New Labyrinths
Older New Ones
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St. Agnes "Labyrinth" circa 2002 |
Plan for the "Labyrinth" at that time |
St. Agnes Labyrinth Restored 2008 |
It is somewhat debatable just when this labyrinth on St. Agnes in the Scilly Isles, southwest of Cornwall, England was built. Some say it was made by a lighthouse keeper in the nineteenth century, but that is not certain. But what happened to it is all too certain. As people who did not know how to make a labyrinth walked it, and kicked its stone walls, and it |
turned into a maze. For example,when youenter it, you are immediatetly met with three choices, and while the middle of the plan shows that it was once a classical seven circuit labyrinth, as you approach the goal, it falls apart into a maze again. For this reason. I have put the word "labyrinth" in the top two in ilustrations in quotation marks as it really has fallen in to a maze. This is why I sometimes call mazes "degenerate labyrinths." It was restored since my visit in 2002 by a Cornish dowser named Donovan and several others at the request of the land owner. This caused a great controversy amongst more academically inclined Earth Mystery researchers; however, from my perspective, it was done with a focus on the energetic consequences rather than the more academic concerns of archaeologists - something that ought to be taken into consideration far more often in my humble opinion. |
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More and more people are beginning to make labyrinths. The first new labyrinth award goes to Othems labyrinth on the island of Gotland off the east coast of Sweden. At the turn of the last century, as a study of what their fishermen fathers had recently been using, a school teacher at the north end of the island had his students make this labyrinth. It is energetically dead - as if Mother Nature knew it was just an academic exercise - but, it is the first "modern"/new labyrinth.

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The first labyrinth Sig built in the UK was at a Glastonbury Earth Mysteries Gathering in May of 1985. The walls had mud from a nearby river, but it was also necessary to mow a path. Notice Glastonbury Tor in background.
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This is the labyrinth Sig Lonegren made in his front lawn at his home in Vermont with the help of his publishers at Gothic Image Jamie George and Frances Howard-Gordon.
Sig's labyrinth in Winter. See the Goddess in the center, looking to the left, with her arms stretched out, and her hair swirling around. This is one of the earlier labyrinths (1986) to be constructed in the US during this modern labyrinthine revival.
Labyrinths are good places for ceremonies. Here Sig walks his labyrinth during a hand-fasting ceremony. Bark chunks make an excellent walking surface and weed controlling mulch.
Solsbury Hill is small flat-topped hill just outside Bath, England. It was earthworked in the Iron Age, is a Druidic seat, and is thought by scholars to be the site of Mount Baden, where Romano-Celtic leader "King" Arthur won his victory over Anglo-Saxon invaders. The labyrinth was cut on common ground on the north-west corner of the hill top during a single night in 1993, by "Boris" Morrice, Patrick Macmanaway and Duncan Johnson. It was sited on a visual axis with a horizon notch, in a location originally lacking dowsable earth energies of any kind.
Since the labyrinth is on common land used for grazing and open to the public, much work is necessary to keep the site in good physical order. Excitingly the labyrinth has attracted constant use, and considerable ley energies and water features have developed at the site. Your conscious and loving visit will assist in the further development of this new sacred site. The keeper may be contacted for further information and for feedback.



