Reykjavík Grapevine - okt. 2021, Side 26

Reykjavík Grapevine - okt. 2021, Side 26
It has to be said before we con- tinue; Galdraskræ!a, or Sorcerer’s Screed, is a dangerous book and should be handled with caution and respect. This is an odd tome, its first version was handwritten and published in 1940. It contains powerful magical runes, magic letters and black and white magic that could easily be misused by dishonest characters. With these runes, one can protect them- selves, curse a neighbour, sway people’s hearts to fall in love or protect one’s mental health. But it also contains the secrets of wak- ing up the dead, forcing people to steal and there is even a rune to make ensure a legal case is won. Should you continue reading, let it be known you have been warned. Strange man, dark history The author of Sorcerer’s Screed was a strange man with a deep interest in the dark history of Icelanders and sorcery. His name was Jochum Magnús Eggerts- son but wrote the book under the name Skuggi (Shadow, in Eng- lish)—an aliashe used often when investigating mysticism. He was born in 1896 and died in 1966. No stranger to the written word, Jo- chum was the nephew of one of Iceland’s greatest poets, Matthías Jochumsson, who penned the poem that serves as the lyrics of the Icelandic national anthem. Kr!sar Jochum had controversial ideas about the settlements in Ice- land. His theory was that histo- rians had changed the history of the first hundreds of years after the settlement to omit the story of a clan called Kr"sar. The Kr"sar are said to have lived in Hafnarfjör!ur, in a place we to- day call Kr"suvík, and they were originally Irish. The leader of the clan, Kolskeggur, is said to have written Iceland’s greatest poems and books, everything from Njál’s Saga’s The Story of Burnt Njál to the Hávamál, a deep philosophi- cal manuscript about honour. Jochum also claimed that he had found a book that Kolskeggur wrote, called the Golden Script, or Gullskinna (also known as Gullb- ringa). Its pages were filled with instructions about magic as well as the true story of settlement in Iceland. Jochum never showed anyone this book and therefore never prooved its existence be- yond doubt, although he claimed to have it in his possession. Erased from history The story goes that the Icelandic chieftains felt the Kr"sar were too powerful, and so they decided to wipe out the clan. And so they did in the year 1054, a c c ord i n g t o Jochum’s theo- ries. Kolskeg- gur was killed a s w e l l . B ut with time, his name changed, and it became Kölski, which simply means, the devil. The book s of the Kr"sar were banned or forbidden and said to be evil books about black and white magic. Kolskeg- gur’s grave is said to be in Kr"su- vík, but a priest decided to build a chapel on in. To top it all, the scholar Ari “Fró!i” Sæmundsson was said to have erased all evi- dence of Kr"sar’s existence from history. Now, this matters, because Jo- chum’s Sorcerer’s Screed is said to be based on ideas of sorcery prac- ticed in Iceland at the time of the settlement. Although, all of the runes Jochum found were com- piled from well-known ancient manuscripts that one can find in our national library, some might be from the mysterious Golden Script, Gullskinna—if it really ex- isted at all. First version handwritten The first version of the book was handwritten—everything from the runes to the magic letters— by JOchum himself. Some of the scripts he used originated in the Westfjords, where Jochum was born. Icelanders burned quite a few warlocks, but only one witch, in the late 16th century Westf- jords. Iceland was different from most European countries when it came to burning witches, since we only burned one woman of the 25 people that were executed for sorcery Reshaped and republished The Sorcerer’s Screed was out of print for decades before young students at the Iceland University of the Arts decided to reshaped and republish the book in asso- ciation with the Icelandic Magic Company (Lesstofan). They re- wrote it, drawing the runes in bet- ter quality. In this book, one can find hundreds of runes and magic let- ters. Now, before you go buying this book with g r a n d p l a n s o f w i n n i n g all your legal cases or catch- ing thieves—or simply waking up the dead— keep in mind, al l of this is c o n s i d e r e d quite danger- ous. But if you need a protective tattoo, we rec- ommend the Greater Shield Of Terror. It can’t hurt. Literally. Info: Buy this book at shop.grapevine.is 26The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 10— 2021 SÆTA SVÍNI! / Hafnarstræti 1-3 / Tel. 555 2900 / saetasvinid.is 790 1.490 HAPPIEST HAPPY HOUR IN REYKJAVÍK ICELANDIC GASTROPUB Book The Mysterious Book Of Sorcerer’s Screed Need to wake up the dead? Look no further Words: Valur Grettisson Photo: Magical stöff "The story goes that the Icelandic chieftains felt the Kr!sar were too powerful, and so they decided to wipe out the clan.” Jochum Magnús Eggertsson

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