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STONEHENGE and THE SEQUANI CALENDAR

Although Stonehenge is surrounded by mystery and clouded in the mists of time, there is one Eadhmonn, a master stone-carver and artist, and a crew of graphic artists, including Mark
practical use of the ancient monument: it is an astronomical observatory that measures the Butervaugh, designed the Celtic circles for each month, and I researched the goddesses and gods
movements of the sun, the moon, and perhaps, the stars. The findings of astronomy may not lead that told the story of the stars, the moon and the sun from their Iron Age references to their
us to the exactitudes of Neolithic life and the construction of the monument and its origins, but Neolithic roots using my training in comparative mythology.
what is clear is that Stonehenge is still a viable and useful calendar of extreme accuracy. With the
use of computers, Stonehenge, an absolute peak of astronomical genius, might be used as such As we move through the second year of the calendar for reproduction for the public, we are
today. gaining a keener awareness of the stars presented in the text. The Sequani Calendar marks a star
of primary magnitude at the beginning of each moonth designated as the PRIN. These twelve
Moreover, an ancient bronze calendar tablet discovered near Coligny, France in 1897 believed to primary stars appear on the Eastern Horizon shortly after sunset when the moon is a first
be the calendar of the tribe of Celts called the Sequani, sheds amazing light on the use of stone quarter moon in its sixth day of waxing, the first day of each moonth for the Celts. They are easy
circles and in particular, Stonehenge. The astronomy of the ancients is easily understood and to identify as they are the brightest in the night sky and appear first to the naked eye. The
made applicable to today's night sky by understanding the basic principles upon which the text constellations of these stars are deities of the Celts, and as they travel the night sky through the
of the bronze calendar, called The Sequani Calendar, and Stonehenge is based. Keeping in mind seasons, their stories are told. In turn, groups of constellations in each season tell the stories of
the diversity of the stone circles of the ancient world and the diversity of the belief systems of the seasons of the year.
Celts, especially in the myths of each tribe, certain basics of Druidic belief are a simple and clear
beginning to understanding the calendar systems of these ancient astronomer-priests. Although the year is a circle without beginning or end, the beginning of the light half of the year
appears at the Winter Solstice in the first lunar cycle of the year called Samonios. The PRIN, or
In 1988, Alban Wall published a paper in the Epigraphic Society Occasional Publications (Vol.17) first magnitude star to guide us on the first quarter moon, is the twin stars of Castor and Pollux,
that summarizes the similarities of Stonehenge and The Sequani Calendar. According to Wall, the Divine Twins of both Greek and Celtic mythology. In Celtic mythology, the twins symbolize a
both Stonehenge and The Sequani Calendar are luni-solar, both are based on a 19 year cycle or strong birth, a single birth from one egg containing mortal and immortal life. Twins such as
the Metonic cycle of the moon, and both have months that basically alternate between 30 and 29 Fiachra and Conn in the Irish tale of the "Fate of the Children of Lir" and Nissyen and Evnissyen
nights. Both can be expanded to 235 months that are divided into light and dark halves which in the Welsh Mabinogion exemplify the Divine Twins. In the second moonth, Dumannios, the
begin at the first quarter moon. The months, or as the ancients called them, "moonths" have the guiding star or PRIN is Sirius and in the third moonth, Rivros, it is Regulus. Both these stars as
full moon marked on the eighth night of the light half of each lunar cycle and the new moon as well as Orion are representatives of the Great Goddess of the Winter Sky: Brigantia in Britain,
the eighth night of each dark cycle. On The Sequani Calendar, the full moon is designated as the Brigit, in Ireland, Brighid in Wales, and Brigantu in Gaul. Brigit is a goddess known for nurturing
Oenach or people's holiday and the new moon is the Druid's Holy Night. new life.

Each marks the solar year holidays at the solstices and the equinoxes as well In the fourth and fifth lunar cycles of the year, the moonths containing the
as the cross-quarter days the same as they are celebrated in Neo-Pagan Spring Equinox, the gods of sacrifice, Esus, Teutates, and Taranis are
circles today: Winter Solstice, Imbolc, Spring Solstice, May Day, represented in the PRIN of Anagantios which is Arcturus, a
Summer Solstice, Lugnasad, Fall Equinox, and Samhain. These well- reddish-orange star that signals a time of blood-letting and
known solar holidays were easily adapted to the Roman calendar self-sacrifice. Known cross-culturally as The Dying Gods, these
that we use today, but the moonths were never transferred to deities exemplify that self-sacrifice is the highest form of love.
our calendar as they involve the precision that a luni-solar In Ogronios, the fifth lunar cycle, the rising star of Vega
calendar demands in order that each lunar cycle remain denotes resurrection. Vega is the first star of the Summer
one moonth or month. Stonehenge and The Sequani Triangle, a symbol not only of resurrection or of the
Calendar, as mentioned above, both retain the luni-solar Vulture and Raven appearing in the heavens in flight, but
months and yearly cycle so that they follow the moon of the coming of the Great Mother Goddess of the
and the sun with "extremely close reconciliation of summer, the Mistress of Birds, Water and of the Earth.
lunar with solar time" (Wall 30). To do this, The
Sequani Calendar allows for an Intercalary Moonth The next two lunar cycles of the year, Cutios and
every two years and six months. Both, however, give Giamonios, the sixth and seventh moonths, complete
special prominence to the solstices. the Summer Triangle with their primary stars of
Deneb and Altair, respectively. Cutios, whose PRIN
The year on Stonehenge and The Sequani Calendar is Deneb, in Cygnus the Swan, is a month for
is divided into two distinct halves: a light and a celebrating the gift of the waters of life as
dark half. The light half begins at the Winter represented in Sequana of the Seine River and
Solstice when the new light of the year begins on namesake of the Sequani; Boann, goddess of the
December 21st, and the dark half begins at the River Boyne in Ireland; or Danu of the Danube in
Summer Solstice with the disappearing of the central Europe. Like the Raven goddesses, the
longest summer day on June 21st. In their Winter water-bird goddesses are one aspect of a Triskele
Solstice Oenach, the new year is celebrated on the of Goddesses that make up the Great Mother
full moon or eighth day of the moonth of the Winter Goddess of the Neolithic tribes represented in the
Solstice. Similarly, the Summer Solstice is celebrated night sky as the Summer Triangle. Giamonios, the
on the mid-point of the lunar cycle of the Summer moonth of the Summer Solstice, whose PRIN is
Solstice moonth. The holiday celebrated in the dark Altair, is the another bird aspect of the goddess.
half indicates special observance of the Summer Altair is most closely associated with Lugh, the
Solstice in the darkest part of the moonth which is the eagle, who is the son of Tailtiu, the goddess of the
eighth day of the dark half of the moon or the Holy Night earth. With the Summer Triangle complete, the
of the new moon. Light is welcomed as the light in the Triskele reaches its full power.
darkness and cold of winter and darkness is welcomed as
the relief from the long summer days. In Simivisonnios, the eight lunar cycle, the constellation
of The Plough is upright signaling the month of the first
Alban Wall observes that both Stonehenge and The Sequani harvest of fruits and vegetables. Altair is still the guiding star
Calendar differ from most other luni-solar calendars in their special of primary magnitude and Tailtiu is the goddess who declares
prominence given to the solstices, their amazing accuracy of the Lugnasad be in honor of her son, Lugh. Marriage contracts are
reconciliation of lunar with solar time, and their division of the year into renewed or dispelled, fruits of labor are shared, and feats of
two halves with their year beginning on the Winter Solstice. Moreover, both physical prowess and gamesmanship become displays of a productive
calendars differ from all other luni-solar calendar systems relative to the marking life. Lugh, symbol of the mastering of life, is an all-wise deity, guarding our
of the special days of the moon in each moonth such as the beginning of the moonth fruits of labor. Likewise, in the month of Equos, following Simivisonnios, the gaming and
as the first quarter or sixth day of the waxing moon, the full moon on the eighth night of the first horse-racing so important to the concept of the Divine Horse in Celtic mythology continues. The
half of the moonth and the new moon of the eighth night of the dark half of the moonth. They PRIN of Equos is Equuleus representative of Epona, the horse goddess. Known also as Macha in
also differ from all other calendars as to their marking of the Winter and Summer Solstices. Ireland and Rhiannon in Wales, the horse goddess is a symbol of independent strength, prowess,
and physical challenge. In the Otherworld of the Celts, horse-racing, feasting, and other such
Wall remarks that "It is highly significant that no lunar calendar other than the Coligny system, pursuits represent the ultimate peace and stability that attention to Epona brings us.
anywhere in the world or at any time in history, began its months at the first quarter moon-
except the one embodied in the stones and holes of Stonehenge" (32). In the first century B.C., The last season of the year, the Fall, is perhaps the most derivative of ancient ritual and
the historian Diodorus Siculus remarked that in the regions beyond the lands of the Gauls, there therefore often considered the beginning of the year by Neo-Pagan cults today. The ancient
lies an island where the moon god visits every nineteen years, "the period in which the return of rituals of the Neolithic tribes at the onset of winter are clearly retained in the rituals of the
the stars to the same place in the heavens is accomplished; and for this reason the nineteen year Sacred Calendar of Eleusis for the Greeks and in The Sequani Calendar for the Celts. The PRIN
period is called by the Greeks 'the year of Meton.' " Here, states Siculus, is a "notable temple marked on The Sequani Calendar for the ninth moonth of the year, Elembivios, is Capella, keeper
which is spherical in shape" (quoted in Wall 32). of livestock and guardian of wealth, and the guiding constellation for the last two moonths,
Edrinios and Cantlos, is the river in the sky, Erindanus. The rituals of the ancients involve the
The fact that Stonehenge and The Sequani Calendar alone begin their moonths on the sixth day of high priest, or what the Indo-Europeans called the "pont-dheh-ker," who is responsible as a
the moon and that the island culture referred to by Siculus in his description of Stonehenge uses transgressor of souls into the otherworld of death and winter as well as a guardian of the wealth
the Metonic cycle of the moon is strong evidence to correlate these highly developed systems of of the tribe; that wealth must be blessed and stored for the winter as the seeds were originally
calendars which might have taken eons to develop and perfect. Siculus' statement as to the stored by the ancient tribes of Europe and the Mediterranean.
genius of the accomplishment that marks the stars returning to the same place in the heavens in
the Metonic cycle might draw another important parallel between Stonehenge and The Sequani In Celtic mythology, this ancient high-priest of the forests and all important deity of the tribes is
Calendar: if the stars are measured on The Sequani Calendar would it not then be highly possible known as Cernunnos. As the ecliptic has moved from South to North in the night sky, the PRIN, or
for the stars to be marked by Stonehenge? Why wouldn't a group of highly educated astronomers guiding star of the month, Capella, appears on the Eastern Horizon on the sixth day of the waxing
and creators of a calendar system in stone and bronze include a map of the stars in their moon to guide us through Elembivios with the protection, vision, and spiritual strength of
calculations of the cycles of the moon and the sun in their stone circles? Cernunnos. Cernunnos accompanies us through the onset of winter. In the moonth of Edrinios,
he crosses the river in the sky, Erindanus as the Milky Way meets with the elliptic. To the
Wall has designated that the outer circle of Stonehenge, or what he calls the "Sun Circle," is used ancients, crossing the river symbolizes the crossing from one realm into another, from life to
to count the days in the year by advancing a marker stone two holes each day, probably at death, and in this case, from fall to winter. As seen in the hero's journey in the mythology of
Sunrise and Sunset in the ceremonies of the Celts. This circle gives a total of the days of the solar several cultures, the river acts as a medium of transfer from one spiritual plane to another.
year if done thirteen times to equal 364 days. The next two inner circles of Stonehenge,
traditionally called the "Y" and "Z" holes designate the lunar moonths by advancing one hole each We arrive through long dark nights of winter to begin the cycle of life again with the celebration
day, first around the "Y" circle, then around the "Z" circle. Wall calls these the "Lunar Circles." of the entrance of the Winter Solstice light. As a full and strong beam of light crosses the
The next inner circle, The Sarsen Stones, symbolizes the 29.5 nights of the moonth, one megalith threshold of the great mound at Newgrange and the Winter Solstice light is welcomed into the
being half size. The magnificent Trilithon horseshoe represents the phases of the moon, and the circle of stones at Stonehenge, we rejoice in another completion of the great cycle of the year.
Year Dial of stones within them is used to count the nineteen year cycle of 235 months. Where The mastery of the solar light, the careful calculation to keep each moonth following the moon's
then could the stars be measured on this ancient calendar? varying course, and the identification of each primary star in a moonth gives us a sense of time
and sense about how our ancestors grasped for some identifiable part of eternity by bringing the
A group of researchers including Helen Benigni, Eadhmonn Ua Cuinn and Barbara Carter, have heavens down to earth. Their and our participation in the celestial will only broaden our
translated the original reconstruction of the calendar found in the headwaters of the Seine at understanding of the infinite. Might we now begin our journey through time to re-capture this
Coligny. Using the reconstruction of the bronze tablets done by Eoin MacNeill for the Royal Irish wonderful sense of the infinite by tracing the stars on Stonehenge?
Academy in 1926, our group translated the calendar by silk-screening concentric circles to
represent each moonth of the first year. Using computers to translate the astronomy into the
year 2001, Barbara, our astronomer, was able to identify the stars, the moons and the sun
marked in the ancient text. INSTRUCTIONS
Collect back your time. It is measured here by the Sun, the Moon and the stars. Look to the East about one and a half hours after sunset. You will see stars of primary magnitude (very bright). These stars
will guide you through the hours of the nights and the moons or months of the year. Count the days around the primary phases of the Moon and you will find the natural weeks. Celebrate the Sun and Moon on
the Oenachs with as many people as you can. Mercury and Venus are always very close to the Sun. Where they are noted, you will find them very close to the horizon at sunset or sunrise. Enjoy your time.
Our book,The Myth of the Year reveals the astronomy underlying Celtic and Greek mythology using the calendar of the Druids discovered in Coligny, France and the Sacred Calendar of Eleusis of ancient
Greece. Our second book, The Goddess and the Bull: A Study in Minoan-Mycenaean Mythology is a study of the archetype of the nineteen year cycle of The Goddess and the Bull. For orders and information
please contact the publisher, University Press of America, Inc. 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200 Lanham, Maryland, 20706 USA 1-800-462-6420 www.univpress.com
CONTACTS
For calendar orders and information, please contact: e-mail barbara@ clcpe.com or write to Helen Benigni e-mail benignih@dewv.edu or Barbara Carter P.O. Box 1694, Elkins, West Virginia 26241
www.sequanicalendar.com

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