Showing posts with label Grain symbolism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grain symbolism. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 May 2025

The oldest Demeter depiction

So...How old is the oldest depiction of Demeter, Greek Mother of Grain? How about 4500-4200 years old? Do you want to see it? Here she is in all her glory...

Mother (vulva) surrounded with grain...This symbol is hidden in plain sight on this strange object. This is one of many mysterious Early Cycladic "Frying Pans" found on Cycladic islands in Greece and dated to the second half of the 3rd mill BC

I talk about this particular frying pan, in my post "Tuna boats" about Bronze Age Cycladic tuna fishermen, in which I was discussing the ancient fishing/sailing calendar for the Cyclades. A lot of these "Frying Pans" depict boats, tuna fish and swirling waves...

And of course I completely missed the most important bit: vulva surrounded with grain, symbolic depiction of the Mother of Grain...

We know that this has been a grain symbol in Eastern Mediterranean, Mesopotamia, Central Asia, Iran, since at least Sumerian times...

I talk about this symbol being used in combination with vulva to depict the mother of grain in many of my posts. Like this post, "Arjoune Venus", about the 6th mill BC Halaf culture figurines from Syria. This one has vulva on front and ears of grain on the back...

We even have this symbol described in "The Courtship of Inanna and Dumuzi" where Inanna, Sumerian Mother of Grain, says:

Before my lord, Dumuzi...

I poured out grain before my womb...


I talked about this in many of my posts...

BTW, we find the same symbolism (grain before womb) described in the Greek legends about Baubo and Demeter...I talked about this in this recent post "Baubo", in which I explain why she is one of the most misunderstood figures from Ancient Greek mythology. 

This is one of many "Baubo" figurines which were found in the Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore at Priene and dated to the 2nd c. BC. 

The fact that we find the earliest use of this symbolism in the Fertile Crescent is important. You'll see why soon.

Anyway, I suddenly remembered the vulva with grain "detail" from our Cycladic "Frying Pan" while I was writing my post "Poseidon pursuing demeter", in which I gave symbolic analysis of this Tetradrachm minted in Byzantium, Thrace, ca 240–220 BC, which depicts veiled head of Demeter, wreathed with corn and Poseidon seated right on rock, holding aphlaston in extended right hand and trident over shoulder. 

In it, I tried to answer the question: why were Demeter, Goddess of grain harvest (season) and Poseidon, God of sailing (season) paired together? As horses?

Basically, horse mating season, Apr/May-Sep/Oct overlaps with both grain harvest and sailing season in Ancient Greece...

Hence the link between Demeter (Mother of grain), Persephone (Grain) and horses. Here is Demeter in her horse-drawn chariot with her daughter Persephone, driving between two prancing stallions. 🙂 Selinunte, Sicily 6th c. BC

And the link between Poseidon and horses. I talked about this link in my posts "Trojan horse", "Three sacrifices", "Tetradrachm from Byblos", "Seahorse ring"...

Anyway, I expanded on it in my post "To sail - To harvest", about the heliacal rising of Pleiades being a calendar marker for the start of both harvest and sailing season in Ancient Greece...Greek name "Πλειαδες" comes from πλεω, which means "to sail"...

I think we find proof for this link between the goddess of grain (harvest) and god of the sea (sailing) in Minoan Crete in the 2nd mill BC.

Actually goddesses of grain, Persephone (grain seed) and Demeter (grain harvest)...

Here they are, in a horse drawn chariot, depicted on a late Minoan limestone sarcophagus, dated to around 1400 BC, excavated from a chamber tomb at Hagia Triada, Crete, Greece...

I just remembered I wrote a whole post, "Agia Triada Sarcophagus", about this a while back where I actually talk about this link between Poseidon, Demeter, Persephone and horses in detail. I am getting old and forgetful...

This link between grain harvest season (Demeter) and sailing season (Poseidon) is I think what is depicted on our Cycladic "Frying Pan":

Tuna fishing boat (Poseidon)

Vulva surrounded with grain (Demeter)

What do you think?

But 🙂 there is something that makes me wonder...

This stele, most likely from the ancient city of Mari in Syria, depicts the Mother of Grain in exactly the same symbolic way...And dates from...🥁🥁🥁...the beginning of the third mill BC...Pretty much the same time as our Cycladic "Frying Pan"...

I talk about this amazing object in my post "Mother of grain from Mari"...

So what I am wondering is, does the vulva surrounded with grain depicted on our Cycladic "Frying Pan" depict Demeter...Or maybe her Levantine double, Inanna/Ishtar/Asherah/Astarte...

I already talked about the possibility that the 2nd mill BC Mycenaean Greeks worshipped Asherah who eventually turned into Demeter in my post "Cup of Nestor"...

Cup from Mycenae with doves. 

And the lions flanking a pole depicted above the main gate of the Mycenae fortress.

Interestingly, Asherah, who was symbolically depicted as an Asherah Pole, was associated with both lions and doves...And so were Inanna and Demeter...

Asherah the goddess represented as a wooden pole erected on "high places". We have no idea what this means, but I have a hunch that the "high places" were threshing floors and that Asherah poles were central poles of the threshing floors...

I talked about this in my post "Sacred marriage on the threshing floor"...

And this is what Homer says about Demeter and threshing floors:

"And even as the wind carries chaff about the sacred threshing-floors / of men that are winnowing, when fair-haired Demeter / amid the driving blasts of wind separates the grain from the chaff"...

Which is why Eugene Vanderpool in "ΕΠΙ ΠΡΟϒΧΟΝΤΙ ΚΟΛΩΝΩΙ: The Sacred Threshing Floor at Eleusis" proposes that threshing floors were sacred to Demeter and were in fact her temples...I talked about this in my post "Demeter riding panther"...

But as we can see from the our "Frying Pan", I think that this "Mother of Grain" from the Fertile Crescent came to Greece much earlier...In the 3rd mill BC. Via Greek Islands...Already linked with the god of the sea...

Look at this:

Asherah's son is Yam, god of the sea, or more precisely Yam, deified sea itself. And because of all this, Asherah's title "Rabat Athirat Yam", found in the Baal Cycle, can be translated as "Lady Aṯhirat (Asherah) of the Sea"...

The same sea god Yam, who in Phoenician and Canaanite mythology, was associated with horses?🙂

Phoenician ships often adorned with horse heads as tributes to Yam, who was believed to be appeased with such offerings to prevent destructive storms.

Reproduction of a Phoenician ship from the Archaic era, called a hippoi by the Greeks (due to the horse head at the bow), carved in bone, c. 11th-9th centuries BC, Ifergan Collection, Malaga, Spain (2019)

I talked about this in my post "Trojan horse", in which I asked a question: was Trojan horse "hypos" - a wooden horse left as tribute, or  "hypos" - a wooden boat with a horse head used for transporting tributes...

And in this article I also pointed at this "coincidence":

In the Phoenician religion, there was a tripartite division of power between Baal (Storm god), Mot (God of death) and Yamm (Sea god)...

This "seems to have" (first understatement of a millennium) influenced the Greek division between Zeus (Storm god), Hades (God of death) and Poseidon (Sea god)...

Are you kidding me? How many other tripartite divisions of power like this do we have?

It "is possible" (second understatement of a millennium) that Poseidon/Neptune was directly inspired by a Phoenician counterpart Yam...

Is Asherah/Astarte then "inspiration" for Demeter? I just realised I wrote another post, "Goddess on a horse", about this 13th c. BC levantine gold plaque, depicting a lady on a horse, probably Astarte or Anat (according to Israel Museum), who was linked to grain and sailing...

Sooooo...What do you think of all this? 

The oldest symbolic depiction of Demeter and Poseidon? 

Or 

The oldest depiction of Asherah and Yam?

Or both?

I hope you had fun reading this thread. I definitely had a lot of fun researching it, thinking about it and writing it...

That's it. To read more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start here…Then check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am way way behind...

Thursday, 15 May 2025

To sail - To harvest

In Ancient Greece, the heliacal rising and setting of Pleiades, whose ancient Greek name "Πλειαδες" comes from πλεω, which means “to sail”), was used as a calendar marker for the beginning and the end of the sailing season...



Heliacal rising and setting of Pleiades marks (roughly) the beginning and the end of the "good sailing winds" season. Winds caused by the sun, heating up the Eastern Mediterranean, and creating an updrift, which sucks the cooler air from Europe to start streaming southward...


I talked about this first in my article "Trojan horse", in which I asked a question: was Trojan horse "hypos" - a wooden horse left as tribute, or  "hypos" - a wooden boat with a horse head used for transporting tributes...

In this article I also explained the link between Eastern Mediterranean Sea gods and horses: The start of the horse mating season marks the start of the sailing season in the Eastern Mediterranean...

For those interested, I also talked about the Etesian winds in my article "Three sacrifices" about human sacrifices made "for good winds" at the beginning and the end of the Trojan war. And about animal and plant calendar markers from the description of these sacrifices, that can help us determine when the Trojan war started and ended...

And I also talked about the Etesian winds, in my article "Anat" about this Semitic "warrior" goddess worshipped by the Canaanites & Egyptians during the Bronze and Iron Ages...

Anyway, after a while I wrote this article, "Demeter with dove", in which I explained why Dove was sacred to Demeter. The reason for that is that nesting season of doves overlaps with the grain harvest season...

After that I wrote this article, "Pleiades", in which I explained this strange Greek legend about the origin of the Pleiades constellation.

According to the Greek mythology, the Pleiades are the seven daughters of Atlas

whom Zeus transformed first into doves

and then into stars...

Why first into doves and then into stars? Animal calendar markers of course...

And in it I also wrote that the Heliacal "Rising" and "Falling" of pleiades divided Greek year into two halves: grain growing agriculture season (Oct/Nov-Apr/May) and sailing season (Apr/May-Oct/Nov)...Kind of important...

Oct/Nov being the time when grain sowing season started and Apr/May being the time when grain harvest season started.

And Apr/May being the time when sailing season started and Oct/Nov being the time when the sailing season ended.

And then last week I wrote this article, "Poseidon pursuing Demeter",  in which I explained the meaning of the strange legend about Poseidon as a stallion eloping with Demeter as a mare...

Poseidon pursuing a woman, 480-450BC. Currently in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Manhattan NY...


Could this unidentified "woman" actually be Demeter? 

And in it I pointed that horse is an (animal) calendar marker which links the beginning of the grain harvest (Demeter) season and sailing (Poseidon) season...

It just occurred to me today that doves/pleiades is another (animal) calendar marker that links beginning of the grain harvest (Demeter) season and sailing (Poseidon) season...

That's it. To read more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start here…Then check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am way way behind...

Sunday, 11 May 2025

Baubo

This is one of many "Baubo" figurines which were found in the Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore at Priene and dated to the 2nd c. BC. 

Who was Baubo? One of the most misunderstood figures from Ancient Greek mythology. Here is why:

Apparently, Baubo is one of the "minor figures" featuring in the story about the abduction of Persephone, depicted on this fresco from, Vergina, 340 BC, Macedonia, Greece.

If you have no idea what I am talking about, here is the story in short:

Hades, the god of the underworld fell in love with beautiful Persephone, daughter of Zeus and Demeter. He asked his brother Zeus for permission to marry her and Zeus agreed. But knowing that Demeter would not agree to the marriage, Zeus permitted Hades to abduct Persephone...

So one day while she was gathering flowers with her friends, Hades burst out of the ground in his chariot, snatched Persephone and took her into the underworld...

Demeter, when she found her daughter had disappeared, disguised herself as an old woman and with lighted torches in her hands roamed the Earth looking for her daughter...

In the depth of her despair, she forbade the earth to produce fruit (or she neglects the earth which results in nothing growing)...

Finally, Demeter met Hekate, the old Witch. Hekate took pity on Demeter and told her to seek help from the all seeing Helios, the sun god. She did and Helios told Demeter all about how Hades had dragged Persephone into the underworld...

Persephone’s mother, Demeter, then begged her brother Hades to allow Persephone to come back to the world of the living, saying that the young Persephone was not supposed to live in the world of the dead. Hades first ignored her pleadings...

But finally Zeus intervened and forced Hades to let Persephone leave. He did that because he was pressed by the cries of the hungry people and by the complaints of other deities, who because of the famine, weren't getting their sacrifices...

Hades complied with Zeus's order. But first he tricked Persephone, giving her some pomegranate seeds to eat. And because she had tasted food in the underworld, she was obliged to spend a third of each year (the winter months) there...

Based on all the animal and plant calendar markers contained in the legend about the Abduction of Persephone, she was abducted at the beginning of winter, Oct/Nov...You can find full discussion in my article "Abduction of Persephone"...

This would explain why Demeter is looking for Persephone "disguised as an old woman". In continental Europe, the beginning of winter is the time when fertile earth (Demeter) turns into infertile old earth (Old Demeter)...

And why "in the depth of her despair, she forbade the earth to produce fruit (or she neglects the earth which results in nothing growing)". In continental Europe, winter is the time of the year when nothing grows and no fruit of land is produced...

So where is Baubo in all this? While wandering the earth looking for her daughter, Demeter, disguised as an old woman, eventually came to the city of Eleusis. The disheartened old woman, who no one suspected to be Demeter, was welcomed into the home of the king...

Everyone in the king's household tried to console and lift the spirits of the severely depressed woman, but to no avail, until Baubo showed up. Baubo, offered Demeter red wine, but Demeter refused...

Clement of Alexandria in his "Exhortation to the Greeks" says that Demeter declines to drink wine, being unwilling to drink on account of her mourning. But maybe she refused the red wine because of its link with the dead...

Considering the context, it is interesting that Ancient Greeks believed that blood was the favourite drink of the dead...

Undiluted red wine was the closest thing to blood, which is why eventually blood letting (blood libation) was replaced with the red wine libation...I talked about this in my article "Blood red wine"...




In Serbia, during funerals, and during annual visits to the graves, undiluted red wine is poured on the graves of the dead. During the communions, the living drink diluted red wine...

So maybe this is the reason why Demeter refused red wine...

And why in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter Demeter refused red wine, cause "it was divinely ordained that she not drink red wine". 

Then she ordered that they prepare a special drink for her by mixing some barley water with pennyroyal, and to give her that potion to drink...

Barley water seems fitting choice of drink for Demeter considering that she was the "Mother of grain" and barley being the most important grain in Ancient Greece...

Grain sheaf (Demeter) is the mother of grain seed (Persephone) which in turn produces grain sheaf...

Talked about Mother Earth in her role as The Mother Of Grain first in my article "Mother of grain"...

Articles about the Mother of grain in Europe, Central Asia, Mesopotamia, Iran, Levant: "Mother of grain", "Altyn Tepe mother of grain", "A person in a little boat", "Sabi Abyad venus", "Arjoune venus", "Mother of grain from Yarim Tepe", "Hathor grain pendants", "Cup of Nestor", "Sacred marriage on the threshing floor",  "Mother of grain from Mari", "Baba, last sheaf of wheat"...

Anyway, Demeter refuses the drink, and then according to Clement of Alexandria, Baubo "thereupon uncovers her secret parts and exhibits them to the goddess. Demeter is pleased at the sight, and now at least receives the draught, delighted by the spectacle!"...

So based on this, it is widely accepted that Baubo was "the sacred fool of Demeter...who mocked Demeter out of her sorrow".

Seriously?

Clement of Alexandria, who wrote about Baubo to depict the "shamelessness" of the secret mysteries of the Athenians, actually quotes lines from Orphic poem which pretty explicitly state that the "shameless" act of Baubo was not mocking at all:

Baubo "drew aside her robes, and showed a sight of shame; child Iacchus was there, and laughing, plunged his hand below her breasts. Then smiled the goddess, in her heart she smiled, and drank the draught from out the glancing cup"...

Who was Iacchus? He was "the Strong child" (freshly cut ear of grain) of "the Strong mother" (Demeter)...I talked about him in my article "Iacchos"...

So Baubo reveals her vulva and who's there? An ear of grain (barler/wheat)...Remember, Demeter, "in the depth of her despair, she forbade the earth to produce fruit (or she neglects the earth which results in nothing growing)"...

Demeter is the mother of grain, so the fruit that she is (supposed to be) producing (giving birth to), is grain. And Baubo, who was btw a midwife, reveals her vulva, the part of female body that gives birth, to the Mother of Grain, who is supposed to give birth to grain...

And Demeter's son, ear of grain, was there before Baubo's vulva, smiling at Demeter. And that cheered Demeter up and she drank the drought made of Barley water...

And people think that Baubo was mocking Demeter???

Baubo is not mocking Demeter. She is just reminding Demeter: You are the Mother of Grain. The dark winter will pass and you will give birth to grain again...Cheer up...And Demeter did...

Baubo, the (holy) midwife, was reminding Demeter that she is the (holy) birth giver...

M-a-m-a

Ohoden, Bulgaria, 7th mill BC.


Natural birthing position since forever

Some articles about it: "Birth Giver", "Birth giver from Luristan", "Mama", "Mistress of the house"

That this is indeed what Baubo was doing can be seen from the fact that the second most common Baubo figurine looks like this: A female figure in the natural birthing position, with an exaggerated vulva filling the space between the legs...

What is really interesting (to me) is that Baubo's "obscene" gesture, which made Demeter laugh, symbolically equates to "pouring out grain (Iacchus) before (Baubo's) womb"...

Which is what another Mother of Grain, Inanna, said she did. In "The Courtship of Inanna and Dumuzi" we find these verses:

As for me, Inanna

Who will plow my vulva?

Who will plow my high field?

Before my lord, Dumuzi ...

I poured out grain before him

I poured out grain before my womb...

I talked about this in my article "Baba, last sheaf of wheat"...

BTW, there is another version of Baubo figurines. This one of a (pregnant) woman with her legs held apart, in a natural birthing position again, gesturing to her exposed vulva (womb)...

I talked about the symbolic depictions of vulva linked to Ishtar/Inanna in my article "Rhomb", in which I talked about some items of a sexual nature from the Middle Assyrian temple of Ishtar at Ashur. Models of human sexual organs, with holes for attachment and suspension: phalli of stone, and a pubic triangle and vulva of baked clay...

I talked about (some other) parallels between Ishtar/Inanna and Demeter in these articles, "Inanna and dove", "Demeter and dove", about why dove was the holy bird of Inanna and Demeter, goddesses of grain (harvest). Spoiler: Harvest starts when doves start nesting...Terracotta statuette of Demeter enthroned with a turtle-dove. Sicily, 5th c. BC.


I also talked about this in my article "Cup of Nestor", in which I proposed that maybe Demeter is just Asherah, Ashtarte, Ishtar, Inanna in disguise...Pic: Cup of Nestor from Mycenae...

The last type of Baubo figurines depicts a woman sitting with again in the natural birthing position, this time on a pig(let). 

The meaning of this figurine becomes obvious when you know about the link between Persephone and pig(lets)...I discuss this in my article "Pigging around"...Pic: Terracotta figurine of a female wearing a polos and holding a piglet in her right hand and a torch in her left hand. From the Sanctuary of Demeter and Kore (Persephone) at Ancient Corinth. Around 320-200 BC. Corinth Archaeological Museum... 

One thing that I didn't talk about is the fact that according to the Latin writer, M. Terentius Varro: "...For our women...identify the female vulva of virgins with piglet, Latin porcum and Greek choiros..."

This word play with porcus/choiros referring both to piglet and to the vulva of virgins indicates that the pigs offered in the Thesmophoria could have been substitutes for (and symbolic of) the sacrifice of a young girl, just as Kore had been sacrificed (abducted)...

Or maybe what was sacrificed was virginity. You need to kill the piglet (rapture the hymen) in order to conceive, to produce life...In order to become the birth giver...

Thesmophoria, the festival commemorating the abduction of Persephone, was celebrated by married women only. And every one of them "had to sacrifice a piglet" to be allowed to participate...

Just like (Virgin) Earth (Persephone) has to be ploughed (raptured) so the grain seeds can be sown into it, and so she can become (Mother) Earth...More precisely Mother of Grain...Demeter...

And so, Baubo, sitting in the natural birthing position, on a pig(let), sometimes touching her vulva, as if to emphasise that the pig(let) and the vulva of the virgins were symbolically, at least from the point of view of the Eleusinian mysteries, one and the same...

Sooo far so interesting. But here comes the most interesting bit...We still haven't answered the question: Who is Baubo actually? 

And I think that to answer this question we fist have to answer this question: What does Baubo mean?

Empedocles who wrote in the 5th c. BC proposed that Baubo means belly...Some understand this as "the place where babies (fruit) are before birth". And some understand this as "association to the belly laughter that she provoked in Demeter"...

But M. Olender in her "Aspects of Baubo" noted that the root word "bau", which was used in a few words associated with nursing an infant – "to lull to sleep, to rock, a cradle, a pacifier", was not common to Greek and may have been a foreign import...

For this and several other reasons she thinks Baubo was a foreign goddess – possibly arising from the Sumerian goddess Bau...Who was also a divine midwife...

Interesting...Even more interesting is that others interpret Baubo's name to mean "old crone"...

Old crone, Old woman...In Slavic languages the word for an old woman is Baba...Which is also the original reading of the name of the goddess Bau, before the reading was (controversially) changed for some strange reason...Baubo was also an old woman...

The Slavic word Baba, apart from meaning Old woman, also means Grandmother, Mother, Birth Giver, anyone who gave birth...And Midwife...The Sumerian Bau/Baba was the holy midwife...And so was Baubo...Or should we call here by her original, old name, Baba...

In Bulgaria, Old Thrace, people still celebrate the day of Baba (Midwife), every January with wild "women only" parties full of "obscene" jesting...

Proverb/riddle from the Balkans:

Q: Who is more important than the king? 

A: Any child. 

This is why women who helped deliver children were so highly respected.

From my article "Baba's day" about Babinden (Midwife day) celebration from Bulgaria:  

In "Iambe and Baubo: A Study in Ritual Laughter", Olga Arans presumes that these are remnants of the Baubo cult...

I would suggest that they are indeed remnants of the original Baba cult before Greeks adopted her and started calling her Baubo...

In the Balkans, Baba is also a name used for rocks, crags, rocky mountains...basically the bedrock that gives birth to all life...Mother Earth...

Great pic by @another_barbara 

Bedrock is in the Balkans known as "živi kamen, živa stena" (living stone, living rock) because it is believed to be still part of the living body of the Mother Earth which gives birth to all life...I talked about this in my article "Living stone"...

In the Balkans, and in general among the Slavs, Baba is also linked to grain. The last harvested sheaf of wheat which contained the Spirit of Wheat, was commonly called Baba and sometimes the woman that cut the last sheaf of wheat was also called Baba...

Olga Arans in "Iambe and Baubo: A Study in Ritual Laughter" again points at a possible link between Slavic Baba (The Mother of Grain) and Baubo...And I agree that there is a definite link. Baubo is an echo of Baba...


This link between Baba (birth giver) and Baba (Mother of Grain) is also found in Germanic and Gaelic folklore. 

I talked about this in my article "Baba, last sheaf of wheat"...

In my article "Baba, last sheaf of wheat" I also mentioned that Balkan Slavs called making, tying grain sheaves "bаbičenje" which also means to perform midwife duties, like swaddling babies...

This can help us understand another [strange] part of the Baubo myth...

In most versions of the story, Demeter meets Baubo in the home of the Eleusian King. After Baubo gets Demeter out of her depression, the queen Metaneira gives her son Demophon to Demeter to nurse him...

Demeter then decides to make the child "immortal" by putting him on fire every night. Until one night Demeter is interrupted by suspicious Metaneira, who screams when she sees her son in the flames...

Her scream breaks the magic ritual and her son burns in fire to death. It is generally accepted that this child nursed (baked) by Demeter is "The Grain Child", bread...

What is interesting is that Clement of Alexandria says that according to the Orphic sources it was Baubo who received Demeter in her house, made her laugh, offered her the kykeon and then gave "the child" (her child?) to Demeter to nurse...

In one of the "Orphic" texts (Orph. fr. 49 ed Kern) we read the same again. We are not told the identity of "the child", but remember, when Baubo exposed her private parts to Demeter, Iacchus, the Grain Child was there "before he womb"...

So Baubo's child can be no one else by "The grain child"...Bread...

I just remembered something I wrote about years and years ago in my post "Grange stone circle", about the biggest Neolithic stone circle from Ireland, whose name "Grange" actually means threshing floor...

The biggest and the only rectangular stone from Bronze Age "Grange Circle", Ireland, is called Crom Dubh, old Irish sun and grain god. The small stack of flat stones on the left is called  "grain child"...


Probably a stack of flat breads, like these ones...


Oh and this is very interesting...Remember the expression "to have one in the oven"? Another link between Baba and grain found among Balkan Slavs...

This is a traditional earthen bread oven from Serbia. Identical ovens were found in excavated Neolithic settlements in Serbia. 

It looks like pregnant woman's belly, and it is in (some parts of) Serbia called "Baba" (Grandmother, Mother, Birth giver). I talked about this in my post "Baba, earthen bread oven"...

Again, symbolically Baubo, the "birth giver", is Dememeter, The Mother of grain...This is again kind of hinted in "Iambe and Baubo: A Study in Ritual Laughter". Great article...I think it is pretty clear now who Baubo (Baba) was. Right?

For the end: Some of the original Baubo figurines of the Priene type have Baubo holding a lyre...

This makes very little sense unless you know that the original lyre, the lyre which Hermes made for Apollo, is a complex animal calendar marker for Apr/May

I talked about this in my post "Lyre of Apollo", about animal and plant calendar markers embedded into the story about the birth of Hermes, particularly the part related to him making the first lyre, which he later swapped with Apollo for the caduceus...

Animal calendar markers: tortoise, bull, ram, snake...

Apr/May is the month in which grain harvest started in Ancient Greece...I talked about this in my post "Hesiod on grain"...

According to the Orphic theogony, when Rhea (Earth goddess), gave birth to Zeus (storm god), she became Demeter (Grain goddess). Demeter and Zeus then had sex as snakes and fathered Persephone.

Apparently "no one knows what this means"...If only anyone bothered looking at the climatic and agricultural calendar...Grain harvest in Ancient Greece started in Apr/May, which is also the start of the thunderstorm season, and the start of the snake mating season...




I talked about this in my post "Who are Persephone's parents"...

Those Orphic dudes preserved some really ancient knowledge indeed.

So I wonder if Baubo (deified birth giver, deified vulva/womb) in her role as the Mother of Grain is holding a lyre to indicate that Demeter is out of her depression and that the birth giving to grain (harvest) is beginning???

PS: 

South Slavs are descendants of pretty much anyone who ever lived in the Balkans. Look at their genes...

Because of that, South Slavs are also inheritors and preservers of (partial remnants) of the cultures of all these ancient people too...

PPS:

Sculpture from the hearth of house No. 51, Lepenski Vir (9500–6000 BC, Serbia). It shows a vulva in a specific physiological state, just before giving birth, with all its anatomical details...Pic from this site...



PPPS:

Birth giver, a figurine made from a single large Danube river pebble. Lepenski Vir culture, 10000BC-4000BC, Serbia. The precursor of Baubo...


PPPPS:

Neolithic 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 grain growing out of the womb...


PPPPPS: To understand why I wasn't surprised at all to find Baba as the name of the divine midwife in Sumerian mythology check this out:

Sumerian is a language isolate, without any known descendants or related languages...but...Interestingly, in it we find some very important words which (look like they) are direct cognates with Words from Balto-Slavic branch of IE languages...

Like words for:

KingScribe and TabletMindBreath, Life, GrainWeevil (Grain eating insect), TeethSickleFly, Set alight

BTW, Akkadian, a Semitic language, also has some very interesting words with (what look like direct) cognates in Balto-Slavic languages...

Like words for:

AxeBalance (This could actually be a Sumerian word, we don't know), GownAcorn and OakBlood and Sacrifice, Scorching heat

There is no explanation for how these words can be found in Sumerian and Akkadian, some of the oldest known Non IE languages, and in Balto-Slavic languages, allegedly "the youngest branch of IE languages"...

That's it. To read more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start here…Then check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am way way behind...