hvered wrote:The Lord Mayor's Show...mascots aren't the two saints but twin giants, Gog and Magog, traditionally made of wicker and plaster. No-one seems to know why giants were so honoured, possibly something to do with the Matter of Britain myth
Gog-Magog legends are found not just in several parts of Britain (Cambridge, Devon, Cornwall, and Glastonbury at least) but also in the Middle East. In Britain, the legends tend to be fairly benign. It’s said that there used to be a pair of Gog and Magog (or Gogmagot and Corineus) figures on Plymouth Hoe, connected with the story of Corineus and Brutus as the founder of Britain.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plymouth_Hoe http://www.unitythroughdiversity.org/gog--magog.html When the two opponents came to grips, Gogmagog hugged the duke to him in so tight an embrace that three of his ribs were broken. Corineus was so enraged that he at once rushed to the nearest stretch of shore and hurled Gogmagog off the cliff to his death on the rocks below. The place at which this happened was thereafter known as Gogmagog’s Leap (Albion: A Guide To Legendary Britain by Jennifer Westwood.)
There is a record of the chalk cut giant being on Plymouth Hoe in 1486 and a record in the City Archive shows a receipt for a bill for cleaning and weeding the giant. The bill was paid by the Earl of Edgcumbe.
http://plymouthlocalhistory.blogspot.co ... magog.htmlIn the Ogbourne valley in Wiltshire, near Avebury, a large Celtic temple has been found; the largest room in the temple was a six foot high malting oven, used to roast barley to make beer. Was this associated with Og?
Gogmagot and Corineus were traditionally carried in the Lord Mayor’s Parade in London. Or Gog and Magog as they are now known, as the traditional guardians of the City of London.
https://lordmayorsshow.london/history/gog-and-magog Brutus, having thus at last set eyes upon his kingdom, formed a design of building a city, and, with this view, traveled through the land to find out a convenient situation, and coming to the river Thames, he walked along the shore, and at last pitched upon a place very fit for his purpose. Here, therefore, he built a city, which he called New Troy; under which name it continued a long time after, till at last, by the corruption of the original word, at came to be called Trinovantum. But afterwards when Lud, the brother of Cassibellaun, who made war against Julius Caesar, obtained the government of the kingdom, he surrounded it with stately walls, and towers of admirable workmanship, and ordered it to be called after his name, Kaer-Lud, that is, the City of Lud. But this very thing became afterward the occasion of a great quarrel between him and his brother Nennius, who took offence at his abolishing the name of Troy in this country. http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/History_o ... /Book_1#16Likewise, Thomas Lethbridge, (author of Gogmagog – The Buried Gods) claimed to have found a giant carved into the chalk at Wandlebury, but that seems to have upset a great many of the archeos of his time, who thought it was wishful thinking at best.
http://www.archaeologyuk.org/ba/ba112/feat3.shtmlIn the Middle East, Gog and Magog stories tend to be a lot more apocalyptic, based on Ezekial and Revalations, with stories of war and “end times” for Israel.
e.g.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gog_and_Magog But trying to makes sense of all that disappears into an internet twilight zone of fundamental religious beliefs of all kinds (Christian, Jewish and Islamic) including how George W Bush tried to get France to join in the invasion of Iraq.
President Jacques Chirac wanted to know what the hell President Bush had been on about in their last conversation. Bush had then said that when he looked at the Middle East, he saw "Gog and Magog at work" and the biblical prophecies unfolding. http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfre ... eorge-bushhttp://trackingbibleprophecy.com/gog_magog.php http://www.imranhosein.org/books/131-an ... n-age.html As remarked by Wael Baseem
https://wbaseem.wordpress.com/2013/10/2 ... t-to-know/..
Any place north of the Holy Land may be the land of Gog and Magog; Gog may be a person and Magog a nation; the Magog of the Genesis reference is certainly a person (the descendent of Noah through Japeth) but the Magog of the other references is apparently a nation or tribe. Take your pick.Gog/Magog features in the history of Alexander The Great as well, and could refer to whoever you want the AntiChrist to be at this moment in history.