24 December 2021

Seventh Moon: the Kyngsmoon

 

The seventh moon of the year is a midwinter moon of 31 dawns. It is named in honour of King Theseus.

It is a cold, melancholy and frosty moon. Many folk spend their time baking bread during this moon; collecting firewood in the bare forests; and slaughtering their swine. The wealthy often hunt boar in the thick and misty woods.


The Feast of the Translation

One of the four great quarter days occurs during this moon: the Feast of the Translation of the Relics of Theseus (or, the Feast of the Translation, for short). It is celebrated over 12 dawns, beginning on the longest night of the whole year: usually after the third dawn of Kyngsmoon. The feast has been observed since 735 A.T. and marks to return of the relics of Theseus to the Parthenion in that year.

The Parthenine general Coalemus received a prophecy from Lord Carneius that the bones of King Theseus were interred on the Island of Dolopon. Theseus had sailed to his estates on this island after being deposed from his throne in the Parthenion in 21 R.T. But the local king, Lycurgus - fearing that the charismatic Theseus might usurp him - had Theseus thrown from a cliff to his death.


Some seven centuries later, Coalemus took an expedition to that island, conquered the local inhabitants, and then scoured the island for Theseus' remains. He found a tomb containing the bones of a gigantic man and a mighty bronze sword. These he translated back to the Parthenion, and interred them in a magnificent tomb in the heart of the city: the Theseium. This tomb thereon served as a sanctuary for the defenseless and the oppressed of the world. The relics are closely guarded, not only for their holy significance, but also for the sacred and mighty properties of the sword of Aegeus.

The Theseium

Even to this day, an important part of the Feast of the Translation is donations of bread and meat to the poor, which thus is for them a feast at which they feel no want and might fancy themselves equal to the wealthiest citizens. Folks of all stations stop work, decorate their homes, and feast merrily. 

Merry Translation!

No comments:

Post a Comment