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Radio Free Golgotha - Radio Free Golgotha
Radio Free Golgotha
48 episodes
3 weeks ago
Welcome one and all, as we mark the Feast of the Beheading of the Baptist, and indeed our fiftieth episode of RFG! Marking this holyday of decapitation, we are delighted to bring you an especially head-y installment this time. Our Sainted Day is Decollation of Saint John the Baptist, prompting discussion of both the church history and popular myths of this relic’d skull and its wandering jaw. Our counterparted Demon(ised) is none other than Salome, assessing the myth and meanings of this figure and her relationship with Herodias as seductress and witch icon across the world. Our Herb is Life-Everlasting, affording analysis of this yellow greenery and its charms of longevity. Our Mineral is the many-hued Agate, concentrating on the Orpheus Agate; diving into the Orphic lapidary epic Lithika and the use of such stones in propitiation and protection. Our Form of Magic is Prophetic Heads, surveying legendary and historical accounts of cephalomancy, talking skulls, and artificial brazen heads. Our Beast is the Unicorn, considering religious cryptozoology, natural magic, bestiary lore, and the historical trade and application of its powdered horn. Our Daysign is Itzcuintli, the Dog; meditating on Mictlantecuhtli and the chthonic Mesoamerican associations and meanings of this trusty sign of the dead. Our Figure spurs conversation on the Earthy Venusian geomancy of Amissio (Loss) and its counterparting Odu of Ifa and Diloggun, Oshe Meji. Our Arcana of the Tarot is the Two of Swords; delving into both Spanish cartomantic meanings and “Western” occultural significances of choice and clarity. Our Dead Magician is Orpheus, the ancient beheaded bard of bards, tragic underworld troubadour, and patron of those mysteries we call Orphic. We hope, as always, you enjoy this decollated assemblage of talking points and headwords as much as we did in recording this especially lengthy folk necromantic co-ramble, and wish you excellent tidings in all your unveiling dances and skullduggery.
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Religion & Spirituality
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Welcome one and all, as we mark the Feast of the Beheading of the Baptist, and indeed our fiftieth episode of RFG! Marking this holyday of decapitation, we are delighted to bring you an especially head-y installment this time. Our Sainted Day is Decollation of Saint John the Baptist, prompting discussion of both the church history and popular myths of this relic’d skull and its wandering jaw. Our counterparted Demon(ised) is none other than Salome, assessing the myth and meanings of this figure and her relationship with Herodias as seductress and witch icon across the world. Our Herb is Life-Everlasting, affording analysis of this yellow greenery and its charms of longevity. Our Mineral is the many-hued Agate, concentrating on the Orpheus Agate; diving into the Orphic lapidary epic Lithika and the use of such stones in propitiation and protection. Our Form of Magic is Prophetic Heads, surveying legendary and historical accounts of cephalomancy, talking skulls, and artificial brazen heads. Our Beast is the Unicorn, considering religious cryptozoology, natural magic, bestiary lore, and the historical trade and application of its powdered horn. Our Daysign is Itzcuintli, the Dog; meditating on Mictlantecuhtli and the chthonic Mesoamerican associations and meanings of this trusty sign of the dead. Our Figure spurs conversation on the Earthy Venusian geomancy of Amissio (Loss) and its counterparting Odu of Ifa and Diloggun, Oshe Meji. Our Arcana of the Tarot is the Two of Swords; delving into both Spanish cartomantic meanings and “Western” occultural significances of choice and clarity. Our Dead Magician is Orpheus, the ancient beheaded bard of bards, tragic underworld troubadour, and patron of those mysteries we call Orphic. We hope, as always, you enjoy this decollated assemblage of talking points and headwords as much as we did in recording this especially lengthy folk necromantic co-ramble, and wish you excellent tidings in all your unveiling dances and skullduggery.
Show more...
Religion & Spirituality
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Episode 42: The Feast of the Holy Innocents
Radio Free Golgotha - Radio Free Golgotha
10 months ago
Episode 42: The Feast of the Holy Innocents
Dear Golgothites, as the calendar year draws to a close, we invite you to celebrate the Feast of Holy Innocents with us. Here we remembrance the mythic slaughter of the children of Bethlehem under the tyranny of Bad King Herod, and consider some of the traditions and folkways associated with this day around the world – from the ill-auspices of Cross Day to the election and misrule of Boy Bishops, and much more. Our honoured Demon King (Queen?) is Paimon, one of the ‘four principle spirits’ usually attributed to the West: surveying medieval and early modern grimoiric appearances, and some eerily similar spirits in the wider corpus of goetic manuals of spirit conjuration, reflecting on this spirit’s wider retinue of regal heralds and daimonic minstrels, and indeed consider the use of altered sigils in one recent horror film which repopularised this senior devil… Our Herb of the hour is Fennel, from seed to root to stalk; cherished as an eye-brightener, vapour-queller, horse-protector, consumer of phlegmatic humours, and vessel of Prometheus’ stolen fire. Our Mineral for this feast is Lead: malleable neurotoxic metal of Saturn and saturnism, plumbing the depths and undergirding the Roman empire, by which we touch on wine adulteration, gold-making mysteries of alchemy, writing on sling bullets, and the suitably venerable number squares of the Greater Malefic’s magics. Our Beast this time is the Camel: emblem of both the Orient and orientalism, totem of trade, commerce, and Grocer’s Guilds, as well as stalwart desert-crossing, tempered choler and modesty, enemy of the horse, and of course, humble and secret-keeping steed of the Magi. Our Daysign of Mesoamerican calendricals and cosmovisions is Ehecatl (Wind) by which we discuss the some of the facets of the Feathered Serpent Quetzalcoatl, specifically as the cardinal rain-bearer, and the gifter of maguey and the alcoholic brews of pulque and its distilled spirits; through which we may navigate the difficulties and blessings of these marked periods of cyclical time. Our Style of Magic is Blood Sacrifice, picking our way through traditions and techniques of sanguine inks, the ritual purifications via phlegbotomy, pact-signing, apotropaic blooding, animal (mis)treatment, and ancestral remembrances of where our blood came from in the first place an to whom we owe it. Our Geomantic Figure of the season is Cauda Draconis, Fiery figure of the twin Malefics of Mars and Saturn, signifier of swift destruction, firework health and safety, and the proper disposal of haunted objects and broken curses. In the course of this consideration, we reflect on parallels with this figure’s counterpart, Ogunda, in the Odu traditions of Diloggun and Ifa concerning the proper steering of violence into constructive – even medicinal – destruction. Continuing our discussions of both divinatory pedagogy and art history, our featured Arcana is the Trump of the Hermit: tracing its development from saturnine Old Man Time, through emblematics of the final stage of the Ages of a human life, as the hourglass becomes a lantern via the cardinal virtue of Prudence, redefinitions of religiosity and occulture, to stand as a beacon between introspective solitudue and guiding way-shower. Our Dead Magician is the very witches’ witch, Erictho, in whose name we celebrate this mythic figure’s examples of wonderfully monstrous Big Hag Energy: from her early mentions in Ovidian poetics, to her role in Lucan’s Pharsalia as a ghoulishly gory boneyard necromancer and force of nature, and even her later turn in Goethe’s Faust as an interlocutor on the human tyranny and war. And so, by these topics, we honour this Feast of the Holy Innocents by cherishing the mysteries and medicines of youth and the age alike, remembering the weight and significance of bloodshed, paying homage to the vehicles of generous wisdom, the virtues and violences of the world, and the folk necromancies of grimoiric devils and ancient hags. We hope, as always, you find these co-rambles edifying and of use in your own works and weirdnesses, and we thank you for gathering with us at our little radiophonic corner of the Place of the Skull throughout this last year. We have big plans for the coming 2025, and we hope you’ll join us for even more invoking and praxis-ing to come! Happy Old Year!
Radio Free Golgotha - Radio Free Golgotha
Welcome one and all, as we mark the Feast of the Beheading of the Baptist, and indeed our fiftieth episode of RFG! Marking this holyday of decapitation, we are delighted to bring you an especially head-y installment this time. Our Sainted Day is Decollation of Saint John the Baptist, prompting discussion of both the church history and popular myths of this relic’d skull and its wandering jaw. Our counterparted Demon(ised) is none other than Salome, assessing the myth and meanings of this figure and her relationship with Herodias as seductress and witch icon across the world. Our Herb is Life-Everlasting, affording analysis of this yellow greenery and its charms of longevity. Our Mineral is the many-hued Agate, concentrating on the Orpheus Agate; diving into the Orphic lapidary epic Lithika and the use of such stones in propitiation and protection. Our Form of Magic is Prophetic Heads, surveying legendary and historical accounts of cephalomancy, talking skulls, and artificial brazen heads. Our Beast is the Unicorn, considering religious cryptozoology, natural magic, bestiary lore, and the historical trade and application of its powdered horn. Our Daysign is Itzcuintli, the Dog; meditating on Mictlantecuhtli and the chthonic Mesoamerican associations and meanings of this trusty sign of the dead. Our Figure spurs conversation on the Earthy Venusian geomancy of Amissio (Loss) and its counterparting Odu of Ifa and Diloggun, Oshe Meji. Our Arcana of the Tarot is the Two of Swords; delving into both Spanish cartomantic meanings and “Western” occultural significances of choice and clarity. Our Dead Magician is Orpheus, the ancient beheaded bard of bards, tragic underworld troubadour, and patron of those mysteries we call Orphic. We hope, as always, you enjoy this decollated assemblage of talking points and headwords as much as we did in recording this especially lengthy folk necromantic co-ramble, and wish you excellent tidings in all your unveiling dances and skullduggery.