Crossroads (Mythology) - Wikipedia
Crossroads (Mythology) - Wikipedia
Crossroads (Mythology) - Wikipedia
(mythology)
Ancient religions
Medieval Folklore
In the UK there was a tradition of burying
criminals and suicides at the crossroads.
This may have been due to the crossroads
marking the boundaries of the settlement
coupled with a desire to bury those
outside of the law outside the settlement,
or that the many roads would confuse the
dead.[3] Crossroads were also commonly
used as a place of criminal punishment
and execution (e.g. by gibbet or dule tree),
which may have also been a reason for it
being a site of suicidal burial as suicide
was considered a crime. This ritual of
crossroads burial dates back to Anglo-
Saxon times and continued until being
abolished in 1823.[4]
In modern fiction
In 1926's Faust, the titular character
summons the demon Mephistopheles at a
crossroad. In the U.S. television show
Supernatural, crossroads demons are a
recurring plot device.
Blues songs …
Some 20th-century blues songs, such as
Sold It to the Devil by Black Spider
Dumpling (John D. Twitty), may be about
making a deal with the devil at the
crossroads. Many modern listeners
believe that the premier song about soul-
selling at a crossroads is "Cross Road
Blues" by Robert Johnson. According to a
legend, Johnson himself sold his soul at a
crossroads in order to learn to play the
guitar. This is chronicled in the Netflix
documentary ReMastered: Devil at the
Crossroads. However, the song's lyrics
merely describe a man trying to hitchhike;
the sense of foreboding has been
interpreted as the singer's apprehension of
finding himself, a young black man in the
1920s deep south, alone after dark and at
the mercy of passing motorists.[9]
See also
Crossroads village
Liminal deities
Hecate
Boundary marker#Greece
Herma
References
1. Hornblower, Spawforth, Eidinow.
(2012) The Oxford Classical
Dictionary fourth edition . Oxford
University Press. p.688, 649-651]
2. The Old English text is reproduced
here from The Cambridge Old English
Reader by Richard Marsden, pp. 205–
208.
3. Robert Halliday (2008). "British
Archaeology, no 25, June 1997:
Features" . britarch.ac.uk. Retrieved
10 September 2011.
4. https://www.historyextra.com/period/
victorian/why-were-suicides-
supposed-to-be-buried-at-
crossroads/
5. Jobes, Gertrude. (1961) Dictionary of
Mythology Folklore and Symbols Part
1 . The Scarecrow Press, Inc. p.388
6. http://www.gutenberg.org/cache/epu
b/52165/pg52165.txt
7. https://www.learnreligions.com/papa-
legba-4771384
8. Canizares, Baba Raul (2000). Santeria
and the Orisha of the Crossroads.
New York: Original Publications.
pp. 23–24.
9. Litwack, Leon F (1998). Trouble in
Mind: Black Southerners in the Age of
Jim Crow. New York: Vintage Books.
pp. 410–411.
10. Jad Abumrad; et al. (2012). "Radiolab,
April 16, 2012: Features" .
Radiolab.org. Retrieved 27 April 2012.
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