Monday 29 April 2024

Ama

The Sumerians wrote word "ama", which means "mother" by drawing the Dingir symbol (𒀭) which means god, inside the symbol for the house. Does this indicate that the mother, birth giver, is the divine force which turns four empty walls into a home full of life?


In Neolithic Balkans house was equated with the mistress of the house, the oldest mother living in the house. Literally...

Early Neolithic figurines from Macedonia depicting anthropomorphised house and bread oven...They are symbolically equating Woman, Mistress of the house, with the house and the bread oven...



This notion was preserved in the Balkans until today...Until recently, in Makedonija, there was a ritual in which bride and groom entered the groom's house for the first time between the legs of his mother, the mistress of the house, who stood on two chairs...This equated the Mother (Baba means grandmother, mother, birth giver) with the House and the Family...


I talked about this in my post "Mistress of the house"...

Lachish animal calendar

A pottery vessel, a ewer, from the Fosse temple at Lachish dated to the 13th century BC, bears an inscription on the shoulder which reads from left to right "Mattan (the donor), an offering to my lady ’Elat". Pic from "Western Asiatic Tree Goddesses".


Symbol analysis 👇

Below the inscription, on the shoulder from left to right, a freeze of animals and trees is drawn: a lion, fallow deer, male and female of the species, a bird with spread wings and tail and a stylised tree flanked by goats...

This is very interesting indeed, as the animals are depicted in exact order they should be placed if they were used as animal calendar markers, markers which mark either mating or birthing or migrating time of the depicted animal...

Lion. Lion animal calendar marker marks the period Jul/Aug, beginning of the mating season of Eurasian lions. This period is still today marked by a lion, Leo...

Deer. Fallow deer marks the period Aug/Sep, which is when the rut season of the Persian fallow deer, native to Levant, takes place...

Bird. Bird with spread wings and tail is the ancient way of depicting an eagle. Vulture is symbol for Oct/Nov, because this is when old world vultures, specifically griffon vultures start mating, in late autumn, Oct/Nov. But I think that bird here is a symbol of something else...

Israel is on the major bird migratory route between Eurasia and Africa. And Sep/Oct is the peak migration season of the large soaring birds, including raptors of all kinds...

When these vessels were made, millions of raptors flew over Fosse temple at Lachish in Sep/Oct. And I think that this is what the eagle animal calendar marker marks on this vessel. Charts showing migration times for Honey-buzzard Pernis apivorus, Levant Sparrowhawk Accipiter brevipes and LesserSpotted Eagle Aquila pomarina. 

More info about autumn bird migrations over Israel can be found in "Soaring-bird migration over northern Israel in autumn".

Goats. Ibex goat marks the period Oct/Nov, because ibex goats start mating in Oct/Nov and continue mating through the winter, until Jan/Feb...


Sooo, we have

Lion - Jul/Aug

Deer - Aug/Sep

Eagle - Sep/Oct

Goat - Oct/Nov

What a coincidence...Not...🙂

There's more:

The reason why two rampant Ibex goats are depicted facing a tree (of life) is because the climate in Levant is divided into hot, dry half (Apr/May-Oct/Nov) and cool, wet half (Oct/Nov-Apr/May).


The rains, which support (the tree of) life in Levant, arrive when male Ibex goats start their mating fights over females, in Oct/Nov...


I talked about this in my post "The tree of life/light". 

3,000 BCE Sumerian Stamp Seal with Impression Tree of Life with Rampant Goats. Mesopotamia. Chicago. Oriental Institute Museum...

BTW, do you see how the tree of life on this bronze age vessel from Lachish looks like Menorah?

Now here is another vessel from the Fosse temple at Lachish also dated to the 13th century BC. On this vessel we see two rampant goats facing not a tree, but a vulva...Vulva is the symbol of fertility number one...Obviously...Easy to understand why...


Vulva is used on a lot of ancient artefacts to represent the fertility of the land. And here this is explicitly spelled out: mating goats of rain, rain which makes land fertile, facing vulva, symbol of fertility...

See wavy lines between vulvas? Flowing water...

Also, you see how the vulva is depicted with dots? I would suggest that the vulva is symbol for a field, grain field, and that the fertility goddess, fertile earth, mother earth, is actually the mother of grain...

You should check this article, "Arjoune venus", about this early Halaf culture figurine from the Arjoune site in Syria. This Venus has square dotted vulva, basically spelling out that the vulva here is actually a grain field...

This is Inanna/Ishtar speaking: 

"...Before my lord, Dumuzi,

I poured out plants from my womb.

I placed plants before him,

I poured out plants before him.

I placed grain before him,

I poured out grain before him,

I poured out grain before my womb..."

Also check the article"Sabi Abyad venus", about this figurine from the Late Neolithic and Early Halaf Village at Sabi Abyad, Northern Syria, part of Fertile Crescent. dated to 7th mill BC. 


Here the front of the figurine has huge vulva, and the sides and back have symbols for grain.


Basically these are all depictions of the "Mother of grain"...

The symbolic link between women and earth depicted on this Early Vinča Culture terracotta figurine from Jela, Iron Gate region of the Danube, Serbia, c. 5200 BC, H. 5.3 cm, which has a branching plant (grain?) growing out of the womb...

I talked about this in my article "Mother of Grain"... 

The same idea depicted on this group of gold and electrum pendants, found in Levant and dated to the Middle-Late Bronze Age. Grain growing out of the vulva...I talked about them in my article "Hathor grain pendants"...



And so finally, the original ewer was dedicated to Alat...So who is then Alat? Definitely not female Alah...She is fertile Mother Earth, more specifically, Mother of grain...

And of course, we can read that Al-Lāt, was reputed to enjoy offerings of barley porridge (sawiq) and small cereal cakes: her devotees prepared these dishes especially, as barley and other grains were considered symbolic of her...

As is appropriate for the Mother of grain...

To read more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start here…then check the rest of the blog posts related to animal calendar markers I still didn't add to this page, and finally check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am 9 months behind now...


Hathor grain pendants

A group of gold and electrum pendants, found in Levant and dated to the Middle-Late Bronze Age, depicting "female form reduced to head with Hathor wig and body, with breasts navel and pubic triangle". Pic from "Western Asiatic Treen Goddesses"...


According to the paper author: "A branch grows from the pubic triangle...The branch is not easily distinguished, it may represent the tree as a whole, an offshoot or a frond"...

I would propose that the "branch" growing out of the vulva is not a branch at all, but a stylised depiction of grain...And that this would make this "female figure" a symbolic depiction of "Mother of grain"...


The paper author then says that "These Syrian-Palestinian pendants have been associated with an Old Assyrian silver pudendum dedicated to Ishtar...In this light, these...pendants should be seen as signifying the sexual aspect of a local goddess, whose symbol was the tree..."

I would say that these pendants should be seen as depicting a local goddess of (grain) fertility (grain growing out of her womb), who was a mixture of Hathor and Ishtar/Inanna...Hathor, because of the headdress and because she is directly linked to the grain fertility through flood. I talked about this in my post "Cow and calf ivory"...Inanna because declares herself to be the Mother of Grain:

"...Before my lord, Dumuzi,

I poured out plants from my womb.

I poured out plants before him.

I poured out grain before him,

I poured out grain before my womb..."

You should check the article "Inanna and dove" as well as the articles linked from this article, which all talk about Inanna and her link to grain...


To read more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start 
here…then check the rest of the blog posts related to animal calendar markers I still didn't add to this page, and finally check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am 9 months behind now...

Sunday 28 April 2024

Pitys


The pine is sacred to Pan because when he pursued the nymph Pitys, she turned herself into a pine tree to escape. In this version of the myth, Pitys had chosen the love of Boreas, god of the north wind, over his rival Pan.

Very very interesting story. From the animal and plant calendar markers point of view...

Let me explain what I mean. 

Boreas was the Greek god of winter as well as the god of the north wind...

Winter starts in Oct/Nov (21st of Dec is midwinter for a reason)...

Oct/Nov is marked by the "Old Capricorn", the Goat of Rain. Because this is the time when male ibex goats start their ferocious mating fights...

And because the wet season in Eastern Mediterranean, Levant, Central Asia, Mesopotamia, Iran starts when ibex goats start mating, ibex goat became an animal calendar marker for the beginning of the rain season...




The anthropomorphisation of the Goat of Rain into God of rain associated with goats started in Neolithic Iran. I talked about this in my post "Goat petroglyphs from Iran". Goat Dude from Tell Brak, dating to c. 3800-3600 BC

Eventually, this goat dude arrived to Europe as Pan.


Pan, who has the hindquarters, legs, and horns of a goat. Whose skin is Pan carrying? Is this "Αιγις" (Aegis),  the goat skin which Zeus carried from Crete?

It just occurred to me. What do you get if you clothe Holy Zeus, the bringer of rain, in goat skin? Holy Ibex Goat, the bringer of rain, of course...

Figurine from Cyprus, depicting Ba’al/Zeus riding a Goat (600-400 BCE):

From my post "Goat riding thunder god"...

Because it marks the beginning of the winter, the goat also became goat of winter...Post "Krampus", which explains the link between Mountain Ibex Goats, Capricorn zodiac sign, Yule Goat, Krampus and all the other Christmas related goat characters and masks


Hence the goat of winter causing frostbites

Serbian fairytale: "I am the life-giving goat, skinned yet not skinned, slaughtered yet not slaughtered, roasted yet not roasted, eaten yet not eaten. My teeth are like stakes, I will bite you in half..."

Scandinavian Yule Goat with long sharp teeth...From my post "Tanngnjostr and Tanngrisnir"...


An illustration by Yuri Vasnetsov from 1956 entitled "Goat". It depicts the scene from Slavic folklore in which goat (of winter) brings spring (basket with flowers) and summer (baby goat).

Anyway, this page, "Goat in European cultures", is a jump page with links to articles about goat animal calendar marker embedded into European mythology, folklore and astrology...

Enough about goats. Oct/Nov is also when pine nut harvest starts in Eastern Mediterranean and Western Asia...Hence pine as plant calendar marker for the beginning of winter and the cool/wet half of the year...


Pine nut harvest season

And so...Back to our story. The goat of winter and the god of winter are fighting over a nymph. A nature spirit...And it turns into a pine tree, the plant calendar marker for the beginning of winter...

How cool is this?

To read more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start here…then check the rest of the blog posts related to animal calendar markers I still didn't add to this page, and finally check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am 9 months behind now...

Tuesday 23 April 2024

Teocintle

This is what early domesticated corn (maize) looked like. It was domesticated from the plant "teocintle" (meaning "grass of the gods" in Náhuatl), most likely by the native people of Guerrero, Mexico, around 8000 years ago...

On this picture you can see two small cobs of teocintle on the left, and two cobs with mixed genetics that are developing towards corn on the right...


My article "Resurrection of the maize god" about animal and plant calendar markers found in the Mayan legend about the resurrection of the corn (maize) god, which is depicted on this plate...

When the vultures start dancing, it is time to plant your corn (maize)...Article "Golden eagles from Costa Rica" about the meaning of the gold "Double Headed Eagles", made in Costa Rica between 700 and 1530 AD by people of Diquis culture...

When the big horn rams start fighting for ewes, the rains will arrive and the the corn will germinate and grow...Article "Alosaka" about Alósaka, Horned Corn (Maize) God of the Hopi Indians from the SW USA. 

If you wanted to symbolically depict the god of rain (which arrive when big horn rams start fighting for ewes), who is also the god of corn/maize (which depends on this rain to grow), how would you do it? Like this maybe? A "mysterious" petroglyph, Arizona. More in my article "Rain cloud". 

When snakes start dancing, the rains will come to help corn (maize) grow...Article "Snake dance" about Hopi Indians snake dance from SW USA.


Snake dance

A member of the Hopi Snake Clan dancing with a snake in his mouth during the ceremonial Snake Dance, the final stage of the 16 days Hopi tribe religious ceremony held every two years in August...

You can see what the snake dance looks like in this documentary from 1913.

Hopi people who live in the Southwestern USA, regard snakes as their "brothers" and rely on them to carry their prayers for rain to the underworld, where the gods and the ancestor spirits, who control the rain, live.

Four days before the snake dance, the Snake priests leave their villages to gather snakes. The priests carry a digging sticks to dig the snakes out of their holes and snake whips, which are rods with two eagle feathers attached to them.

Once they dig the snakes out, they stroke them with the snake whip to make them straighten out and then grab them behind the head. They bring the snakes to the village where they are put inside the "kiva", sacred underground room, where they stay until the day of the snake dance.

On the day before the snake dance, a race is run across the plain and up the steep slope of the "mesa" (village) just before sunrise, symbolising the rain-gods bringing water to the village.

Then the members of the Antelope clan, who also participate in the ceremony, build a "kisi", a shallow pit covered with a wooden board, which represents the entrance to the underworld where the gods and the ancestors live.

At sunset of the day before the snake dance, the Snake and Antelope dancers dance around the plaza, stamping on the "kisi" board and shaking rattles to simulate the sounds of thunder and rain.

The Antelope priests dance with green vines around their necks and in their mouths, just as the Snake priests will later dance with snakes around their necks and in their mouths.

On the day of the snake dance, the snakes are washed in a large jar filled with water and herbs. Finally the snakes are gathered up in a bag, carried to the village plaza, and placed in the "kisi".

Then, each Snake priest reaches into the "kisi", grabs a snake, and they all dance around the village plaza with the snakes first in their hands and then in their mouths, "to symbolically pass their prayers for rain to the snakes".

Finally, one of the Snake priests makes a large circle of cornmeal on the ground. All the snakes are thrown into the circle, while women and girls scatter cornmeal on the wriggling reptiles.

Then the Snake priests grab the snakes, and run out of the village where the snakes are released to carry the prayer for rain to the gods and the ancestor spirits in the underworld, and to inform them that the Hopis still live in the old way of their ancestors.

Soooo...Very interesting...Remember my post "Horned serpent" about the Horned Serpent, whom Hopi believed to be the guardian of water and is associated with rain, thunder and lightning?


In the article I said that when I first saw the depiction of the Horned Serpent, I thought that this could be a depiction of an actual horned snake, the American horned rattlesnake (Crotalus cerastes).

In the article, I then explained why I changed my mind and why I believe that the Horned Serpent was a complex animal calendar marker for rain season an animal hybrid with: 

a body of a rattle snake 


and horns of the desert big horn sheep.

The thing is it is possible that the horns of the Horned Serpent are not (just) the horns of the desert big horn sheep. They could (also) be the horns of the pronghorn (false antelope)...

Arizona climate chart...

The desert big horn sheep mating starts in Jul and ends in Oct. During the rut, the rams charge at each other head-on crashing their horns together with tremendous bangs...Thundering bangs...So they are ideal calendar markers for the monsoon season....

In their southern range, the pronghorns mating starts  Jul and ends in Sep. During the rut, the bucks charge at each other head-on crashing their horns together with tremendous bangs...Thundering bangs...Ideal calendar markers for the monsoon season...Arizona climate chart...

And interestingly, it is the snake and antelope clans that perform the snake dance rain ceremony together. Why? There has to be the reason for it, albeit one that has been long forgotten...The reason we are now rediscovering...

Something else: Two depictions of the Hopi antelope katchina (spirit doll). You can see that one has horns that look like pronghorn horns and that the other one has horns that look like big horn sheep horns...So did Hopis consider both of these animals to be the same "spirit"?




Final proof that the Horned Serpent from the Hopi mythology was not an actual horned rattlesnake (Crotalus cerastes), is the fact that horned rattlesnakes are not used in the rain snake dance ceremonies.

The rattlesnake that is used is the Prairie Rattlesnake (Crotalus viridis). You can read more about it in this article which contains some early accounts of the snake dance ceremony 

One interesting thing about Prairie Rattlesnakes, is that this species usually mates between Jul and Sep...

And when rattlesnakes mate they dance...Amazing pics by Marc Perkins

And so, in August, the peak mating season of the dancing snakes, dancing big horn sheep and dancing pronghorn antelopes, and in the middle of the Monsoon season in the SW USA, the members of the  Antelope and Snake Clan dance for rain...

And the Horned Serpent, the guardian of the waters releases the life saving rain and refills the rivers and wells...

To read more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start here…then check the rest of the blog posts related to animal calendar markers I still didn't add to this page, and finally check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am 9 months behind now...