Athame

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One version of the athame, with a steel blade and bog-oak hilt. The image of the Triple Moon is in silver.
One version of the athame, with a steel blade and bog-oak hilt. The image of the Triple Moon is in silver.

An athame or athamé is a ceremonial double-edged knife, one of several magical tools used in Traditional Witchcraft and other pagan beliefs and religions such as Wicca for various ritual knives. It is variously pronounced /ˈæ.θə.meɪ/, /ə.ˈθeɪ.miː/, etc. A black-handled knife called an arthame appears in certain versions of the Key of Solomon, a grimoire originating in the Middle Ages.[1].

The athame is mentioned in the writings of Gerald Gardner in the 1950s, who claimed to have been initiated into a surviving tradition of witchcraft called Wicca. The athame was their most important ritual tool, which had many uses, but was not to be used for actual physical cutting[2].

There has been speculation[3] that Gardner's interest and expertise in antique swords and knives, and in particular the magical kris knives of Malaysia and Indonesia, may have contributed to the tool's central importance in modern Wicca[4].

Contents

[edit] Appearance

An athame can take many forms. It frequently has a double-edged blade with a sharp point, and a handle which is often black. The handle may be inscribed with particular symbols dictated by the tradition[5]. Janet and Stewart Farrar in "A Witches Bible" suggest that the point of an athame be dulled so as to prevent un-intended physical harm during ritual use.

In "eclectic" forms of witchcraft the handle decorations range from astrological glyphs to runes, the symbols being chosen by the owner. Many fantasy-themed athames are also available from medieval and neopagan supply shops.

[edit] Use

The athame's primary use is for ritual and magical purposes only, to direct energy; if things such as herbs or cords need to be cut, another knife called a boline - a white-handled knife - is used. An exception is the "kitchen witchcraft" philosophy, which actively encourages the use of magical tools for mundane purposes to increase the witch's familiarity with them.

An athame may be employed in the demarcation of the Magic circle rite.

As a masculine principle, it is often used in combination with the chalice, as feminine principle, evoking the act of procreation, as a symbol of universal creativity. This is a symbol of the Great Rite in Wiccan rituals[6]. Some modern witchcraft traditions may prefer not to use iron blades, instead preferring alternatives such as copper, bronze or wood. This is most common amongst traditions that have a particular fondness of the Sidhe, to whom iron is supposedly harmful.

[edit] Associations

Many traditions associate the athame with the masculine principle and with the element of either air or fire. Janet and Stewart Farrar suggested this difference is due to the Golden Dawn releasing false information in the hopes of preventing its rituals being used in the correct way.[7]. They add that a witch should always choose the association which seems the most correct to them. Touching another person's athame without permission is considered an intrusion of the owner's personal space.

[edit] Acquisition

There are rituals of consecration for a newly acquired athame, be it new, or acquired from another person[8]. When purchasing a knife for this purpose (or any ritual tool) it is considered important never to haggle over the price.[9]

[edit] Etymology

Extract from a C16th version of the Key of Solomon. Note the Bolino (Boline) top left, Artavo (athame) below it.
Extract from a C16th version of the Key of Solomon. Note the Bolino (Boline) top left, Artavo (athame) below it.

The term athame derives, via a series of corruptions, from the late Latin artavus ("Quill knife"), which is well attested in the oldest mansucripts of the Key of Solomon. It means "a small knife used for sharpening the pens of scribes" ("Cultellus acuendis calamis scriptorii"). Artavus is well-attested in medieval Latin, although it is not a common word. This explains why it was left untranslated in some French and Italian manuscripts, and ultimately became garbled in various manuscripts as artavo, artavus, arthana, artanus, arthany or arthame. [10] [11] [12] Latham described the etymology of artavus as being dubious, but Joan. de Janua in Catholico derives it from arto, artas, etc (to narrow). [13]

Idries Shah, who was personal secretary and close friend of Gerald Gardner, provides an alternate etymology from an alleged Arabic al-dhammé "blood-letter", which was supposed to be the ritual knife of a medieval magical cult of Morocco and Andalusia. This etymology is controversial, however. It appears in his book The Sufis as a quote from A History of Secret Societies by Arkon Daraul (a probable pseudonym of Shah). Robert Graves (an acquaintance of Shah) suggests an Arabic derivation from al thame (or adh-dhame), which he translates as "the arrow".[citations needed]

A Latin manuscript version of the Key of Solomon has a drawing that looks like a sickle, labelled Artavo. Gerald Gardner's use of 'athame' probably came from modern French versions of the Key of Solomon, probably via Grillot de Givry's Witchcraft, Magic and Alchemy (1931), who misinterpreted the term as applying to the main ritual knife, as shown by his index entries "arthane" or "arthame"[14]. [15]

[edit] Historical parallels

  • The Malay kris is a ritual knife regarded as having magical powers, and Gerald Gardner was a recognised authority on these knives prior to his involvement in Wicca.[16][17]
  • The Roman secespita was a ritual knife, however, it was used for sacrifice.
  • Zoroastrian priests ("magi") traditionally used a knife ("kaplo"), a spear (or stick with a nail on the end), or even the forefinger, to draw ritual furrows ("karsha") for purpose of protecting the sacred ritual space from evil and ritual pollution. [18]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ MacGregor Mathers, S. Liddell (ed.) The Key of Solomon (Clavicula Salomonis) Revised by Peterson, Joseph H. (1999, 2004, 2005). Available here
  2. ^ Gardner, Gerald. Witchcraft Today (1954) London: Rider. p.150
  3. ^ Heselton, Philip. Wiccan Roots. 
  4. ^ Gardner, Gerald. Keris and other Malay weapons (1936) Singapore: Progressive Publishing Company
  5. ^ Farrar, Janet and Farrar, Stewart. The Witches' Way (1984) (published as Part 2 of A Witches' Bible, 1996) Custer, Washington, USA: Phoenix Publishing Inc. ISBN 0-919345-92-1 p.253
  6. ^ Crowley, Vivianne. Wicca: The Old Religion in the New Age (1989) London: The Aquarian Press. p.159. ISBN 0-85030-737-6
  7. ^ Janet and Stewart Farrar, The Witches' Way, p. 252.
  8. ^ Jones, Evan John & Valiente, Doreen Witchcraft: A Tradition Revealed (1990) London: Robert Hale Ltd p.115
  9. ^ Doreen Valiente[citation needed]
  10. ^ Du Cange, Gall. Glossarium Mediae et Infimae Latinitatis, Band I, Graz-Austria, 1954, p. 410. Compare J.F. Niermeyer & C. Van de Kieft, revised by J. W. J. Burgers, Mediae Latinitatis Lexicon Minus, Leiden, Brill, 2002, p. 82;
  11. ^ R.E. Latham, Dictionary of Medieval Latin from British Sources, London, 1975;
  12. ^ R.E. Latham, Revised Medieval Latin Word-List from British and Irish Sources, London, 1965, p. 32.)
  13. ^ (Du Cange Loc. Cit.)
  14. ^ de Givry, Emile Grillot. Witchcraft, Magic and Alchemy (1931) Republished by Dover. ISBN 0-486-22493-7
  15. ^ Hutton, Ronald. The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999, p. 232.
  16. ^ Gardner, Gerald (1936). Keris and other Malay weapons. Singapore: Progressive Publishing Company
  17. ^ Hutton, Ronald [1999] (2005-05-24). The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft. New York City: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198207441. OCLC 41452625. 
  18. ^ J. J. Modi, Religious Customs and Customs of the Parsees (Bombay, 1922, pp. 57, 114, 126, 288).