portals to the Otherworld.

The superstitions and strange tales of cross-roads continued after the arrival of Christianity.

The folklore of Britain and Ireland are filled with tales of unearthly black hounds, shape-shifters and ghosts haunting crossroads.

There were a great number of legends about huge black hounds which guarded crossroads. The black hounds were taken as manifestations of demons and other evil entities.

People also witnessed or heard the howls of frightening black dogs near bridges, gallows, cemeteries, ruins and along roads.
Black Shuck” was a demon hound that haunted rural areas in East Anglia for hundreds of years.

A ghostly black hound haunted the cross-roads of Oschaert in the folklore of Belgium. Legends claimed the only way to make the hound vanish was by standing in the middle of crossroads.

The spirits of crossroads were thought to be omens of bad luck, impending doom, sickness and even death. Those who saw or heard the supernatural entities were cursed with misfortune.

The screaming spirit of an ugly woman called the cyhyraeth haunted cross-roads in Welsh folklore. The cyhyraeth warned those who heard hers screams that death was near.

Judges at witch trials heard evidence of the accused performing forbidden magic at crossroads.

The Bethy Grave Crossroads in the English county of Gloucestershire was famed since the 1700s as the burial site of a witch known as Elizabeth Bastre.

The deities and nature spirits of crossroads were important among the druids and Celtic tribes as they protected travellers from harm. Many of the legends in the folklore of Britain, Ireland and Europe dated back to the time when the Celtic gods and goddesses were venerated at cross-roads.

For more information on the Celtic gods and goddesses of Britain, Ireland and Europe, please visit

Interesting Articles

Independent – Removal of Cursing Stones by Harry Keaney:

References

A Beautiful Resistance: At the Cross-roads by EMMA KATHRYN :

Fabulous Creatures, Mythical Monsters, and Animal Power Symbols: A Handbook by Cassandra Eason:


Wikipedia – Corpse Roads: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corpse_road