Quantcast

Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples

Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples Page of 485 Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
AMULETS: PRIMITIVE, MODERN               369
to have been brought from Palestine command what is re­garded as a good price, three roubles being paid for a single one ; these are great favorites with the Jews more especially, one of their supposed virtues being to prevent abortion.38
The religious fervor of the Russians is illustrated by the character of the amulet said to be constantly worn by the Czar as a protection against the dangers which hourly threaten him. This is a ring in which is set a piece of the True Cross, the sacred material which was believed to lend a mighty potency to the famous "Talisman of Charle­magne." A less venerable belief is said to render the Czar superstitiously careful to see that an ancestral watch in his possession is always kept wound up, for a family legend tells that should this watch ever stop the glory of the reigning house would pass away.39
Of bone amulets there is a great variety. Among ffchose used in the British Isles may be noted a hammer-shaped type, fashioned out of a sheep's bone, worn by Whelby fisher­men as protection from drowning; similarly shaped bone amulets find favor with some London laborers as preventives of rheumatism. This is the type of Thor's Hammer, still popular with the Manxmen. The strange resemblance of the os sacrum of the rabbit to a fox's head has recommended its use as a talisman, or luck-bringer, and a London solicitor is stated to have owned an example which he had mounted as a gold scarf-pin, the likeness to an animal head being brought out still more by the insertion of onyx eyes.40
The talismanic power of the turquoise is still credited in provincial England, for in the counties of Hampshire and Sussex it is believed that when two persons station them-
" S. Weissenberg, " Südrussische Amulette," in Zeitschrift für Ethnologie, 1897, pp. 367-369.
•From Jewellers' Circular Weekly, Feb. 5, 1913, p. 153.
" A. E. Wright and E. Lovett, " Specimens of Modern Mascots and An­cient Amulets of the British Isles," Folk Lore, vol. six, p. 295, Plate V, fig. 1. 24
Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples Page of 485 Ch. 9: Amulets of Primitive Peoples
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page