in a German
POW camp God-in-a-bottle, or God-in-the-Bottle, is a symbolisation of the
crucifixion of Jesus through the placing in a bottle of carved wooden items, including a cross and often others such as a ladder and
spear. They were found elsewhere in Catholic Europe, and are related to older "Passion Bottles", made by
glassblowers in their spare time, where a large variety of small glass symbols of the
Passion of Jesus were inserted into a bottle. The making of Gods-in-bottles was exported through
Irish diaspora, notably to
mining communities in
Northern England, where scenes with mining tools sometimes replaced the crucifixion. Examples are in the collections of the
National Museum of Ireland – Country Life the
Irish Agricultural Museum, Later makers were often
Irish Travellers, whose craftworks often recycle discarded objects.
Richard Power's 1964 novel
The Land of Youth, set in a fictional version of the
Aran Islands, mentions an outcast who uses
driftwood for what is "known to generations of children as God-in-a-bottle." Although the
Offaly Independent says that in the 1970s "almost every
pub in
Tullamore" displayed a bottle, by the 21st century they were largely unknown in Ireland. A 2023 episode of
Nationwide reported on two men in the
Irish midlands still practising the tradition. ==Small objects that expand naturally==