Sunday, June 22, 2025

Not Only by Broomstick

 



The Ottoman traveler Evliya Çelebi arrived in a Circassian village at the end of April, 1666. He learned from the locals that it was the night of battles with the Kara-Kondjolos (vampire witches). Çelebi went out with eighty members of his party and observed a fantastic battle in the sky. 

The sorcerers of the Abkhaz - his mother's people - rose into the sky mounted on uprooted trees, terracotta pots, axes, shovels, cartwheels, rugs and more. Circassian shamans took to the air to oppose them, sailing in fishing boats or riding horses, bulls or camels. The battle lasted six hours and was partly waged on the ground when witches and sorcerers fell from the sky. 

When roosters crowded the contenders became invisible. Çelebi said he had never believed stories of such night battles until he and thousands around him witnessed this one.

He included this episode in book VI of his Book of Travels, the Seyahatname, an enormous ten-volume work that  he compiled after forty years of travel all over the Ottoman empire, and to bordering lands. 


Illustration RM + AI

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Thank you Robert, is there a book recommendation you could offer on Evliya Celebi’s life. My dream would be to travel to Persia. I was able to experience some adventures in dream travel by one of your meditations and classes, so vivid and amazing . I would love to learn more about Evliya and his experiences. Thank you for this!

Robert Moss said...

Robert Dankoff, "An Ottoman Mentality the World of Evliya Celebi" (Leiden and Boston: Brill, 2006),