THE HEROIC AGE

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    The Heroic Age

    A Journal of Early Medieval Northwestern Europe

    Issue 11 (May 2008) | Issue Editors: Larry Swain &

    Linda Malcor

    Founded 1998 | ISSN 1526-1867

    The Germanic Sword In The Tree: Parallel Development

    Or Diffusion?1

    C. Scott Littleton

    Occidental College, Los Angeles, CA

    Linda A. Malcor

    Independent Researcher, Lake Forest, CA

    © 2008 by C. Scott Littleon and Linda A. Malcor. All rights reserved. This edition copyright

    © 2008 by The Heroic Age. All rights reserved.

    Abstract: In this paper we consider whether the Norse story of the "Sword in the Branstock"

    and the Arthurian tale of the "Sword in the Stone" may represent two variants of a tale about

    a celestial event that occurred 2160 B.C.E.

    Introduction

    §1. Scholars have long pointed to the Arthurian tale of the "Sword in the Stone" and the

     Norse story of the "Sword in the Branstock" as examples of the parallel development of an

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    Indo-European myth that became part of an epic tradition in the Celtic and Germanic cultures

    (e.g., Bruce 1958, 1:145). In this paper we reexamine these two tales and consider whether 

    they may represent two variants of a story that was born as the result of a celestial event that

    was viewed from somewhere near the northern shore of the Black Sea in 2160 B.C.E.

    (Barber and Barber 2004, 210).2

    The Sword in the Stone

    §2. The legend of the Sword in the Stone is well known today through the numerous

    retellings of the Arthurian tale in stories, plays and film (Plate 1). The basic story, as it took 

    its mature form in Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur  (Malory 1:15-20), relates how the twelve-

    year-old Arthur accompanies his foster brother, Sir Kay, to a tournament in London.3 Arthur 

    forgets Kay's sword and runs to retrieve it. On the way, he passes a churchyard where he

    spies a sword embedded in an anvil atop a stone. Arthur pulls the Sword from the Stone and

    takes it to Kay, who claims to be the one who drew the blade. A series of tests prove that no

    one except Arthur can draw the sword, so the young boy is crowned "King of all England" as

    the golden words on the sword prophesy.

    §3. In From Scythia to Camelot  (Littleton and Malcor 2000, 181-194), we argued that this

    variant of the Sword in the Stone legend was transmitted to Europe by the Alans during the

    fifth century C.E. In the Nart sagas, folk narratives told by the Ossetians, who are the

    descendents of the Alans, there are many elements of the Sword in the Stone story, but not

    the explicit motif of the weapon being drawn from a stone or anvil (Littleton and Malcor 

    2000, 184, 186). The ancient Alans were, however, observed practicing a religion associated

    with their war god, and, as part of this ritual, they embedded a sword in the ground

    (presumably removing it at some later point in time; Ammianus Marcellinus 31.4.22;

    Littleton 1982; Littleton and Malcor 2000, xxvvii, 186). This ritual is clearly a survival of the

    ritual the Scythians performed in honor of their war god, as that ceremony was described by

    Herodotus (4.59-62). What is intriguing for the purposes of this paper, however, is that in the

    ritual as described by Herodotus, the iron sword is planted neither in an anvil nor in the

    ground but rather in an altar atop a pile of wood. With this in mind, let us take a look at the

    Germanic variant of the tale.

    The Sword in the Branstock 

    §4. The main reason that scholars have assumed that the Germanic variant of this legend is

    the product of parallel development instead of diffusion is that the Germanic sword is veryclearly embedded in a tree rather than in an anvil or a stone. When the Germanic tale is

    viewed, however, through its proper lens, it quickly becomes apparent that this difference is a

    matter of perspective rather than a material difference.

    §5. The Norsemen told of the "Sword in the Branstock" in the "Sigurdsaga" portion of the

    Volsungasaga (Guerber 1985, 253-258) (Plate 2). At the wedding of Signy and Siggeir, a

     blue-cloaked man with one eye plunges a sword in the Branstock, an ancient oak. The man

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    declares that the sword will belong to the warrior who can pull it free, then he leaves. The

    wedding guests identify him as Odin.4 Several warriors, including Signy's father, Volsung, try

    to draw the weapon and fail. Sigmund, the tenth and youngest son, however, succeeds.

    Through Siggeir's treachery, Sigmund and his brothers are condemned to death and the sword

    is taken from Sigmund. The brothers are chained to an oak in the forest and each night one is

    killed by a she-wolf.5 Finally, only Sigmund is left. Signy helps Sigmund escape. Siggeir 

    eventually recaptures Sigmund along with Sinfiolti, Signy's youngest son by Sigmund, andorders that the two heroes be buried alive. The gravegoods that Signy throws into Sinfiolti's

     portion of the grave (which is covered by a stone roof) contain Sigmund's sword. Sinfiotli

     plunges the sword through the stone that separates him from Sigmund, cuts an opening

    through stone and iron, and father and son escape. Sigmund then burns Siggeir to death and

     becomes king.

    The Historical Context

    §6. Tacitus's Germania is our main source for ethnographic data regarding the early

    Germanic peoples (Puhvel 1987, 189). Cassius Dio, Ammianus Marcellinus and a few other Greco-Roman authors round out the very short list of written texts we have about this culture

    (Puhvel 1987, 189) prior to their Christianization by missionaries in the late eighth century

    (Puhvel 1987, 190).6 The Embedded Sword story most likely spread to Iceland via Viking

    settlement in 874 C.E., but Iceland was officially Christianized by 1000 C.E. (Puhvel 1987,

    190). Snorri Sturluson, who composed the Prose Edda, the main source for this tale, didn't

    live until two centuries later (1178–1241 C.E.; Puhvel 1987, 190).7 In other words, the

    Germanic sources are recorded late, and, as Jaan Puhvel puts it, are of an "antiquarian (rather 

    than primary) nature" and show "diffusionary influences from classical cultures" (1987, 191).

    Puhevl adds that Snorri's material as well as the Poetic Edda also show "diffusionary

    influences from the general direction of the Near East" (Puhvel 1987, 219) (see Map 1).

    §7. Herodotus (4.21, 4.46-50) put the Scythians as neighbors to the Celts and the Sarmatians

    as neighbors to the Scythians. Caesar places the Germans between the Celts and the

    Scythians, with the Danube as an arbitrary dividing line that was probably chosen more as a

    result of his political ambitions than of any careful ethnographic observation (Wells 2001,

    115-116). Strabo thought of the Germans as Celts (Wells 2001, 116), and Cassius Dio called

    Roman Germania "Keltica", reserving "Germania" for the area "between the Rhine and Elbe

    Rivers" (Wells 2001, 117).8 So, the divisions in ancient texts were not made on the basis of 

    languages spoken or perceived similarities of cultures but rather on geographic location

    (Wells 2001, 117).

    The Basic Comparison

    §8. The basic elements of the embedded weapon being a sword and of the younger brother 

    withdrawing the blade and becoming the future king are about as far as most comparisons go

     before turning from the similarities to the differences between the tales. Several key parallels,

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    however, are contained in the material between the withdrawal of the sword and Sigmund's

    ascension to the kingship. Among them are that Arthur's sword in the anvil atop a stone is in

    a graveyard and that Sinfiotli and Sigmund use the sword from the Branstock to cut through

    stone and iron as they escape from a grave.9

    §9. Bruce (1958, 145) argued that the legend of the Sword and the Stone derived from the

    Greek story of Theseus and the Germanic Volsungasaga. The story's pattern, however, was

    more widespread than those variants and parts of it appear in Herodotus's ancient account of 

    the religion of the Scythians.

    Transmission

    §10. The spread of the tale that developed, as we consider all of these variants, strongly

    suggests that transmission occurred via the steppe nomads. As these horse-riding warriors

    came into contact with other cultures and transmitted their knowledge of cavalry warfare and

    of forging iron, they also transmitted stories about the deity who oversaw both war and

    smithing, a combination that only occurred among the steppe nomads (see Map 2).

    §11. The knowledge of iron working first appeared in the "second half of the third

    millennium B.C. in Anatolia" (Milisauskas 1978, 253).10 Milisauskas (1978, 254) noted that

    the Scythian influence in La Téne art could have come in with iron technology,11 and this

    agrees with what we find in the patterns of transmission for the tale of the Sword in the

    Stone. Knowledge of iron-working first showed up ca. 600–300 B.C.E. among Germanic

     peoples in the area of the Jastorf culture (Schutz 1983, 309), south of the Elbe and north of 

    the Weser. This was not, however, forging swords. The Germanic peoples did not start

    forging iron into longer swords intended for use by cavalry until the Late Roman Iron Age,

    ca. 180–400 C.E. (Hedeager 1992, 13).

    §12. The identity of the horse-riding elite warrior emerged in Europe in the first century

    B.C.E. (Wells 2001, 120). Ca. 50–1 B.C.E., warrior graves with spurs, horse equipment, and

    long swords show up on both sides of the Rhine as far north as central Sweden (Wells 2001,

    121). This style of grave seems to be influenced by Sarmatian burials, as these nomads

    tended to substitute horse equipment and/or pieces of horses for the full horse interments that

    we find in the burials of other cultures. The style of cavalry equipment also seems to have

     been transmitted from the Sarmatians.

    §13. Caesar considered the "German" cavalry to be his best mercenaries (Gallic War  8.10). It

    is no accident that shortly after the German cavalry units start showing up in the Roman army

    (48–36 B.C.E.; Wells 2001, 121), Sarmatian units also start service as Roman allies. For 

    instance, Tiberius stationed the Iazyges between the Danube and the Tisa as Roman allies ca.

    20 C.E. (Millar 1966, 276). We know that during the Marcomannic Wars of 166/7–175 and

    177–180, the Iazyges, a tribe of Sarmatians, were allied with the Marcomanni and the Quadi,

    two tribes of the Suebi (Millar 1966, 115). In 175, when 5,500 Iazyges were set to Britain,

    "cavalry from the Marcomanni, Quadi and Nuristae were sent . . . [to] Syria" (Millar 1966,

    115).12

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    §14. While the Huns had had significant contact with the Germanic peoples prior to the

    recording of the stories in the Volsungasaga, Alano-Sarmatian peoples had had heavy

    interaction with their Germanic neighbors long before the Huns appeared on the scene. After 

    the Huns defeated the Massagetae in 175 B.C.E., a tribe of Sarmatians founded a kingdom

    and became known as the Royal Sarmatians (Millar 1966, 284). This group is thought by

    several scholars to have been the Iazyges in particular (Millar 1966, 289), and they may have

    earned their title by defeating and absorbing the Royal Scythians, who were previously

    settled in the area where the Romans report the Iazyges. By 50 C.E. the bulk of the

    Sarmatians were located in the vicinity of the Tisa and the Danube (Millar 1966, 289). This

     put them in close contact with several Germanic peoples. Tacitus (Germania 46) tells that

    there were several tribes who were so intermingled that he could no long tell which was

    German and which was Sarmatian.13 At least one of those tribes, the Bastarrae, were in

    contact with the Sarmatians by the third century B.C.E. (Todd 1992, 24).14

    The Story in the Stars

    §15. Anyone who attempted to navigate by the stars, whether on an actual sea or a sea of 

    grass, would notice that something terrifying happens over the course of centuries: North

    moves. (Plate 3) For instance, ca. 2500 B.C.E. Thuban in the constellation Draco was the

     pole star (Barber and Barber 2004, 198-199).15 In 2140 B.C.E., Polaris, which is in the Little

    Dipper, became the pole star, and about 13,000 years from now Vega, in the constellation

    Lyra, will become the pole star (Barber and Barber 2004, 198).16 The pole takes roughly

    2160 years to pass through each sign of the Zodiac (Barber and Barber 2004, 199).17

    Accordingly, the spring equinox shifted from Taurus into Aries in 2160 B.C.E. (Barber and

    Barber 2004, 208)

    §16. There were two ways of telling stories about this event. One was to focus on the

     precession of the pole through the various signs of the Zodiac (Plate 4), which, as we know

    it, was created roughly 5,000 years ago (Krupp 1978, 262-263), ca. 3,000 B.C.E.18 This is

    what happened in the case of narratives about Mithras. "The precession out of Taurus into

    Aries occurred nearly two thousand years before Mithraism became popular" (Barber and

    Barber 2004, 206), yet it is quite clear from the imagery of the warrior slaying the bull, with a

    scorpion and serpent attacking from below and a dog lapping up the bull's blood, that the

    myths celebrated by the cult carried information taken from the sky. The artists were not

    subtle about the connection: Most Mithraic images include the sun, moon and stars. (Plate 5)

    In the worship of Mithras, we have the warrior stabbing the bull, Aries attacking the adjacent

    sign of Taurus (Barber and Barber 2004, 206). The hero of the story of the Ram (e.g., theGolden Fleece) can replace the Ram in such tales, and this is how some cultures told the tale

    of the celestial precession.

    §17. The second way to tell the story was to focus on the pole itself and "northshift".19

    While Mithras attacks the zodiacal sign that the celestial pole is leaving, the hero in the

    Sword in the Stone story wields the pole itself, in this case a sword that is sticking into the

    opposite sign. In 2160 B.C.E. that sign was Libra, but Libra did not become a scale until the

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    Romans decided to reinstate the old Babylonian system.20 For the Hittites, Libra was a throne

    and for the Chaldeans, Libra was an altar.21

    §18. The pole itself is depicted as many different things, from a spindle to a churn. In the

    nomadic cultures of Eurasia, the pole was sometimes a tent pole (Sullivan 1996, 80; Barber 

    and Barber 2004, 200), but we think it could also be a sword. In the Germanic cultures, the

     pole was the World Tree, Yggdrasil, which is represented in the Volsungasaga by the

    Branstock. (Plate 6) A tree turns up in some retellings of the northshift story because the

    celestial pole is the World Tree in addition to being the sword, which is why the sword is in

    the tree in the Germanic tradition.22

    §19. Either the Hittites or the Chalybes were responsible for the addition of the anvil and

    other ironworking pieces of the tale. In the case of the steppe cultures, the war god was also

    associated with the forging of iron, and when these cultures transmitted the knowledge of 

    how to forge iron, they transmitted the stories of their war god as well.23 The overall

    distribution of the tale matches the pattern of the steppe cultures spreading south, west and

    east out of the steppes. Since the Alans were in the Caucasus region and had more contact

    with the Hittites and Chalybes than the Iazyges did, they developed a form of the sword ritualthat dropped out the wood and embedded the sword in the ground. The Iazyges, however,

    absorbed the Royal Scythians, who practiced the Sword in the Altar atop a Pile of Wood

    variant and then had close contact with the Germanic peoples who saw the celestial pole as a

    tree rather than a sword. When idea of the cavalry warrior transmitted from the Iazyges to the

    Germanic peoples, the practice of forging iron transmitted with it. Images merged, and the

    resulting tale became that of the Sword in the Tree instead of the Sword in the Stone.24

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    Figures

    Plate 1: Arthur pulling Excalibur from the anvil [Back]

    Plate 2: Odin thrusts the sword into the Branstock [Back]

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    Map 1: The world according to Herodotus, ca. 450 BCE [Back]

    Map 2: Modern Europe [Back]

    Plate 3: Northshift [Back]

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    Plate 4: The Zodiac, showing the precession of the equinox [Back]

    Plate 5: Mithras slaying a bull [Back]

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    Plate 6: Yggrasil, the World Tree [Back]

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    Notes

    1.  An earlier version of this paper was presented on Friday, April 21, 2006, at the Annual

    Meeting of the Western States Folklore Society, Berkeley, CA. [Back]

    2.  By this date, Near Eastern cultures were squarely in the middle of the Bronze Age.

     [Back]

    3.  Twelve seems to be a typical age for the hero to begin his career. For instance, in the

    Icelandic Saga of Hrolf Kraki Bothvar and his brothers are all twelve when they start to show

    their prowess and begin pulling weapons from a stone. [Back]

    4.  In the Hrolf Kraki, Bothvar, the hero who pulled the sword from the stone, senses that

    Odin is about appear just before he dies. Although Thor appears to be the chief diety in many

    areas, Odin "dominated in . . . Viking society" (Puhvel 1987, 192), and it is the Viking variant

    that we have preserved in the Prose Edda. Despite Odin's deceptively small role in Tacitus as

    well as in later sources, he was the actual head of the Germanic pantheon (Puhvel 1987, 193).

    Although Odin has magical and priestly proclivities, as Puhvel puts it, he "holds down much

    of [the warrior-god] . . . slot" (1987, 204). [Back]

    5.  Odin is associated with wolves, particularly werewolves, the !lfhe"nar ("wolf-skinned"),

    who were analogous to the berserker ("bear-skinned"; Puhvel 1987, 196). That there are two

    types of frenzied warriors associated with Odin may indicate that we have a doublet caused

     by impact from the Alano-Sarmatian—or Scythian—tradition. Essentially on top of where

    Caesar says the German peoples were a few centuries later, the Neuri may have had a

    significant impact on the development of Germanic lore, since these were the "Scythians"

    that Herodotus singled out as "werewolves", creatures that are specifically associated with

    Odin in Germanic tradition. Two of Odin's companions, Geri and Freki, are also wolves(Puhvel 1987, 197), so when we have a she-wolf figuring in a story that began with Odin

     plunging a sword into the World Tree, it's very likely that the she-wolf is acting as Odin's

    agent. [Back]

    6.  There is a little information from "Frankish and Langobard laws" and from Anglo-Saxon

    literature (Puhvel 1987, 190), but none of these contain the story of the Sword in the

    Branstock. [Back]

    7.  "Germanic materials from the High Middle Ages . . . show heavy contamination by

    Continental literary convention" (Puhvel 1987, 190) and are of little importance to the

    discussion of Germanic mythic tradition. [Back]

    8.  For Greek writers, the Celts generally "occupied the lands to the west [and] the Scythians

    to the east" (Wells 2001, 115). [Back]

    9.  This pattern can be seen in seemingly unrelated tales. For instance, while Thor is having a

     piece of whetstone removed from where it is embedded in his head, he tells of making the

    Morning Star out of the frozen toe of the husband of the woman who is using magic to

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    remove the stone. The woman, Gr #a, became so upset that the stone "remained embedded in

    Thor's skull" (Puhvel 1987, 202). Here there is clearly an astral connection with a warrior and

    a stone associated with a sword. [Back]

    10.  By 1270 the knowledge of iron working had spread to Greece (Milisauskas 1978, 253).

     [Back]

    11.  The Halstatt culture shows evidence of iron working ca. 1000–500 B.C.E., and the La

    Téne culture shows similar evidence ca. 500 B.C.E.–1 C.E. (Phillips 1980, 228). [Back]

    12.  The Nuristae may be the same people that Herodotus calls the "Neuri." [Back]

    13.  These were the Peucini (Bastarnae), Venedi and Fenni. [Back]

    14.  Although the sword cult has not been recorded among Sarmatians specifically, we do

    know that the cult was among the Alans and that the Alans had a heavy impact on Germanic

    groups in the fourth and fifth centuries.

    In one German legend recorded by the Brothers Grimm (Grimm and Grimm 1981, 2:16, no.381), a herdsman finds a sword, sacred to the Scythians, after a cow steps on it. He removes

    the sword from the ground (it doesn't seem to be embedded in any particular fashion) and

    gives it to Attila, who recognizes it and is thrilled to possess it. Priscus mentioned the sword

    cult and made the connection between the cult and the story of the shepherd who followed a

    trail of blood from his heifer to an ancient iron sword that was buried in the ground, which he

    dug up and gave to Attila, who identified it as the Sword of Mars (Jordanes 35.183). Ward

    says "Cf. Altdeutsche Wälder , I, 212, Note 10 and p. 319. Cr. Also Lamb. Schafnab., p. 348:

    The Legend of Leopold von Mersburg who suffered great misfortune, including the account

    of the sword." Attila also figures in the Icelandic Saga of Hrolf Kraki, albeit as an opponent

    of rather than a wielder of Bothvar's sword (Mills 1933, 60 ff.).

    All of these stories refer to a sword cult where the sword was embedded in the ground rather 

    than in a tree or an anvil or a stone. This cult was observed among the Alans by Ammianus

    Marcellinus (31.4.22), who noted that the Alans worshiped a god of war by plunging a sword

    into the ground. The Scythian sword cult referred to here was recorded by Herodotus

    (4:59-62). The Huns, who feature prominently in the Volsungasaga, as the story continues,

     probably acquired their knowledge of the sword cult from the Alans (Bachrach 1973, 111).

    The sword cult also spread to Japan (Littleton 1995).

    In the Icelandic Saga of Hrolf Kraki, the short sword that Frothi drives into a wooden beam

    was one that he originally pulled from a stone (Mills 1933, 45). Frothi's brother, Bothvar,wields a long sword which he pulled from the same stone and which he carries in a bark 

    scabbard (Mills 1933, 49). [Back]

    15.  In other words, the "sword" used to be in Draco's tail. The Delphic story of Python the

    Dragon, "presumably the constellation traditionally named Draco . . . is told from a Camera

    Angle focused specifically on 'Northshift' rather than on 'Precession,' suggesting a local

    tradition that developed before diffusion of the Near Eastern model [i.e., the Kingship in

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    Heaven]" (Barber and Barber 2004, 208, n. 15). For the Japanese variant, see Littleton 1981.

     [Back]

    16.  In between times, when there is an observable pole star, the position of the celestial pole

    can be determined by noting the positions of the various constellations. [Back]

    17.  The world pillars are the constellations in which the sun rises at the solstices and

    equinoxes (Barber and Barber 2004, 201). [Back]

    18.  We know, however, that people were creating pictures of their myths in the stars,

    constellations, long before that time. As Barber and Barber (2004, 211) point out, the

    "Kingship in Heaven" stories, which also reflect the northshift, "were told by Babylonians,

    Hittites, . . . Phoenicians. . . . , Germanic and Finnic tribes . . . across Eurasia to Iran, India

    and China [and] . . . all [of them] must have diffused ultimately from the Near East." They

    (Barber and Barber 2004, 210-211) have shown that these tales encode data regarding the

    celestial precession that dates back to 6480 B.C.E., well before we have a record of the

    Zodiac. The "Kingship in Heaven" theme characterized the movement of the equinox from

    Gemini to Taurus ca. 4300 B.C.E. (Barber and Barber 2004, 208). [Back]

    19.  "Northshift . . . The slow circuit of the extension of Earth's rotational pole through the

    stars takes almost 26,000 years, swinging the apparent North Celestial Pole from one part of 

    the northern sky to another and causing the sun to appear against a shifting background of 

    Zodiac stars" (Barber and Barber 2004, 198, fig. 35). [Back]

    20.  Absolutely none of the stories or images is found prior to 2160 B.C.E. Libra is also

    known as a dragon, a stone altar or the Claw, depending on which culture is telling the tale.

     [Back]

    21.  For Mithraism as a celestial cult, see Barber and Barber 2004, 205-206 and Ulansey1989. The twelve signs of the zodiac show up as the twelve rebel kings in the Arthur tale, the

    twelve Apostles in San Galgano's tale, the animal-shaped hilt of the Hititte sword god in

    Yazilikaya, Turkey (ca. 1250 B.C.E.) and so forth. For the Chinese, Libra was a dragon,

    which explains why in Asia the sword is in a dragon's tail instead of in the stone (Littleton

    1981, 272). [Back]

    22.  The seven layers of earth that figures in some of the tales are the celestial spheres,

    through which the Divine Sword cuts. [Back]

    23.  Dates for precession of the spring equinox: ca. 6480 B.C.E. (Cancer to Gemini), ca.

    4320 B.C.E. (Gemini to Taurus), ca 2160 B.C.E. (Taurus to Aries) (Barber and Barber 2004,210), and 6 B.C. (Aries into Pices) (Barber and Barber 2004, 209). The precession from Pices

    into Aquarius will occur ca. 2154 C.E. [Back]

    24.  The Christians clearly had no idea that the tale was originally a mnemonic for 

    remembering the "new" order of the Heavens, yet the monks and authors like Robert who

    record the tale do an admirable job of keeping the important details that the ancients were

    trying to transmit to the next generation intact. [Back]

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