Strabo, Diodorus, and Julius Caesar all refer to a druidic practice that involved "huge human-like wicker structures into which living men were cast before they perished in fire." (Rogers, 15). Another account by the Syrian historian Posidonius mentioned a similar druidic practice that involved filling up a giant wicker-man with many living men inside it and setting it on fire. The figure of the wicker man first appeared in Britannia Antiqua Illustrata in1676. The cult must have always stayed in the public memory, but it became an integral part of our modern pop-culture in 1973 when the film Wicker Man was released. The film was a box office success and remains a favorite even today amongst horror film aficionados. This druidic practice was linked to the Celtic festival of Samhian, which marked the end of summer.