Tag: female power

  • The Crone

    The Crone

    Written by

    emma.stormbornelore
    in

    The moon shone in the darkest of nights as I gathered the herbs.Around my cave herbs of healing yarrow and nettle being the most used by our clan.

    Only eight winters ago the leader of claw clan approached me. My son in custody I see him a bone chain around his neck.

    “What do you want Clun?” I asked the small balding man dressed in simple furs .

    “We promise no harm to the children,” said the tall man wrapped in makeshift coats. He thrust a small vial towards me “You’ll have your son by sunrise. Just brew a sleeping draft. Put Camp Utthar to sleep.”

    I hesitated. The chief of Utthar had been good to us took my family in when no one else would. But River was my son. My blood. My only hope my future what else I do?

    I nodded slowly but looked to my boy a sadness stirred in me. Ad i gathered berries, roots, sacred herbs and stirred them into the pot by firelight. That night, the warriors, the women, the children… all fell into deep, enchanted sleep.

    So deep was the sleep that no one stirred when the men of Clun entered the encampment. As The Clun men crept in silent as shadow, savage as flame.

    I watched from the trees as my eldest, Ryn, was dragged into camp forced to witness the massacre. His voice was broken when he turned to me:

    “What did you do, Mother?!”Ryn cried

    A silent attack killing women children and men who remained within the camp. Fifty men died that night warriors hunters their wives and children.

    “You promised you’d leave the children” I cried

    I was aware that utther wife had been taken to a local cave. A safe place where she would give birth when the time was right.

    “Foolish old lady, why would we leave our enemies children? When they will grow to seek vengeance” Clun smirked riding away

    I was left staring at the devastation . The next days passed and the Chief returned from battle, his warriors behind them. The chiefs horn was heard and his sons replied with the wolfs howl. But they ran with newborns in their arms Boldolph leading the charge.

    Time froze the wind stilled as boldolph approached his father

    “They came in the still of night no one would wake up. The claw killed all of then father and she helped” boldolph replied as if giving his report

    Suddenly the screams came

    “Take her! Bind her!” Raven shouted.
    “She betrayed the family! Everyone’s dead! Mother’s alive but in labour!”

    One of the wounded men pointed at me with blood on his chest.

    “We heard her whispering with the Clun.
    She brewed the sleeping draft… then brought death upon us.”

    I turned and ran wishing for cover ducking from branches and jumping over roots from trees. The sound of hounds barking after me my heart racing beating like the drums. The hounds found me first. The men were not far behind.

    They bound me in ropes and dragged me back to camp, fear pounding through my veins like war drums. Then he came…

    Boldolph stood at seven feet tall.
    “Let me have her,” he growled but his eyes softened when they found Morrigan, his wife, weeping with in a cave

    “Lox is dead she did it” morrigan said

    “We have her,” a man spat, dragging me by the hair.i screamed trying to fight against the men holding me

    The chieftain stood tall.

    “Whitehair, you have betrayed your tribe. Look around you. This is your doing you butchered them in their sleep.” The cheiftan said “Take her to the rocks. Strip her name. Cut her nose and tongue. Then bind her and take her far from here.”

    The punishment was swift.

    The curse came faster.

    Before they dragged me away, my final spell shattered the night:

    “May your line suffer,
    May your form twist,
    Until one born cursed by storms,
    Breaks the wheel with mercy and fire.”

    And then, the transformation.

    As I was dragged out I could hear the howls of pain and anguish from boldolph and his mate morrigan. as Boldolph the giant, and Morrigan the gentle, were torn from flesh and given fur. Wolves. Forever cursed.

    Later, bound and broken, I was dragged to the sacred stone. They beat me. Stripped me of sound. My nose. My tongue. My name.

    Blindfolded, I was taken to lands unknown far beyond the reach of kin or mercy.

    But my magic remains.
    So does the curse.
    And the storm is not yet done.

    I could still taste blood.

    The salt of my torn tongue. The copper of betrayal. The earth where they left me bound, blindfolded. my hands lashed with nettles so tightly i still bear scars decades later.

    They called it mercy.

    But mercy would have been death.

    Instead, they gave me exile: cast beyond the sacred stones with only the breath in my lungs. The curse they feared more than her voice.

    Ad i crawled for days dragging my broken body through marsh and thorn. Wolves circled but did not bite. Ravens flew overhead but did not cry. And the spirits… the spirits walked with me.
    I did not die i became something else.

    Something older than their laws.

    As i found shelter in the hollow of a tree once used by midwives. A place where blood had been spilled in both birth and death. There, pressed my palms to the bark, and for the first time in weeks, i did not feel pain.

    Only power.

    It rose from the roots. From the bones buried deep the old ones, the forgotten, the nameless. Their stories rushed into me like a storm tide.

    And over time i remembered my own name.

    Not the one they spat when they cursed me. Not the one the elders tore from the village scrolls.

    But the one my mother gave me beneath the silvery moon.

    “Cceridwyn,” whispered, mouth bleeding, lips cracked.

    As the Years passed more people feared me. As i walked among the bones now, barefoot and veiled. My form barely seen except by those on the edge of death or madness. Her tongue never healed. Her voice never returned. But her curse… her curse remained intact.

    And more potent than ever.

    For every 13th child born of her bloodline, a sign would come:
    A sickness no healer cure.
    Eyes the colour of stormlight.
    A voice that spoke truths no one taught.

    The 13th of the 13th would be the end or the beginning.

    She waits still.
    Her bones lighter now, her spirit heavier.
    Watching as the stories repeat,
    as her great-grandson walks into the same woods where she once crawled.

    Taranis.
    The boy with the storm in his chest.

    The one they tried to exile, like her.

    But this time…
    the storm remembers.

    © written and created by ELHewitt

  • The Unsung Heroines of the Welsh Marches: A Historical Perspective

    The Unsung Heroines of the Welsh Marches: A Historical Perspective

    Drax’s Region , StormborneLore

    A colorful drawing depicting a bright blue sky with clouds and a sun, alongside a vibrant green landscape featuring a pond, flowers, and sheep.
    A vibrant child’s drawing depicting a pastoral scene with sheep, flowers, and a pond under a colorful sky.

    Historical Insight Series

    In the shadow of ancient hills and stone-crowned ridges, the Welsh Marches whisper stories long forgotten. Winds race across the Long Mynd.

    Caer Caradoc looms in silent watch. Yet somewhere beneath the earth, fragments of the lives. Once lived by Bronze Age women stay buried in urns, marked in pottery, etched in the soil itself.

    Though no names were written, no songs preserved their deeds in ink. These women shaped the land and its legacy just as surely as their male counterparts.

    In this post, we explore what archaeology reveals about their roles. struggles, and power during a time of shifting tribes, emerging hillforts, and mythic memory.

    Colorful abstract painting featuring a celtic knot border, a bright sun, a stylized tree with multicolored leaves, and a vibrant field of flowers.
    A vibrant, colorful painting featuring a tree with colorful leaves. A stylized sun, and a bright blue sky, embodying a connection to nature and artistic expression.

    Life in the Bronze Age Welsh Marches:

    The Female Thread, settlements and Society.


    Sites like Llanilar, Moel y Gaer, and the Breiddin Hillfort give us glimpses of structured settlements roundhouses. Aswell as storage pits, and hearths.

    While many daily activities stay unrecorded, it’s women who managed food preparation, textile production, tool-making, and child-rearing. Their hands shaped the rhythm of Bronze Age life.

    Burial Practices and Reverence.


    At Allt Y Crib and nearby burial cairns. The remains of women have been discovered alongside grave goods beads, pottery, bronze tools.

    These finds suggest women were not merely laborers. But held positions of respect, spiritual or familial leaders whose deaths warranted ritual care.

    Pottery and Cultural Identity.


    Decorated pots, many found in ritual pits and barrows, often bear feminine associations. Women have been central to their crafting, shaping not only vessels, but cultural identity through art, trade, and tradition.

    Celtic knots, landscape abstract arts

    Stone Circles and Ritual


    Mysterious sites like Cerrig Duon and Y Garn Goch offer insight into ceremonial life. While we can’t say definitively that women led rituals. Their burial proximity and symbolic items hint at possible priestess roles guardians of knowledge, seasons, and ancestral memory.

    Subsistence and Survival

    The Grinding stones, charred grains, and animal remains suggest women were active in agriculture, foraging, and preservation. They ensured continuity passing down wisdom in planting cycles, herbal lore, and the ways of fire and feast.

    Silent Influence, Lasting Echo


    Though no written records survive from the Bronze Age, the archaeology of the Welsh Marches speaks in its own language. Women’s influence is woven into every excavated hearth, every grave good, every pottery shard.

    They were not background figures they were central to survival, culture, and possibly leadership.

    Whether as midwives, weavers, warriors, or spiritual guides. The women of the Welsh Marches helped forge the legacy of the land Drax now calls home in StormborneLore.

    Thank you for reading.© 2025 Emma Hewitt / StormborneLore. All rights reserved.Unauthorized copying or reproduction of this content is prohibited.

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