
Drei Gaugöttinnen - Walburg, Verena und Gertrud als deutsche Kirchenheilige. - Sittenbilder aus dem germanischen Frauenleben - von - E.L. Rochholz. - 1870
Vorwort.
Inhalt.
III. Gertrud mit der Maus, die Allerseelenherrin. - Nachträge. - Wortregister.
I. Walburg mit drei Aehren, - die Ackergöttin.
II. Verena mit dem Kamme, - die Kindsmutter.
III. Gertrud mit der Maus, - die Allerseelenherrin.
Nachträge.
Wortregister.
The book invites listeners on a scholarly trek through the German countryside, where three beloved saints—Walburg, Verena and Gertrud—emerge not only as holy figures but as echoes of ancient regional goddesses. Drawing on the author’s own field notes from hunting trips, monastery visits and local folklore, it weaves together oral memory and scarce written sources to suggest that these women once embodied the protective spirit of their “Gau,” long before ecclesiastical borders were drawn.
Beyond the mythic layer, the work explores how these female deities reflected the Germanic ideal of a household ruled by a wise woman, overseeing marriage, labor and peace. It shows how the onslaught of war and later Christian conversion reshaped these goddesses into saints, preserving fragments of their original virtues while masking their older roles. The narrative balances careful historical analysis with vivid descriptions of the valleys and river basins that kept the old cult alive.
Through clear, engaging prose, listeners gain a fresh perspective on how regional identity, gender, and religion intertwined in early German lands, offering a thoughtful glimpse into a world where myth and faith still whisper across the hills.
Language
de
Duration
~6 hours (380K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Delphine Lettau and PG Distributed Proofreaders
Release date
2004-04-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1809–1892
A lively 19th-century folklorist and historian, he devoted much of his work to legends, myths, and popular traditions from Switzerland and the German-speaking world. His writing helped preserve a rich body of regional storytelling that might otherwise have faded away.
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