Philip Shallcrass (born 1953), often known by his Druid name, Greywolf, is Chief of the British Druid Order.[1] He is an English artist, writer, poet, musician and singer-songwriter who pioneered a "shamanic" Druidism.[2]

Philip Shallcrass
Born1953 (age 70–71)
Other namesGreywolf
Known forBritish Druid Order

Background

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Philip Shallcrass was born in Sussex, England in 1953. His first visit to Avebury occurred in the 1970s. In 1974 he discovered Druidry through reading Robert Graves' The White Goddess. In the same year, Shallcrass read Mircea Eliade's Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy. Eliade's book contained descriptions of the visionary experiences of shamans that mirrored events in Shallcrass's own life. Further studies convinced him that Druidry was the earliest recorded form of native European shamanism.[3] Philip Shallcrass has provided an account of his life, beliefs and inspirations for the BDO's YouTube channel, including Stuart Piggott's work on the history of Druidry. As a child Shallcrass was familiar with the Christian church; later, he would be inspired by the Welsh medieval text The Mabinogion and its stories. Shallcrass went on to run an occult bookshop in St. Leonards before being asked to join Alex Sander's coven, an offer which he would turn down. After working on Wicca with a different group Shallcrass went on to form the Grove of the Badger, a group based on Druidic principles. As a result of running a Druid group he decided that he was running a religious house as a response to Margaret Thatcher and the poll tax, providing proof of this to the relevant authorities which would propel him further along the course of Druidry. Meetings with Philip Carr Gomm and his wife Stephanie led to Shallcrass joining The Council of British Druid Orders and running a stall at a Pagan Federation national conference. During a sweat lodge at an OBOD camp in 1994, Shallcrass made contact with a wolf spirit who would become his spiritual guide and guardian.[4]

Work

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In 1978, Shallcrass joined an Alexandrian Wiccan coven, being initiated a High Priest the following year. During the course of that year, he had been writing seasonal festival rites for the coven. These were heavily influenced by his studies in Druidry. By the time the festival cycle was complete, the coven's celebrations had become so Druidic in flavour that the members agreed to stop calling themselves a coven and become instead a Grove; the Grove of the Badger. This is now seen as the Mother Grove of the British Druid Order (BDO).[5]

Over the years that followed, the material written for the Grove of the Badger was revised and added to. At the end of the 1980s it began to be published and bring the BDO to wider attention. He married Eleanor Kilpatrick, an Occupational Therapist with the NHS, in 1985. In the early 1990s, Kilpatrick and Shallcrass met and began a continuing friendship with Philip and Stephanie Carr-Gomm, chiefs of the Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids. Philip Shallcrass began to lecture on Druidry at a series of conferences on New Religious Movements.

In 1992, he became editor of The Druids' Voice: the Magazine of Contemporary Druidry.[6]

In 1993, at the invitation of Tim Sebastion, founder of the Secular Order of Druids, Shallcrass composed a ritual to be performed at a multi-faith conference Tim had organised among the old stone circles of Avebury in Wiltshire. This resulted in the formation of the Gorsedd of Bards of Caer Abiri, which grew over the next few years to become what Ronald Hutton described as the "central event" of the New Druidry, initiating many people into the Bardic grade.[7] A detailed account of the first event was published in The Gorsedd of Bards of Caer Abiri Newsletter No. 1, where Shallcrass took the role of Chief Druid (equivalent to Master of Ceremonies) with the assistance of Philip Carr Gomm of the Order of Bards Ovates and Druids.[8] Another detailed account of the Gorsedd was later provided in the Pagan Federation's journal Pagan Dawn.[9]

In 1994, following what he described as a powerful vision in a sweat lodge, Shallcrass adopted the Druid name, Greywolf. In 1995, he began to work regularly with Emma Restall Orr, who became joint chief of the BDO. Together, they lectured, hosted workshops and rituals, wrote new material for the Order, and appeared on TV and Radio in the UK and elsewhere.[10]

The "shamanic" form of Druidry pioneered by Shallcrass with the British Druid Order resulted in bringing the shamanic vision of the World Drum Project to ceremonies at Dragon Hill, below the Uffington White Horse hill figure in Oxfordshire, and at Avebury in Wiltshire.

Shallcrass has created a series of distance learning courses on Druidry for the British Druid Order covering all three grades of Bard, Ovate and Druid as a series of monthly booklets. The course comes with recommendations from prominent figures including Professor Ronald Hutton and Robin Williamson.[11]

The closing ceremony of the 2012 Paralympics included text from a 1997 Gorsedd ritual written by Philip Shallcrass and Emma Restall Orr.[12]

Shallcrass has been active in areas of ancient technology such as roundhouse building at the Wildways retreat centre in Shropshire.[13][4] He has also created numerous songs and chants, and worked with instruments including the drum, the chrotta and the tiompan. Some of these performances draw upon Shallcrass's knowledge of the Medieval period and its poetry and literature including metrical dinsenchas, while also being inspired by classical poems such as The Song of Amergin from the Mabinogion and The Battle of Cad Goddeu.[14]

Books

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Publications by Philip Shallcrass include:

  • A Catalogue of Occult Books, MRG, Hastings, 1978
  • A Druid Directory: A Guide to Druidry and Druid Orders Archived 25 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine, British Druid Order, Devizes, 1995, with revised editions 1997, 2001 (with Emma Restall Orr)
  • Druidry: Rekindling the Sacred Fire Archived 25 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine, (with Emma Restall Orr and others), British Druid Order, Wiltshire, 1996, with revised editions 1999, 2002
  • The Passing of the Year: A Collection of Songs and Poems, Spells and Invocations[permanent dead link], British Druid Order, Wiltshire, 1997, reprinted 1999, 2001
  • The Story of Taliesin[permanent dead link], British Druid Order, Wiltshire, 1997
  • Druidry: A Practical and Inspirational Guide, Piatkus Books, London, 2000 ISBN 0-7499-2040-8
  • The Remembering Soul: A Collection of Songs and Poems, Spells and Invocations[permanent dead link], British Druid Order, Wiltshire, 2001
  • Articles by Philip Shallcrass appear in:
  • Paganism Today, edited by Graham Harvey & Charlotte Hardman, Thorsons, 1995, reprinted as Pagan Pathways, Thorsons, 2000
  • The Druid Renaissance, edited by Philip Carr-Gomm, Thorsons, 1996, reprinted as The Rebirth of Druidry, Element, 2003
  • Talking Stick Magickal Journal, issue i, volume ii, Talking Stick Publications, 1996
  • The Encyclopaedia of Modern Witchcraft and Neo-Paganism, edited by Shelley Rabinovitch and James Lewis, Citadel Press, New York, 2002
  • The Druids' Voice: The Magazine of Contemporary Druidry[permanent dead link], British Druid Order, 1992-date
  • Tooth & Claw: Journal of the British Druid Order[permanent dead link], British Druid Order, 1995-date
  • [http://www.druidry.co.uk/products-page/Druidry-Pretanic[permanent dead link] Press-Philip Shallcrass/dp/ISBN 978-1-915604-00-2 2nd revised edition Pretanic Press 2023

References

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  1. ^ "The British Druid Order - Rekindling the sacred fires of Druidry". Druidry.co.uk. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  2. ^ The content of this article is extracted from booklet 9 of the BDO Bardic Course, Who Are We?, pages 21–31, from biographical notes in Shallcrass & Restall Orr (eds.), A Druid Directory, pages 31–33, from the autobiographical account given in 'A Priest of the Goddess,' Chapter 12 of the book, Nature Religion Today, edited by Pearson, Roberts and Samuel, Edinburgh University Press, 1998, and from the manuscript of Philip Shallcrass' as yet unpublished autobiography, A Druid's Tail. Publication details are from these sources and from Emma Restall Orr's website Archived 9 November 2012 at the Wayback Machine, the BDO archive, from amazon.co.uk and from the BDO webshop[permanent dead link].
  3. ^ See Philip Shallcrass, 'A Priest of the Goddess,' which forms Chapter 12 of the book, Nature Religion Today, edited by Pearson, Roberts and Samuel, Edinburgh University Press, 1998.
  4. ^ a b "British Druid Order YouTube channel, February 22nd 2019. BDO podcast Episode 01 Rob talks to Greywolf". Youtube.com. 22 February 2019. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  5. ^ Philip Shallcrass, 'A Priest of the Goddess,' which forms Chapter 12 of the book, Nature Religion Today, edited by Pearson, Roberts and Samuel, Edinburgh University Press, 1998.
  6. ^ "A Little BDO History - the British Druid Order". Archived from the original on 7 August 2013. Retrieved 12 September 2012.
  7. ^ Ronald Hutton, Witches, Druids and King Arthur, Hambledon and London, 2003, pp. 255–256
  8. ^ Philip Shallcrass, The Gorsedd of Bards of Caer Abiri Newsletter No. 1 Autumn 1993, BDO Publications 1993.
  9. ^ Philip Shallcrass, The Avebury Gorsedd 25 Years On, Pagan Dawn 208 Lammas 2018 pp. 28-30
  10. ^ Shallcrass & Restall Orr, eds., A Druid Directory, BDO Publications, Third edition, 2001.
  11. ^ "Courses". Druidry.co.uk. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  12. ^ "British Druid Order website, September 9th 2012. BDO Druidry Goes Global in the Paralympics Closing Ceremony". Druidry.co.uk. Archived from the original on 19 January 2017. Retrieved 18 July 2020.
  13. ^ Philip Shallcrass, A Roundhouse Between The Worlds, Pagan Dawn 207 Beltane 2018 p14 to 16.
  14. ^ "Philip Shallcrass - YouTube". Youtube.com. Retrieved 18 July 2020.