User Contributed Dictionary
Adjective
imprecatoryExtensive Definition
A curse is the effective action of some power,
distinguished solely by the quality of adversity that it brings. A
curse may also be said to result from a spell
or prayer, imprecation or
execration, or other imposition by magic
or witchcraft, asking
that a god, natural force,
or spirit
bring misfortune to someone.
The forms of curses found in various cultures
comprise a significant proportion of the study of both folk
religion and folklore.
Folk use
The deliberate levying of curses is often part of the practice of magic, taking place at the boundary between organized religion and folkloric customs. The curse makes effective part in the Hindu culture (The Fakir has the bless and curse power).Special names for specific types of curses can be
found in various cultures:
- African American voodoo presents us with the jinx/haitians and crossed conditions, as well as a form of foot track magic, whereby cursed objects are laid in the paths of victims and activated when walked over.
- Middle Eastern and Mediterranean culture is the source of the belief in the evil eye, which may be the result of envy but, more rarely, is said to be the result of a deliberate curse.
- German people, including the Pennsylvania Dutch speak in terms of hexing (from the German word for witchcraft), and a common hex in days past was that laid by a stable-witch who caused milk cows to go dry and horses to go lame.
- Indian people, use the word Shrap in Hindi and Marathi
Ancient Greek and Roman curses
Greek and Roman curses were somewhat formal and official. Called katadesmoi by the Greeks and tabulae defixiones by the Romans, they were written on lead tablets or other materials, generally invoked the aid of a spirit (a deity, a demon, or one of the dead) to accomplish their aim, and were placed in some place considered effective for their activation, such as in a tomb, cemetery, or sacred spring or well.In the text of katadesmoi and defixiones, the
petitioner uttered a prayer or formula that the enemy would suffer
injury in some specific way, along with the reason therefore, such
as theft or loss of respect.
The Romans, Etruscans, and
Greeks in Italy all practiced this custom. They buried the curses
so well that today we have a body of curse inscriptions to tell us
how they did it.
Celtic curses
In the Celtic world there were also many different forms of curses. Some of the most well known from Ireland are Curse stones, Egg curses, New Year curses and Milk curses.Curse stones
generally involved particle stones with the power to curse. One
example involved turning a stone three times and saying the name of
the person you wanted to curse.
Egg curses are
a fertility curse. If you buried/hid eggs on someone else's land it
was believed you could steal their land's fertility and therefore their
luck. There are also some
well documented methods believed to break these curses.
New year
curses are like egg curses. If you took something from someone
on the new year you took their luck for the year. People used to
not clean their house or throw out water for this reason. In
Munster you
can see a similar form in the may bush and the
stealing of may bushes.
Stealing back the item or bush is believed to return the
luck.
Milk curses were curses put on a household where
the milk from others cows went to yours.
Curses in the Bible
The first curse in the Bible is put on the serpent by God, "You are cursed more than all cattle," (Genesis 3:14). As a result of Adam and Eve disobeying God, the ground is also cursed: "Cursed is the ground for your sake; in toil you shall eat of it All the days of your life." (3:17). Cain is cursed from the earth, "So now you are cursed from the earth," (4:11).In the New
Testament Paul
sees curses as central to the meaning of Jesus's crucifixion. In Galatians
3:13 he says: "Christ redeems us
from the curse of the law by becoming a curse for us...". He refers
to Deuteronomy: " anyone who is hung on a tree is under God's
curse." (21:23 RAEDM)
Some passages in the Tanakh treat
curses as being effective techniques; they see a curse as an
objective reality with real power. However, most sections of the
Bible
conceive a curse to be merely a wish, to be fulfilled by God only
when just and deserved.
According to the Book of
Proverbs, an undeserved curse has no effect (Proverbs 26:2),
but may fall back upon the head of him who utters it (Genesis 12:3;
Sirach
21:27), or may be turned by God into a blessing, as in the case of
Balaam
(Deuteronomy
23:5).
The declaration of punishments (Gen. 3:14, 17;
4:11), the utterance of threats (Jeremiah 11:3,
17:5; Malachi i. 14), and
the proclamation of laws (Deut. 11:26-28, 27:15 et seq.) received
added solemnity and force when conditioned by a curse.
In the Bible, cursing is generally characteristic
of the godless (Ps. 10:7), but may serve as a weapon in the mouth
of the wronged, the oppressed, and those who are zealous for God
and righteousness (Judges 9:57; Prov.
11:26, 30:10).
A righteous curse, especially when uttered by
persons in authority, was believed to be unfailing in its effect
(Gen. 9:25, 27:12; II Kings 2:24;
Ecclus. Sirach 3:11). One
who had received exemplary punishment at the hands of God was
frequently held up, in cursing, as a terrifying object-lesson (Jer.
23: 22), and such a person was said to be, or to have become, a
curse (II Kings 22:19; Jer. 24:9, 25: 18; Zechariah
8:13). An elaborate trial by
ordeal for a woman suspected by her husband of adultery is set forth in
Numbers
5:11-30; this involved drinking a "bitter water that brings a
curse"; if the woman were guilty, she would suffer miscarriage and infertility.
It is especially forbidden to curse God (Exodus 22:28),
parents (Ex. 21:17; Leviticus 20:9;
Prov. 20:20, 30: 11), the authorities (Ex. 22:28; Eccl. 10:20), and
the helpless deaf (Lev. 19:14).
Curses in Rabbinic literature
A number of sections of the Talmud show a belief in the power of curses (Berachot 19a, 56a.) In some cases, a curse is described as related to the nature of a prayer (Ta'an. 23b); an undeserved curse is described as ineffective (Makkot 11a) and falls back upon the head of him who utters it (Sanhedrin 49a).Not only is a curse uttered by a scholar unfailing in its effect,
even if undeserved (Mak. 11a), but one should not regard lightly
even the curse uttered by an ignorant man (Meg. 15a).
The Biblical prohibitions of cursing are legally
elaborated, and extended to self-cursing (Shebu. 35a). A woman that
curses her husband's parents in his presence is divorced and loses
her dowry (Ket.
72a).
Cursing may be permissible when prompted by
religious motives. For
instance, a curse is uttered against those who mislead the people
by calculating, on the basis of Biblical passages, when the
Messiah
will come (Sanhedrin 97b). Cursed are those who are guilty of
actions which, though not forbidden, are considered
reprehensible.
According to legend, some rabbinic scholars
cursed sometimes not only with their mouths, but also with an
angry, fixed look. The consequence of such a look was either
immediate death or poverty (Sotah 46b, and parallel passages). (See
Evil
eye)
Cursed places
Certain landmarks or locales are said to be cursed. Various lakes, rivers and mountains have been called cursed, as has the Sargasso Sea. However even when there is a tradition of a place "taking someone" every number of years it is not always considered cursed. For example, someone is said to drown in Lough Gur in Limerick, Ireland every seven years but the lake is not considered "cursed" by the locals. The alleged Bermuda Triangle effect is believed by some to be some form of curse (and by others to be some unexplained natural phenomena).Babinda's Boulders, Babinda township,
near Cairns,
Queensland on
Australia's
mid-north coast, is a place known for the Devil's
Pool, a group of waterholes known to be dangerous to young male
travellers, but never claiming the lives of locals or females.
There is some dispute about the dangers, that the geography of the
place is naturally risky with the rocks and fast moving currents
&em; yet an Aboriginal legend exists giving it the context of a
historic curse.
Curse to the United States presidency
Tecumseh's curse was reputed to cause the deaths in office of Presidents of the United States elected in years divisible by 20, beginning in 1840. This alleged curse appears to have fallen dormant, since Ronald Reagan, (elected in 1980) survived an assassination attempt.Sports-related curses
A number of curses are used to explain the failures or misfortunes of specific sports teams, players, or even cities. For example:- The Curse of the Billy Goat is used to explain the failures of the Chicago Cubs baseball team, who have not won a World Series championship since 1908, and a National League pennant since 1945.
- There was the Curse of the Bambino, on the Boston Red Sox major league baseball team, who had not won a World Series since 1918 until the 2004 World Series, when the Sox defeated the St. Louis Cardinals, 4 games to 0.
- The "Krukow Kurse" is used to explain the San Francisco Giants' failure to ever win the World Series. It is attributed to Mike Krukow (a former pitcher for the Giants and a current broadcaster for the team) based upon his yearly pre-season predictions that the Giants "have a chance" to win the World Series. Once Krukow stops making such predictions- says the legend- the Giants will, in fact, win the World Series.
- Players who appear on the covers of either the Sports Illustrated magazine or the Madden NFL video game have tended to, coincidentally, suffer setbacks or injuries, immediately after appearing on either cover.
- Some think that the NHL's St. Louis Blues, Toronto Maple Leafs, and the Los Angeles Kings are cursed. Each team has not won a Stanley Cup championship, since 1967. For the Blues and Kings, 1967 was the season that each team joined the NHL, also implying that each team has never won the Stanley Cup.
- There was the Curse of 1940, which was placed on the New York Rangers for 54 years. But that curse was broken in the 1994 Stanley Cup Finals, with a 4 games to 3 victory against the Vancouver Canucks.
- There was an alleged curse placed on the Los Angeles Lakers, whenever they played the Boston Celtics in the NBA Finals, especially at the old Boston Garden. Los Angeles lost to Boston 6 times in the Finals in the 1960s ('62, '63, '65, '66, '68, '69), and in the 1984 NBA Finals. In several matchups, infamous incidents have seemed to have favored the Celtics, and in series-clinching wins for Boston, legendary coach Red Auerbach was said to have pulled his famous "victory cigar," and puffed it in front of the Lakers' bench. But the "leprechaun jinx" ended, with the Lakers' 4 games to 2 victory over the Celtics, in the 1985 NBA Finals. The Lakers' celebration was at Boston Garden, which would be the only time in the garden's history that a team other than the Celtics won the NBA championship in that building.
- There are alleged curses on the cities of Buffalo, Cleveland, Houston, Philadelphia, San Diego, and Seattle; which are believed to have a major league sports championship curse, meaning that any major league franchise that settles in that city are unable to win a sports championship, even if they have powerful and talented teams, thus causing much heartbreak to their fans, and much joy to rivals. Houston did however managed to win back to back championships in the NBA in 1994 and 1995, thus the curse for Houston may have been broken.
The Curse of 27
The Curse of 27 is the belief that 27 is an unlucky number due to the number of famous musicians and entertainers who have died at the age. Robert Johnson, Jim Morrison, Brian Jones, Jimi Hendrix, Ron "Pigpen" McKernan, Janis Joplin, Jonathan Brandis and Kurt Cobain are all believed to have been affected by the curse of 27. This is also known as the 27 Club.Cursed objects
Cursed objects are generally supposed to have been stolen from their rightful owners or looted from a sanctuary. The Hope Diamond is supposed to bear such a curse, and bring misfortune to its owner. The stories behind why these items are cursed vary, but they usually are said to bring bad luck or to manifest unusual phenomena related to their presence. The idea has broad pop-culture appeal, from eponymous object in the 1902 horror short story "The Monkey's Paw", to the ancient Greek story of Pandora's Box to the "Lament Configuration" puzzle box in the modern Hellraiser movie series. The television show Friday the 13th: The Series dealt with a hoard of cursed antiques sold by an evil man that gave their owners various powers in return for killing. Once cursed, the objects were indestructible and had to be stored in a special vault. This is an example of placing a new curse onto an otherwise neutral object which was then used as a cursed object to purportedly bring a curse to a person or place. This is similar to the practice of recording a spoken curse onto a media such as a cassette tape (sometimes then known as "witch's tape") or recordable CD which is then left at the area to be cursed.Egyptian curses and mummies
There is a broad popular belief in curses being associated with the violation of the tombs of mummified corpses, or of the mummies themselves. The idea became so widespread as to become a pop-culture mainstay, especially in horror films (though originally the curse was invisible, a series of mysterious deaths, rather than the walking-dead mummies of later fiction). The "Curse of the Pharaohs" is supposed to have haunted the archaeologists who excavated the tomb of Pharaoh Tutankhamun, whereby an imprecation was supposedly pronounced from the grave by the ancient Egyptian priests, on anyone who violated its precincts. Similar dubious suspicions have surrounded the excavation and examination of the (natural, not embalmed) Alpine mummy, "Ötzi the Iceman". While such curses are generally considered to have been popularized and sensationalized by British journalists of the 19th century, ancient Egyptians were in fact known to place curse inscriptions on markers protecting temple or tomb goods or property.See also
- Book curse
- Kennedy curse
- Motif of harmful sensation
- Nocebo: see "Ambiguity of Anthropological Usage".
- Sports-related curses
- Superman curse
- Tecumseh's curse
- The cursed videotape
References
- Curse tablets and Binding Spells from the Ancient World by John G. Gager ISBN 0-19-506226-4
- Maledicta: The International Journal of Verbal Aggression ISSN US 0363-3659
External links
- Rotten Library Article on Hexes
- Skeptic World Article - Curses
imprecatory in Czech: Kletba
imprecatory in Danish: Forbandelse
imprecatory in German: Fluch
imprecatory in Spanish: Maldición
imprecatory in Esperanto: Malbeno
imprecatory in French: Malédiction
imprecatory in Hebrew: קללה
imprecatory in Dutch: Vloek
(onheilsbezwering)
imprecatory in Japanese: 呪い
imprecatory in Portuguese: Maldição
imprecatory in Quechua: Ñakay
imprecatory in Russian: Проклятие
imprecatory in Albanian: Mallkimi
imprecatory in Simple English: Curse
imprecatory in Thai: คำสาป
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Rabelaisian, abusive, blasphemous, calumniatory, calumnious, comminatory, contumelious, cursing, damnatory, denunciatory, dirty, dysphemistic, epithetic, excommunicative,
excommunicatory,
execratory, foul, fulminatory, maledictory, obscene, profane, raw, ribald, risque, scatologic, scurrile, scurrilous, vile, vituperative