Wicked Wednesdays: Devil’s Botany Absinthe Tasting

Wicked Wednesdays: Absinthe Masterclass with Devil’s Botany

Celebrate World Absinthe Day with Devil’s Botany

Explore the wicked world of absinthe at The Last Tuesday Society with a Wednesday night tasting & masterclass delving into the curious world of wormwood.

Tickets include a welcome drink on arrival plus a tasting of our Wormwood Vodka, award-winning Devil’s Botany London Absinthe & Absinthe Regalis, finishing with our decadent Chocolate Absinthe Liqueur. To finish, guests will be invited to explore the collection in the Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities.

Doors open at 18:30 for welcome drink.
Tasting & masterclass starts at 19:00.

Event is suitable for 18+ over only. Please contact [email protected] with any questions, allergies or dietary requirements. Refunds for in-person events are only possible up to 7 days prior to the event date.

Devil’s Botany is the UK’s first absinthe distillery, founded by Directors of The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour & Cocktail Bar. Celebrating spirit’s connection to art, literature, magic & mixology, Devil’s Botany is unleashing the future of absinthe with bold expressions for the adventurous drinkers of today.

Dracula Returns To Derby with Dan Webber – LIVE

Please note this is NOT a ZOOM Lecture but an in person lecture. Tickets include a complimentary glass of Devil’s Botany Chocolate Absinthe. Doors open at 6:30pm and talk starts at 7pm

Dracula Returns To Derby with Dan Webber

On 15th May 1924, Hamilton Deane produced the first official stage adaptation of Dracula at The Grand Theatre in Derby, creating the iconic version of the character we know today. Dracula Events Specialist Dan Webber unearths the fascinating connections between the city of Derby, and the World’s most famous vampire, following research undertaken as part of ‘Dracula Returns To Derby’.

Dan Webber (he/him) is an award-winning LGBTQ+ poet, promoter and producer. He has appeared at numerous festivals and venues across the country, including Glastonbury Festival, Edinburgh Festival Fringe, The Royal Vauxhall Tavern and as part of the 25th birthday celebrations for Leicester Comedy Festival. His latest collection, ‘Whispers From The Woods’ was published by The University of Derby Press in July 2025.

—————————————-

The Absinthe Parlour at The Last Tuesday Society is London’s best award-winning alternative cocktail bar hidden within The Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities. A drinker’s cabinet of wonder filled curious cocktails & extraordinary elixirs —The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour is truly a hidden treasure of East London. Opened by collectors, drinks historians & absinthe experts — Allison Crawbuck (Brooklyn) & Rhys Everett (London) in 2016, the duo bring with them a shared passion for the mysterious world of spirits & the macabre.

Devil’s Botany is the UK’s first absinthe distillery, founded by Directors of The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour. Celebrating spirit’s connection to art, literature, magic & mixology, Devil’s Botany is unleashing the future of absinthe with bold expressions for the adventurous drinkers of today. The Last Tuesday Society’s curious Monday night lecture series is sponsored by Devil’s Botany.

The venue opens at 18:30. Doors will close at 19:00 to avoid disrupting the speaker. We kindly ask that all guests arrive before 19:00. Refunds are not possible for in person events with less than seven days notice in any circumstances. Please note, the museum of curiosities is not opened on Mondays during our lectures.

The Old Stones: A Field Guide to the Prehistoric places of Britain and Ireland

Please note this is NOT a ZOOM Lecture but an in person lecture. Tickets include a complimentary glass of Devil’s Botany Chocolate Absinthe. Doors open at 6:30pm and talk starts at 7pm

The Old Stones: A Field Guide to the Prehistoric places of Britain and Ireland

A highly illustrated and fast paced talk based around many of the themes, new discoveries and mysteries highlighted in our book The Old Stones, along with a look at many lesser known but interesting sites around the UK. The Old Stones is the most comprehensive and thought-provoking field guide ever published to the iconic standing stones and prehistoric places of Britain and Ireland and was a winner of Current Archaeology Book of the Year.

Andy Burnham is lead author of ‘The Old Stones – the Megalithic Sites of Britain and Ireland’ book, along with other contributors to the huge Megalithic Portal web resource which he founded and has been running continuously since 2001.

The Absinthe Parlour at The Last Tuesday Society is London’s best award-winning alternative cocktail bar hidden within The Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities. A drinker’s cabinet of wonder filled curious cocktails & extraordinary elixirs —The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour is truly a hidden treasure of East London. Opened by collectors, drinks historians & absinthe experts — Allison Crawbuck (Brooklyn) & Rhys Everett (London) in 2016, the duo bring with them a shared passion for the mysterious world of spirits & the macabre.

—————————————-

Devil’s Botany is the UK’s first absinthe distillery, founded by Directors of The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour. Celebrating spirit’s connection to art, literature, magic & mixology, Devil’s Botany is unleashing the future of absinthe with bold expressions for the adventurous drinkers of today.

The venue opens at 18:30. Doors will close at 19:00 to avoid disrupting the speaker. We kindly ask that all guests arrive before 19:00. Refunds are not possible for in person events with less than seven days notice in any circumstances.

K-Pop Demon Hunters: Women, Spirits, and Korea’s Occult Traditions LIVE

Please note this is NOT a ZOOM Lecture but an in person lecture. Tickets include a complimentary glass of Devil’s Botany Chocolate Absinthe. Doors open at 6:30pm and talk starts at 7pm

K-Pop Demon Hunters: Women, Spirits, and Korea’s Occult Traditions with Melanie Hyo-In Han

Inspired by the Netflix original film K-Pop Demon Hunters, this illustrated talk uses the movie as a gateway into Korea’s spiritual landscape.

The film’s vision of song as sorcery and female warriors battling unseen forces draws directly from musok, Korea’s indigenous shamanic tradition. For centuries, mudang—predominantly women—have worked with spirits through ritual music, dance, and performance to heal, protect, and negotiate with the unseen world. In K-Pop Demon Hunters, these practices are reimagined as pop spectacle, where music becomes a weapon and performance becomes ritual.

In this lecture, Melanie Hyo-In Han explores how musok and mudang traditions—often misunderstood or marginalised—inform the film’s imagery, narrative, and worldview. Moving beyond the screen, the talk situates these practices within a living tradition shaped by women’s spiritual authority, the disruptions of Japanese colonisation, and the pressures of modernisation.

Blending historical insight, cultural critique, and rich visual material, K-Pop Demon Hunters: Women, Spirits, and Korea’s Occult Traditions offers audiences a deeper understanding of Korean spirits, ritual song, and female power—revealing how ancient occult lineages continue to resurface in contemporary global culture.

Melanie Hyo-In Han

Born in Korea and raised in East Africa, Melanie Hyo-In Han recently moved from the U.S. to the U.K. She is the author of Passing Notes in Secret (boats against the current), Abecedarian: Banff, Canada (kith books), My Dear Yeast (Milk & Cake Press), and Sandpaper Tongue, Parchment Lips (Finishing Line Press).Currently, she is finishing her PhD in Creative Writing at the University of Surrey, where she teaches undergraduate seminars in the School of Literature and Languages. She also serves as the Co-Editor-in-Chief of Flora Fiction and the Two Languages Prize Editor at Gasher Press. Learn more at melaniehan.com.

The Absinthe Parlour at The Last Tuesday Society is London’s best award-winning alternative cocktail bar hidden within The Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities. A drinker’s cabinet of wonder filled curious cocktails & extraordinary elixirs —The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour is truly a hidden treasure of East London. Opened by collectors, drinks historians & absinthe experts — Allison Crawbuck (Brooklyn) & Rhys Everett (London) in 2016, the duo bring with them a shared passion for the mysterious world of spirits & the macabre.

—————————————-

Devil’s Botany is the UK’s first absinthe distillery, founded by Directors of The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour. Celebrating spirit’s connection to art, literature, magic & mixology, Devil’s Botany is unleashing the future of absinthe with bold expressions for the adventurous drinkers of today.

The venue opens at 18:30. Doors will close at 19:00 to avoid disrupting the speaker. We kindly ask that all guests arrive before 19:00. Refunds are not possible for in person events with less than seven days notice in any circumstances.

Deeper Than Dermis: Tattooing as Magical Ritual with Grace Howarth – LIVE

Please note this is NOT a ZOOM Lecture but an in person lecture. Tickets include a complimentary glass of Devil’s Botany Chocolate Absinthe. Doors open at 6:30pm and talk starts at 7pm

Deeper Than Dermis: Tattooing as Magical Ritual

Deeper Than Dermis is an illustrated lecture exploring tattooing as a form of contemporary magical and ritual practice. Drawing on her MA research in Magic and Occult Science and her lived experience as a professional tattoo artist, Grace Howarth reframes tattooing not as decoration or subculture, but as an embodied rite shaped by intention, pain, consent, time, and transformation.

The talk approaches skin as a liminal threshold rather than a surface, and tattooing as a ritual act that alters the body, memory, and sense of self. Grace explores tattooing as spellwork and sigil craft, where repeated symbols, marks, and gestures act apotropaically, binding intention into flesh.

Themes include ritual mark making across cultures, the magical function of pain and endurance, the tattoo studio as a modern ritual chamber, and the ways vulnerability, altered states, and care arise through the tattoo process. The lecture also considers how tattoos continue to function long after their making, as living talismans carried through time.

This is not a technical lecture on tattooing, but an accessible and esoteric exploration of why humans mark themselves, how magic persists within contemporary secular spaces, and how the body becomes a site of ritual and transformation.

Grace Howarth is a UK based artist and professional tattooist working at the intersection of ritual, embodiment, and contemporary magical practice. She holds an MA in Magic and Occult Science, with a dissertation titled Deeper Than Dermis: Tattooing as a Magical Ritual. Her work approaches tattooing as an act of transformation, a deliberate rite shaped by intention, consent, pain, time, and care.

Her practice is informed by academic experience in archaeology, philosophy, teaching, and creative writing. These lineages shape how she understands the body as a site of inscription, how marks accumulate meaning across time, and how knowledge is transmitted through gesture, repetition, and language. Tattooing, for Grace, is a form of embodied authenticity. A way of thinking, remembering, and speaking through the skin. Marks become declarations, the body a living grimoire.

Working across multidisciplinary art forms and research led workshops, she treats skin as a threshold rather than a surface. Her work draws on sigil craft, apotropaic imagery, and ritual mark making, with a particular focus on bodily autonomy, chosen identity, and the quiet power of self authored transformation. Queerness enters her practice not as a theme but as a way of moving through the work, through the refusal of fixed narratives, the redefinition of symbols, and the holding of care as an active, embodied practice.

Alongside her tattoo practice, Grace develops lectures and workshops that explore ritual marking across cultures, the tattoo studio as a contemporary ritual chamber, and the ethics of vulnerability, attention, and consent. Her work is grounded in the belief that magic persists within everyday spaces, and that tattoos function as living talismans carried through time on the body. Her current work includes an upcoming artist residency at the Kolaj Institute in New Orleans, alongside sigil based workshops at the Copenhagen Occult Club’s Witches Camp, focused on mark making as embodied ritual process.

The Absinthe Parlour at The Last Tuesday Society is London’s best award-winning alternative cocktail bar hidden within The Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities. A drinker’s cabinet of wonder filled curious cocktails & extraordinary elixirs —The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour is truly a hidden treasure of East London. Opened by collectors, drinks historians & absinthe experts — Allison Crawbuck (Brooklyn) & Rhys Everett (London) in 2016, the duo bring with them a shared passion for the mysterious world of spirits & the macabre.

—————————————-

Devil’s Botany is the UK’s first absinthe distillery, founded by Directors of The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour. Celebrating spirit’s connection to art, literature, magic & mixology, Devil’s Botany is unleashing the future of absinthe with bold expressions for the adventurous drinkers of today.

The venue opens at 18:30. Doors will close at 19:00 to avoid disrupting the speaker. We kindly ask that all guests arrive before 19:00. Refunds are not possible for in person events with less than seven days notice in any circumstances.

Foxtrot Echo & COUM Transmissions with Matthew Levi Stevens

Please note this is NOT a ZOOM Lecture but an in person lecture. Tickets include a complimentary glass of Devil’s Botany Chocolate Absinthe. Doors open at 6:30pm and talk starts at 7pm

Foxtrot Echo & COUM Transmissions with Matthew Levi Stevens

Before Coil and Carter-Tutti, before Psychic TV and Thee Temple ov Psychick Youth, before even Throbbing Gristle, there was COUM Transmissions: an alchemical cauldron in which many of the personalities and later obsessions of these subsequent projects were explored for the first time.

COUM was more an anarchistic Art Gang than a commune, that at its very best combined latter-day Artful Dodgers and some decidedly Dodgy Artists, regardless of Age, Colour, Gender, or Sexuality. Like something between a love-affair and a cult, Monty Python meets Gilbert+George, hitches a ride with the Merry Pranksters to the nearest Acid Test.In their own words:

“Your local dirty banned, COUM are the folk-music of tomorrow, but there is no tomorrow. Made up of various people from all creative areas, post-psychedelic trash, vanguard for the Wild Boys, soon to become “Wreckers of Civilization.”

COUM urinate down the handrails of your subconscious, and are a nice evening out for the family” (even if the Manson Family!)“COUM are fab and kinky. And never forget that infamous and nasty COUM guarantee of disappointment, sweetie.”

Foxtrot Echo was a key member of COUM, alongside Genesis P-Orridge & Cosey Fanni Tutti. He was the first to meet Monte Cazazza, the first to take nude photos of Cosey, and bridged the move from Hippy Happenings & Street Theatre to later Transgressive & Body Art: also the move to London, and meeting with Peter ‘Sleazy’ Christopherson.

Tonight, Matthew Levi Stevens will explain the salient background, and then invite Foxtrot Echo himself to help unpack the deeper stories, with the help of anecdotes from his rich history, and rare images from his personal archive (many of which have not previously been seen in public.)

Matthew Levi Stevens is the author of The Magical Universe of William S. Burroughs (Mandrake of Oxford, 2014) and various related texts, as well as a range of print and online articles for Beatdom, FANEmag, The Fenris Wolf 12, Furfur, Reality Sandwich, Soft Need 23, and others. He has also spoken at The Last Tuesday Society, The Occult Conference (Glastonbury), The Atlantis Bookshop, Treadwells, and The Horse Hospital.”

The Absinthe Parlour at The Last Tuesday Society is London’s best award-winning alternative cocktail bar hidden within The Viktor Wynd Museum of Curiosities. A drinker’s cabinet of wonder filled curious cocktails & extraordinary elixirs —The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour is truly a hidden treasure of East London. Opened by collectors, drinks historians & absinthe experts — Allison Crawbuck (Brooklyn) & Rhys Everett (London) in 2016, the duo bring with them a shared passion for the mysterious world of spirits & the macabre.

—————————————-

Devil’s Botany is the UK’s first absinthe distillery, founded by Directors of The Last Tuesday Society’s Absinthe Parlour. Celebrating spirit’s connection to art, literature, magic & mixology, Devil’s Botany is unleashing the future of absinthe with bold expressions for the adventurous drinkers of today.

The venue opens at 18:30. Doors will close at 19:00 to avoid disrupting the speaker. We kindly ask that all guests arrive before 19:00. Refunds are not possible for in person events with less than seven days notice in any circumstances.

Magical Recipes- An Online course: Food, Potion, and Power in Old Norse & Folk Magic – Lena Heide Brennand – Zoom

Magical Recipes- An Online course: Food, Potion, and Power in Old Norse & Folk Magic

This one-night, fully practical online workshop is about making two complete, historically grounded Viking recipes from start to finish: a Viking herbal honey bread and a traditional-style Viking mead, prepared live in your own kitchen using simple, accessible ingredients.

By the end of the evening, every participant will have baked a finished loaf of herbal honey bread and begun a real mead preparation that continues fermenting after the session, alongside a clear understanding of why bread, honey, herbs, fermentation, and time were understood as powerful and magical in the Norse and Northern folk world.

In Viking and folk tradition, magic was not abstract. It was kneaded, brewed, heated, tasted, shared, and remembered. Bread and mead sat at the heart of both daily survival and ritual life, carrying meanings of hospitality, protection, abundance, oath-making, and community. Fermentation itself was understood as a living process, something that transformed sweetness into strength through patience and care.

During the session, participants will be guided step by step through the preparation of a historically inspired, kitchen-safe Viking herbal honey bread, using grain, honey, and simple herbs rooted in Northern tradition. Alongside this, participants will learn how to prepare a traditional-style Viking mead using honey, water, and yeast, following principles drawn from historical and archaeological evidence rather than modern commercial recipes. The bread will be fully prepared and baked during the live session, while the mead will be mixed, activated, and set aside to ferment at home.

Alongside the practical cooking and brewing, the workshop explores how these recipes functioned as ritual technologies. Participants will learn how intention was built through timing, repetition, touch, and attention; why kneading, stirring, heating, and spoken words mattered; the symbolic and practical roles of honey, grain, herbs, water, and fermentation; and how food and drink moved fluidly between nourishment, medicine, celebration, and ritual power. The session also addresses how to adapt these techniques responsibly for modern kitchens while respecting historical reality.

All ingredients are non-toxic, food-safe, and easily sourced from ordinary supermarkets. Ingredient lists and clear instructions will be provided in advance.

The workshop is designed as an intimate, hands-on experience. Participants are encouraged to bake and brew along on camera, ask questions, and share their process, though cameras remain optional. No prior baking, brewing, or magical experience is required.

Places are strictly limited to preserve a practical, interactive, and genuinely communal atmosphere.

Come knead. Come brew. Come taste the old magic.

You will leave with warm bread, living mead in the making, and a deeper understanding of how magic once lived in the hearth and the cup.

Participant Preparation

During the Workshop

The bread will be fully prepared and baked live

The mead will be mixed, activated, and set aside to ferment

Fermentation continues at home after the session

Important Notes

No prior baking or brewing experience required

Instructor Bio

Lena Schattenherz Heide-Brennand is a Norwegian lecturer with a master degree in language, culture and literature from the University of Oslo and Linnaeus University. She has been lecturing and teaching various subjects since 1998. Her field of interest and main focus has always been topics that others have considered strange, eccentric and eerie, and she has specialised in a variety of dark subjects linked to folklore, mythology and Victorian traditions and medicine. Her students often point out her thorough knowledge about the subjects she is teaching, in addition to her charismatic appearance. She refers to herself as a performance lecturer and always gives her audience an outstanding experience

This is a participation workshop only, if you are unable to attend please request a refund as this course will not be recorded

The Philosophers’ Stone Is Real: How Chemistry Shaped Alchemical Allegory – Sergei Zotov – Zoom

The Philosophers’ Stone Is Real: How Chemistry Shaped Alchemical Allegory

Early modern alchemists did not invent their imagery in a vacuum. It emerged from engagement with real chemical and metallurgical processes observed in laboratories. This lecture explores how such processes generated the weird and often disturbing allegorical language of alchemy: hybrid bodies, hermaphrodites, cannibalistic kings, green lions, and Christ-eagles. I argue that these strange images often functioned as visual models for thinking about matter, transformation, and causality before the modern chemical theory of elements.

Drawing on illustrated alchemical manuscripts and albums from the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries, the talk shows how allegory became a practical cognitive tool — a way to stabilise, remember, and communicate experimental knowledge in a world without standardised chemical notation.

Speaker Bio:

Sergei Zotov is a historian of science and visual culture specialising in alchemy, magic, and iconography in medieval and early modern Europe (c. 1400–1800). He received his doctorate from the University of Warwick and is currently an Associate Fellow at the Warburg Institute (University of London). His research has been supported by major international fellowships held in Baltimore, Glasgow, Berlin, Gotha, Wolfenbüttel, and Überlingen, and has involved extensive archival work across more than 100 collections worldwide. Sergei has published in leading journals, including Nuncius and the British Journal for the History of Science, and is the author of five books on early modern iconography, two of which have received prestigious prizes and others shortlisted for major awards.

Curated & Hosted by:

Lena Schattenherz Heide-Brennand is a Norwegian lecturer with a master degree in language, culture and literature from the University of Oslo and Linnaeus University. She has been lecturing and teaching various subjects since 1998. Her field of interest and main focus has always been topics that others have considered strange, eccentric and eerie, and she has specialised in a variety of dark subjects linked to folklore, mythology and Victorian traditions and medicine. Her students often point out her thorough knowledge about the subjects she is teaching, in addition to her charismatic appearance. She refers to herself as a performance lecturer and always gives her audience an outstanding experience

don’t worry if you miss it – we will send you a recording valid for two weeks the next day

Dwell with Osiris – Death and Rebirth in Ancient Egypt – Dr Chris Naunton – Zoom

Dwell with Osiris- Death and Rebirth in Ancient Egypt

What happens when you die?

The ancient Egyptians developed a rich and complex set of beliefs about death, the afterlife, and the journey beyond the horizon. Among the most vivid and influential of these is the Amduat — an Egyptian term meaning “That Which Is in the Netherworld.”

The Duat was the hidden, underground realm through which the sun god travelled each night, dying with the setting sun and being reborn at dawn. This nocturnal journey was not his alone. It was also the path taken by the spirit of the king, who hoped to dwell eternally within the Amduat alongside Osiris, the mythic first king — and yet also to emerge renewed, transformed, and reborn into a perfected next life.

This lecture follows that perilous passage: through darkness and transformation, danger and renewal, as we trace one of humanity’s earliest and most compelling maps of death, rebirth, and cosmic order.

Speaker Bio:

Dr Chris Naunton is a British Egyptologist, author, and public historian, widely respected for his ability to bring the beliefs, texts, and lived realities of ancient Egypt vividly to life. He holds a PhD in Egyptology and is particularly known for his work on Egyptian religion, funerary literature, and conceptions of the afterlife, including the Amduat, Book of the Dead, and related underworld texts.

He has served as Director of the Egypt Exploration Society, one of the world’s oldest and most prestigious Egyptological organisations, and has been closely involved with research, fieldwork, and scholarly outreach connected to major collections such as those of the British Museum. Alongside his academic work, Naunton is a prolific communicator, appearing frequently in documentaries, lectures, podcasts, and radio programmes, where he bridges rigorous scholarship with compelling storytelling.

Naunton is the author of several acclaimed books, including Searching for the Lost Tombs of Egypt and The Story of Egypt, which combine archaeology, history, and cultural analysis to explore how ancient Egyptians understood their world — and how we continue to interpret it today. His lectures are known for their clarity, depth, and narrative power, guiding audiences through complex religious ideas while remaining firmly grounded in historical evidence.

With a rare talent for making ancient texts feel urgent, strange, and profoundly human, Dr Chris Naunton is one of the leading contemporary voices interpreting Egypt’s gods, dead, and eternal landscapes for modern audiences.

Curated & Hosted by:

Lena Schattenherz Heide-Brennand is a Norwegian lecturer with a master degree in language, culture and literature from the University of Oslo and Linnaeus University. She has been lecturing and teaching various subjects since 1998. Her field of interest and main focus has always been topics that others have considered strange, eccentric and eerie, and she has specialised in a variety of dark subjects linked to folklore, mythology and Victorian traditions and medicine. Her students often point out her thorough knowledge about the subjects she is teaching, in addition to her charismatic appearance. She refers to herself as a performance lecturer and always gives her audience an outstanding experience

don’t worry if you miss it – we will send you a recording valid for two weeks the next day

Haunted Waters: River Spirits, Drowned Ghosts & Water-Witches – Lena Heide Brennand – Zoom

Haunted Waters: River Spirits, Drowned Ghosts & Water-Witches

Where something ancient watches from beneath the surface—hungry, patient, and older than the land itself.

In every culture on earth, water is a threshold—a mirror, a mouth, a silent witness—and often, a predator. This immersive lecture journeys through the world’s most haunting aquatic folklore, from the still pools of rural China where drowned maidens rise for revenge, to the river-goddesses of West and Central Africa who demand offerings, to Japan’s kappa lurking beneath bridges with a child’s laugh and a demon’s appetite.

Meet the Slavic Rusalka whose beauty kills; the Nøkken of Scandinavia who sings travellers to their deaths; the storm-witches of the Baltic who can raise waves with a whisper; and the restless river-ghosts of Eastern Europe and East Asia, forever tied to the waters that claimed them.

Drawing on global folklore, mythic ecology, and the anthropology of water-spirits, we reveal why lakes, rivers, wells, estuaries, and shorelines are universally feared as borders between worlds. Discover the ritual offerings once cast into sacred springs, the ceremonies performed to calm offended rivers, and the bone-deep belief that the drowned do not sleep—they linger.

A night of mythology, terror, beauty, and the uncanny pull of the deep: a lecture on the ancient, living waters that have shaped human imagination for thousands of years

Speaker Bio:

Lena Schattenherz Heide-Brennand is a Norwegian lecturer with a master degree in language, culture and literature from the University of Oslo and Linnaeus University. She has been lecturing and teaching various subjects since 1998. Her field of interest and main focus has always been topics that others have considered strange, eccentric and eerie, and she has specialised in a variety of dark subjects linked to folklore, mythology and Victorian traditions and medicine. Her students often point out her thorough knowledge about the subjects she is teaching, in addition to her charismatic appearance. She refers to herself as a performance lecturer and always gives her audience an outstanding experience

don’t worry if you miss it – we will send you a recording valid for two weeks the next day