There is no first-hand evidence, she writes, of people being burned in a wicker man — a large figure made of woven branches. Julius Caesar, whose writings provide the earliest surviving report of this, may even be drawing from a much earlier Greek philosopher whose own writings have since been lost.
The practices we do have evidence for tend to be cultural hybrids — especially in early Christian Ireland, where, Ehrmantraut shows, people might have combined a protection spell with a prayer to St Patrick for good measure. As for the remedy for worms: “The medical practitioner is to sing the following charm nine times in the afflicted person’s ear, followed by the Paternoster: ‘gonomil orgomil marbumil’. These words are slightly garbled Old Irish for ‘I wound the beast.’”
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