Celebrating the Women’s Magic of Womb Space: Witch Stones, the Men-an-Tol, Earth Pass-Throughs, and More by Carolyn Lee Boyd

Men-an-tol: By waterborough – photo shooting, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=1085927

Womb space — that liminal, gateway place of birth and rebirth where nothing now exists but anything could — is sacred women’s space. Holes in stones large and small, clefts in trees, pass-throughs in the Earth and under people and animals, and other such spaces have been connected with women’s healing, protection, and rituals for millennia. Let’s enter into these enthralling portals to see what we find.

Worn on a string, carried in a pocket, or hung on a door, wall, or loom, small stones with naturally occurring holes are magic talismans across many cultures. They are known as “witch stones” and “hag stones,” among other names. Still revered today, especially in Europe and the Americas, they have been found in graves and house excavation sites in Gaza as far back as 2000 BCE.

Witch stones have been used to heal snake bites, nosebleeds, and back aches; ward off livestock illnesses; protect against lightning and drowning; and ensure family prosperity. They have protected against malevolent witches and spirits, especially those who would ride horses to exhaustion in the middle of the night and steal milk’s richness.  Tradition says to look through them to see whether someone is really a witch or fairy or to have “second sight” to view events taking place far away.

People in various countries also passed through larger holed stones, to be healed, especially of backaches and rickets. The Men-an-tol in Cornwall is said to cure numerous ills and increase fertility. Dorsetshire parents pulled ill children through the “Druidical” stone because evil would not be able to follow. The power of these stones goes beyond healing. Swearing an oath on the Scottish Odin Stone invoked its holy power; breaking your oath was punishable by law.

ŠGold jewelry: Zde, CC BY-SA 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons. Piece of jewelry (amulet), gold and carnelian. Burial place near Varna. Chalcolithic, 4600-4200 BC. Varna Archaeological Museum.

Artists in Anatolia, Greece, and the Balkans intentionally made holed art objects including jewelry and sculpture from marble, metal, and terra cotta. They have been discovered in graves, caves, and elsewhere around excavation sites and many date from about 4000 BCE.

Old ways suggest crawling or being handed through a naturally or humanmade hole in the Earth for healing or to stop babies’ crying, sometimes in the belief that the illness would be taken by the soil. Often holes were constructed in cemeteries or places associated with witches and magic, like cross-roads.

Moving through trees with natural or humanmade openings offered more healing, especially for babies’ hernias or for birthing women. In Sweden, tree openings are called “elf-bores.” In Portugal, one remedy required three women named Mary (three Marys was often a renaming of the three Fates) to spin yarn while an ill child was passed through a tree. During epidemics, Serbian villagers would extinguish all lights, then three old women would then pass under tree roots while circling the village three times. Finally, everyone would pass through the roots and be marked with a cross by a stick charred in a rekindled fire. In France, children with hernias would be passed under an oak tree while women danced around the tree praying.

Finally, some rituals featured passing through the people’s legs. Sick children passed through their parents’ legs. In Poland, enchanted people passed through the legs of a “firstborn” woman. Some people crawl under dead bodies, sometimes of saints, other times of criminals, perhaps so that the dead person will take the illness to the grave. In Scandinavia, sick people lay in open graves with arches over them. People needing healing and protection also passed through baked goods, animals’ legs, loops of yarn, wagon wheels, and fences, and, in modern times, even under trains and cars.

These objects, beliefs, and rituals span millennia and many areas of our world. Yet, what weaves them together is women’s spiritual power. Many relate to witches and fairies, goddesses and wise women, demonized with christianization, but once forceful, spirited, and benevolent. Also, healing, protection, and providing abundance are all functions of many goddesses, wise and holy women, and priestesses in temples. Rituals involve women circling, spinning, praying and dancing, all activities associated with women’s rites worldwide.

At the center of the matrix connecting all these aspects of women’s spiritual power is the goddess’s function of rebirth. The resemblance of these objects to birth openings is obvious, but the relationship to rebirth is especially remarkable in practices of passing through women’s legs, especially those of mothers. This ritual element has been reclaimed by women of our own time in rebirthing ceremonies.

Closely related to birthing power is that of the fate goddesses, which is especially associated with spinning, weaving, and yarn, all present in these practices. Perhaps not coincidentally, witch and hag stones closely resemble spindle whorls and loom weights.

Now, how can we, in our time so full of the need for healing, protection, and rebirth, open ourselves to this clearly deep and needed well of regeneration?

When we encounter a portal, whether actual, or a pivotal event, or an opportunity, we can be open to what is on the other side. We can make sure we do not limit our ability to truly see what could lie beyond out of fear or untrue attitudes or beliefs. The universe is always full of surprises.

These objects and rituals are all deeply connected to the Earth. Spiritual or emotional rebirth must ground us more profoundly to the needs of the Earth and to the beings who live on Her so that what we say and do has a positive effect on ourselves and others.

Finally, we must realize that when we encounter a rebirthing experience, we are doing so in relationship. No one is born alone. We rebirth one another, and when we rebirth someone else, we rebirth ourselves. When we are reborn in the arms of Goddess, we also rebirth Her. Honor those who have been part of our rebirthing and help those who need assistance in their own rebirth.

In this time when renewal is so deeply essential, may we all pass through the portals that appear to us and find ourselves and our planet on the path to rebirth on the other side.

Sources:

Apostolika, Nina Kyparissi. Tracing Symbols of Life and Symbols of Death in Neolithic Archeological Contexts in Documenta Praehistorica, 32 (2005), pp. 133–144.

Dale, Elizabeth. (undated). Cornwall’s Prehistoric Holed Stones. The Cornish Bird.https://cornishbirdblog.com/cornwalls-prehistoric-holed-stones/

Dashu, Max. Witches and Pagans: Women in European Folk Religion, 700-1100. Richmond, CA: Veleda Press, 2016.

Duffin, Christopher J. Herbert Toms (1874-1940), Witch Stones, and “Porosphaera” Beads in Folklore, Vol. 122, No. 1 (April 2011), pp. 84-101. https://www.jstor.org/stable/41306568

Hand, Wayland D. “Passing Through”: Folk Medical Magic and Symbolism in Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, Dec. 9, 1968, Vol. 112, No. 6 (Dec. 9, 1968), pp. 379-402. https://www.jstor.org/stable/985938

King, Vicky. November 11, 2021. Hag Stones and Lucky Charms. Hornman Museums and Gardens. https://www.horniman.ac.uk/story/hag-stones-and-lucky-charms/

Mehofer, Mathias. Metallurgy during the Chalcolithic and the Beginning of the Early Bronze Age in Western Anatolia in Western Anatolia before Troy. Proto-Urbanisation in the 4th Millennium BC?: Proceedings of the International Symposium held at the Kunsthistorisces Museum Wien Vienna, Austria, 21-24 November, 2012 edited by Barbara Horejs and Mathias Mehofer. Austrian Academy of Sciences Press. http://www.jstor.com/stable/j.ctv5vdd0s.26

Murray, M.A., British Superstition in Oxford in Folklore, Vol. 54, No. 2 (Jun., 1943), p. 317. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1257048

Pennick, Nigel. Celtic Sacred Landscapes. New York, NY: Thames and Hudson. 1996.

Petch, Alliison. (undated). A Dorset Hag Stone. The Other Within: Analysing the English Collections at the Pitt River Museum.  https://england.prm.ox.ac.uk/englishness-Dorset-hag-stone.html

Sutherland, Elizabeth. Ravens and Black Rain: The Story of Highland Second Sight. London: Corgi Books, 1985.


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10 thoughts on “Celebrating the Women’s Magic of Womb Space: Witch Stones, the Men-an-Tol, Earth Pass-Throughs, and More by Carolyn Lee Boyd”

  1. Glenys, I’m so glad you found the stone to help with your healing and also to accompany you on your trip! I love having stones around me for inspiration.

    You (and Sara and all others who feel spiritual and healing connections to stones), you might be interested in a book I finished literately five minutes ago titled “Looking for the Hiddenfolk: How Iceland’s Elves Can Save the Earth” by Nancy Marie Brown. The book is about many things, including the deep spiritual connection many people feel to Iceland’s landscape, which is mostly lava, mountains, glaciers, etc, and to the spirit folk who dwell in it. There is a lot, especially, in the last chapter about the spirituality of stones and our human connection to stones.

  2. Carolyn it won’t let me reply to you direct either, and I wanted to respond to your statement “Stones are so ancient and have so much to teach us”. I used to sleep with a stone when my life fell apart in the early-mid 1990’s, so I could heal. I also took a sizeable stone all the way to Toronto and back in my carry-on in the late 1990’s – it was a bit heavy but I wanted it with me.

  3. Sara, that is so amazing that your stone has a serpent and a lizard meeting! That definitely seems like a sacred women’s stone to me! Please do write about it – I can’t wait to read what you will have to say!

    1. It has to be a woman’s stone – Algonquin people’s were peaceful fishing hunting communities in the town my brother found this stone – the whole thing is amazing

  4. Carolyn, I found my stone and was quite stunned to see that the edge is circled by a serpent and a lizard that meet each other … am going to have to write about this – how is it that I missed the significance of the serpent/lizard that encloses the entire story when i have been wearing a serpent ring since I was 39??????? Tell me that this isn’t a sacred woman’s stone – yikes – who needs fiction?

  5. What a wonderful gift to have your brother’s stone, and one so connected to the spirit of nature. It must be beautiful. Stones are so ancient and have so much to teach us. Thank you for your lovely comment!

  6. “In this time when renewal is so deeply essential, may we all pass through the portals that appear to us and find ourselves and our planet on the path to rebirth on the other side.” Amen to this!

    While reading this post after looking at that beautiful portal in stone I remembered as stone I have had since my brother died – he often wore it – this stone was one found in NY – an Indian artifact with petroglyphs inscribed into the surface – from the inscriptions I believe it was used in hunting since an arrow and a fish show up – surely invoking the help of the spirit of nature…

  7. Thank you, Glenys! It was fun to write – one of those things I started researching out of a vague curiosity and then found (through the amazing resources of my small town local library) some interesting threads of what is probably a much larger matrix of thealogy and practices. Now you’re making me think of all the ways this could be the core of a book!

    (for some reason my computer won’t let me reply directly to your comment, which is why this is a reply to the post and not your comment)

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