Mykola Kornylovych Pymonenko, Fortune-Telling on Christmastide. 1888
I found the image above in the Carpathian folk tumblr (where there are lots of interesting pix). At the artist's Wikipedia entry I found that the painting is at the State Russian Museum in Saint Petersburg.
The young girls are shadowcasting by candlelight, holding something (a coin?) in the other hand. Are any readers familiar with this custom and able to shed some light on the process or its history?
Reposted from 2015 to accompany the updated post from earlier today about Russian art.
they may be holding a piece of wax. melted wax would poured into water and the resulting shape would then be used to foretell the future. there are many such carpathian mountain traditions associated with christmas time. it is a magical time, and not just because of christmas.
ReplyDeletethanks for the tumblr link!
I-)
I believe they are practicing molybdomancy, a form of "divination" using molten metal (typically lead or tin).
ReplyDeletea video of Bleigießen (i.e. molybdomancy. literally "lead pouring") as it is practiced today.
DeleteI also found an English language list of interpretations.
Note that in the video (around t=0:43) the practitioners place the quenched lead blob from the water bowl between the candle and the wall in order to use the shadow to better determine what "shape" the blob most resembles which then allows them to lookup the divinatory meaning of that shape. This is why it looks like shadow casting.
Deletefirst time i have heard of the term 'molybdomancy', but i like it!
ReplyDeletefrom what i know, in the carpathians, they use melted wax, beeswax to be specific. i have not heard of it being done with melted metal, but i will check.
I-)
here is the wax method, which is what those girls would be doing.
ReplyDeletehttps://journals.ku.edu/index.php/folklorica/article/viewFile/3744/3583
I-)
excellent link, anon. When I get a chance I'll update the post with the info from your link and the one provided by nolandda.
DeleteDivination by means of wax is called "carromancy."
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carromancy
thanks for that wiki link!
Delete:-) i was going to invent a word for the wax version of 'molybdomancy', but you did, and you created a wiki page for it as well! :-)
I-)
The young girls are shadowcasting by candlelight, holding something (a coin?) in the other hand. Are any readers familiar with this custom and able to shed some light on the process or its history?
ReplyDeleteWas "shed some light" on "shadowcasting" intentional?
Must be my 50-years-ago English major tendencies creeping in.
Delete