Showing posts with label Mycenaean mythology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mycenaean mythology. Show all posts

Thursday, 17 April 2025

Cup of Nestor

Cup of Nestor from Mycenae

"There was also a cup of rare workmanship which the old man had brought with him from home, studded with bosses of gold; it had four handles, on each of which there were two golden doves feeding, and it had two feet to stand on." - Iliad, book 11.

Dove was sacred to Demeter. Terracotta statuette of Demeter enthroned with a turtle-dove. The cult image of the harvest goddess was likely venerated in a sanctuary. From Sicily, 5th century BC. Milan Archaeological Museum.

The reason for that is that nesting season of doves overlaps with the grain harvest season. I talked about this in my post "Demeter with dove"...


Dove was also sacred to Inanna/Ishtar. 1800-1600 BC pottery cup, Syria. The rounded body tapering to a flat base, with 26 bird heads. Similar objects were interpreted as votive objects dedicated to Ishtar/Inanna, who was also linked to grain and doves. I talked about this in my post "Inanna and dove"...

The start of the nesting season of doves which overlaps with the start of grain harvest also overlaps with the heliacal rising of Pleiades...

Which is why according to the Greek mythology, the Pleiades are the seven daughters of Atlas, whom Zeus transformed first into doves, and then into stars...

I talked about this in my post "Pleiades"...

How what does any of this have to do with the Cup of Nestor from Mycenae? Did you know that Asherah, Levantinge version of Inanna/Ishtar/Demeter was linked to "high places". These were holy grounds of sort, but no one  knows what they were really...And Asherah pole stood in the middle of these "high places". Like the central pole on a threshing floor?

I talked about this in my post "Sacred marriage on the threshing floor"...BTW, this is what Homer says about Demeter, the goddess of grain harvest, 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"...

You can find this quote in "A Compendium of Similes in the Iliad and Odyssey"...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..

And did you know that doves were linked to Asherah too...

Why am I talking about Asherah? Asherah was Levantine Ishtar and Ishtar was linked with lions...The reason for this is that Inanna/Ishtar was actually deified Sirius, which rises in the morning before the sun in Leo (Jul/Aug),...Which is why Ishtar stands on a lion (with sun above the lion) and is known as "The Lioness of heaven"...I talked about this in detail in my post "Inanna and Sukaletuda"...


And what does this have to do with Mycenaean dove cup? Well, was the cup dedicated to Demeter or to Asherah/Ishtar/Inanna? Remember the Ishtar/Innana dove cups? 

This stands above the main gate in Mycenae: A pole between two lions...Asherah/Ishtar/Inanna pole?


Threshing floor pole? BTW, Jul/Aug, Leo is when grain harvest ends in Mesopotamia and the Eastern Mediterranean...

So was Mycenaean Demeter actually Asherah/Ishtar/Inanna? I think so...They are one and the same goddess, The Mother of Grain...I talked about the mother of grain in many of my posts...

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... 

Friday, 24 May 2024

War season

Today I came across this article "The natural order and an apparent anomaly" which presents the symbolic analysis of this 12th c. BC Mycenaean stone stele covered in plaster with painted decoration in bands, currently in the Hellenic National Archaeological Museum. Which I don't agree with 🙂

And here is why:

The article authors proposed that what is depicted is the "natural order": 


Top: Gods/Rulers

Middle: Army

Bottom: Nature

Really? 


I don't know for sure what all three freezes put together symbolise, but I am pretty sure what the bottom one symbolises: It's an animal calendar marker for the war season...

What we see is

A hedgehog

Three stags following a doe/hind.

The article says, "...hedgehogs hibernate [between Nov and Mar] and that’s why they were considered symbols of [spring] throughout time..."

Basically, hedgehog is an animal calendar marker for Feb/Mar/Apr...

The article doesn't put forward any explanation for the deer...But stags only follow does/hinds during deer rut. Deer rut starts in Sep, peaks in Oct and ends in Nov...

Meaning deer is animal calendar marker for Sep/Oct/Nov...

Put together, from left to right these animals mark the period between Feb/Mar and Oct/Nov. In Roman times, Mar-Oct was the "war season", which was opened and closed with the appropriate religious festivities presided by the Salii priests...

Did Mycenaeans also have a "war season" which started when hedgehogs reappeared from their hibernation (Mar) and ended when deer rut peaked (Oct)?

Why am I asking?

The Mycenaean stele depicts

Top: Some religious ceremony (According to the article)

Middle: Warriors/War (Obvious)

Bottom: War season, Mar-Oct (Not so obvious unless of course you know about animal calendar markers)

As I said, I don't know "for sure" 🙂 what the artist wanted to actually depict on this interesting stele, but I think this explanation makes a lot more sense than the explanation put forward in the quoted article...What do you think?

To read more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, which were the key to deciphering all this, 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...

Saturday, 29 January 2022

Theseus ring

The "Theseus ring". Gold Mycenaean signed ring from the Acropolis of Athens, 15th c. BC. Currently in NAMAthens.


First I doubt this ring was made on the Mainland...It was most likely made on Minoan Crete, based on what is depicted on it...Was bull leaping a popular activity in Mycenae? Or is this just another looted Minoan treasure? I talked about this in my post about the legendary battle depicted on the Combat Agate...

But this is not what makes this ring interesting...

You know how summer (May/Jun/Jul) starts in Taurus (Apr/May)? And how bull is the symbol of summer, because summer starts with calving of wild Eurasian cattle and ends with mating of wild Eurasian cattle?

And you know how autumn (Aug/Sep/Oct) starts in Leo (Jul/Aug)? And how lion is the symbol of autumn, because main mating season of Eurasian lions starts in Leo and spans the whole of autumn?

I talked about symbols of the seasons in this post


Both Taurus and Leo are ancient animal calendar markers which originally had nothing to do with stars, and have been used to mark the same times of the year since Neolithic...More about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start here then check the rest of the blog posts I still didn't add to this page, and finally to to @serbiaireland and check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am 9 months behind now...

Now if we look at the scene depicted on the ring, the bull is walking away from a green branch and towards a lioness...Why?

Well green branches usually depict spring, or wet season in general, the old winter which in Crete starts in Oct/Nov and ends in Apr/May...

Now in Crete, Oct/Nov is also the time when wild ibex goats start mating....

Hence ibex goats featuring so prominently on Minoan and "Mycenaean" artefacts...as Goat of Rain which makes Crete green...Like on this ring, another one most likely pilfered from Crete...

Officially: "Golden ring depicting goat sacrifice", Mycenaean, 1500BC. I don't think so. Ibex was in Minoan, and later Mycenaean culture linked to rain season and regeneration of nature. This could be sacrificing to the Goat (of rain) which makes Crete green (see green branches growing from the goat's back?), not of a goat...

So in Minoan Crete, and later Mycenaean continuation of Minoan culture, we find goat and bull as two opposing symbols. Like on this larnax


Because they symbolise beginning of cool, wet season (goat) and hot dry season (bull)...


Anyway, so what we have depicted on the Theseus ring is bull, walking away from the green branch (symbol of the cool wet half of the year), towards lion, symbol of the hottest part of the hot, dry half of the year, Jul/Aug, and symbol of autumn...Nice...

Sunday, 24 October 2021

Mycenaean ostrich egg with seasons

Engraving on an Ostrich Egg from Mycenae, Greece. From great text: "Ostrich egg-shell cups of Mesopotamia and the ostrich in ancient and modern times



Is this just a random scene or were the animals deliberately arranged like this?

In my article "Symbols of the seasons" I talked about animal markers for 4 seasons:

Ram: Spring (Feb-Apr)

Bull: Summer (May-Jul)

Lion: Autumn (Aug-Oct)

Goat: Winter (Nov-Jan)



This has to do with mating and birthing seasons of these animals...Lambing of wild Eurasian sheep (Spring), Calving of wild Eurasian cattle (Summer), Mating of Eurasian lions (Autumn), Mating of wild Eurasian goats (Winter)...

These are most common symbols of the seasons

Achaemenid rhytons (1st millennium BC) depicting ram (spring), bull (summer), lion (autumn), goat (winter)...

Spring (Jan/Feb-Apr/May)


Summer (Apr/May-Jul/Aug)


Autumn (Jul/Aug-Oct/Nov)


Winter (Oct/Nov-Jan/Feb)


In my article about the symbols of the seasons, I mention that if you wanted to represent all seasons as grazing animals, then the symbol for autumn would be deer, which mates in autumn...

Achaemenid rhytons (1st millennium BC) depicting ram (spring), bull (summer), deer (autumn), goat (goat)...


Spring (Jan/Feb-Apr/May)


Summer (Apr/May-Jul/Aug)


Autumn (Jul/Aug-Oct/Nov)


Winter (Oct/Nov-Jan/Feb)


So if we look at the Mycenaean ostrich egg scene, we can see that from right to left: 

Ram: Spring

Bull: Summer

Deer: Autumn

What's missing is Goat: Winter

But what about the lion(s)?

There is an article that I published a while back entitled "Lions vs buffalos" about this Akkadian seal

In it, I asked a question: was lion, apart from being symbol of autumn, maybe a symbol of the whole hot sunny dry part of the year? Being a solar symbol linked with the sun's heat (the hottest part of the year in the northern hemisphere is Leo)

This would then explain why on the Mycenaean scene we have a lion depicted in all three panels depicting three sunny seasons: spring, summer, autumn.

But there is one more interesting detail on this image. I think that this scene actually depicts a specific moment in the solar year. The end of summer and beginning of Autumn. Leo. The hottest part of the year. Why would I think so?

You see how both Ram-Spring and Bull-Summer are attacked by lions, but Deer-Autumn is still roaming free???

Saturday, 12 December 2020

Pan - Goat of rain

Pan is a great example of what happens when mythology based on a local climate gets exported to the place where climate is different...


The story of Pan starts on the Island of Crete, where the local climate is characterised by hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters. The rainy season starts in October and lasts till March or even April.

The beginning of the Cretan rain season coincides with the beginning of the mating season of the Cretan Ibex.

Which is why in Minoan Crete Ibex was venerated as the goat which brought rain...And life... Which is why Ibexes are depicted on this Minoan fresco from Knossos flanking "the tree of life"...

By the way, the "tree of life" is olive. And olives are harvested from late October, early November, at the beginning of the rain season...

The flowers depicted all around are crocuses, which also bloom from Late October, early November, at the beginning of the rain season...


So this fresco depicts the beginning of the rain season, when ibexes fight and mate, crocuses bloom and olives are ripe...

We know that the Ibex cult existed in Mycenae, to where it was most likely brought from Minoan Crete. We can see this from seals found in Mycenaean sites.

This is a Lentoid Gem depicting Sacred Tree and Ibex Goats from Mycenae.


This is next artefact, a Gold Signet Ring from Mycenae, is even more interesting.




In "Mycenaean Tree and Pillar Cult and Its Mediterranean Relations, Journal of Hellenic Studies 21, 1901" Arthur Evans says this about this artefact:

"In the gold ring from the Lower Town of Mycenae, a man in the usual Mycenaean garb, who perhaps answers to the male attendant of the Goddess in other religious scenes, is seen reaching out his hand towards the topmost bough of what is perhaps also intended for a fruit tree. Behind him with the branches of another tree visible above the back, stands a large agrimi or Cretan wild goat - an animal seen elsewhere in connexion with female votaries. This goat may represent the sacred animal of either the male or female member of the divine pair referred to in the preceding- sections....the votive remains of the Diktaean Cave as well as the traditions of Amaltheia tend to show that this animal was sacred to the indigenous 'Zeus' at an earlier period than the bull. The ox indeed in any form seems to be absent in the more primitive archaeological strata of the island"

This is very very interesting on so many levels...

Cretan wild goat - an animal seen elsewhere in connexion with female votaries (Symbol of the Goddess, Yin, part of the year), was once the symbol of Zeus, who was later associated with the bull, but Evans didn't know why...
Now the climate in Mycenae, on Peloponnesus, is similar the climate in Crete, consisting of hot dry summers and mild wet winters. But year is not clearly divided into dry and wet period, as can be seen from the precipitation table.


The main reason why Mycenaeans associated the Thunder God with bull and why Minoans associated the Thunder God with goat is because of this: the distribution of thunderstorms across the year....


If we look at the Balkans, the thunderstorm season starts in May...When Aurochs start calving...At the end of the wet part of the year...During the period, which by the time of Mycenaeans, has already been marked by a Bull all over Eastern Mediterranean, Central Asia, Middle East for thousands of years...  

If we look at Crete, the thunderstorm season starts in October...When Ibex goats start their mating season...At the beginning of the rain season...During the period, which by the time of Minoans, has already been marked by a goat all over Eastern Mediterranean, Central Asia, Middle East for thousands of years...
  

So Mycenaeans didn't have a direct obvious reason to associate Ibex with Zeus, Rains storm...Whereas Minoans did...

Yet on mainland Greece, Ibex was still seen as "the bringer of life"...Except after a while everyone forgot why...Which is why eventually this life bringing goat, whose mad mating causes nature to flourish, flowers to flower, trees to bud, rivers to flow....became Πάν (Pan)...

Pan, who has the hindquarters, legs, and horns of a goat, in the same manner as a faun or satyr. 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...


Pan, the god of the wild, nature of mountain wilds, natural vegetative cycle caused by gods rather than men.

Pan, the lover and companion of the Nymphs (nature sprits) and particularly the darling of Naiades (nymphs presiding over fountains, wells, springs, streams, brooks and other bodies of fresh water)...No wonder considering that it is the Holy Goat who used to bring rain and fresh water to Minoan Crete... 

Pan, the symbol of sex and lust and therefore symbol of fertility. Who because of different climate on Greek mainland, became associated with the season of spring and Aphrodite, goddess of love and spring. No wonder, that on mainland Greece Spring, and not Winter, was the time when life returned to the nature...



Pan, who in his earliest appearance in literature, Pindar's Pythian Ode iii. 78, was associated with a mother goddess. Perhaps Rhea??? The Goddess which is always playing with goats on Minoan artefacts??? And who gave Zeus to a goat to mind him?

Pan, whose worship began in Arcadia which was always the principal seat of his worship. Arcadia was a district of mountain people, culturally separated from other Greeks. Remember, Greeks considered Arcadians the oldest inhabitants of Greece, Pelasgians. They were so ancient and so traditional and archaic that they still ate acorns...I talked about this in my posts "Acorns in ancient texts" and "Pelasgos". And they still remembered at leas part of the "Old faith", before Olympians arrived...Ahh. Arcadia is sooo close to Mycenae...Where Minoan Holy Ibex landed on the Greek mainland...

Pan, who as a "rustic god" (read here "old god"), was not worshipped in temples or other built edifices, but in natural settings, usually caves or grottoes such as the one on the north slope of the Acropolis of Athens. These are often referred to as the Cave of Pan...Hmmm...Cave...Just like the holy cave in holy Goat Mountain here the Holy Goat nursed the Holy Infant Zeus...

Pan, who was a hunter, and to whom hunters owed their success or failure and whose statue Arcadian hunters used to scourge if they had been disappointed during hunt. Hmmmm....Holy hunt again???

And here is the best bit...

Pan's parentage is unclear. In most accounts though, he is the son of Zeus...Hmmm...Considering that it is the Holy Goat which brings forth the Holy God...

Hyginus says that Aega (whose name means probably She Goat) who was a daughter of Melisseus, king of Crete, was chosen to suckle the infant Zeus. But as she had no milk, it was goat Amalthea who suckled infant Zeus. Hyginus also says that while married to Pan, Aega had a son by Zeus whom she called Aegipan (Goat Pan), and who was also suckled by Amalthea...Hmmm...So both Zeus and Pan were suckled by the same She Goat...Zeus actually tells Athena that "...goatfoot Pan...once was mountain-ranging shepherd of the goat Amaltheia my nurse, who gave me milk"...Meaning that Pan, Holy Goat, was there before the arrival of Zeus, Holy God...

And finally, the BESTEST :) bit: 

Pan aided his foster-brother Zeus in the battle with the Typhon...



TYPHOEUS (Typhon) was a monstrous "storm-giant" who laid siege to heaven but was defeated by Zeus. He was the source of devastating storms which issued forth from that dark nether-realm. 

I don't think Typhon was a storm giant or a source of devastating storms...He was The Dragon, the symbol of destructive blazing heat of the late summer...

Typhoeus was a winged giant, said to be so huge that his head brushed the stars. He was a sky being not being of the nether realm...


Hesiod in his Theogony dated to 8th or 7th century BC describes him like this:

"Typhoeus; the hands and arms of him are mighty, and have work in them, and the feet of the powerful god were tireless, and up from his shoulders there grew a hundred snake heads, those of a dreaded drakon (dragon-serpent), and the heads licked with dark tongues, and from the eyes on the inhuman heads fire glittered from under the eyelids: from all his heads fire flared from his eyes' glancing; and inside each one of these horrible heads there were voices that threw out every sort of horrible sound, for sometimes it was speech such as the gods could understand, but at other times, the sound of a bellowing bull, proud-eyed and furious beyond holding, or again like a lion shameless in cruelty, or again it was like the barking of dogs, a wonder to listen to..."

Snakes are symbol of sun's heat.

Dragons breathing fire or glaring fire are symbols of the destructive sun's heat at the end of the summer which brings draught. 

Bellowing bull is the symbol of summer, because summer starts in Taurus. 

Lion is the symbol of the end of summer, the hottest part of the year, which falls in the middle of Leo. 

Dogs are symbol of "Dogs days", the hottest 7 days of the year. Middle of Leo falls in the middle of Dog Days...

Typhoeus was also described as a giant which was "breathing fire" and whose eyes were "flashing fire"...

Hardly a description of a Storm Giant...

But then, I love that Typhoeus also had "a filthy, matted beard and pointed ears"...Just like Pan who looks suspiciously like an Ibex goat. The Holy Goat which brought rain to Minoan Crete every October-November and ended the drought...The Goat who killed Typhoeus...Or as Zeus bragged "who helped him kill Typhoeus"...

Oh, by the way, did you know that we also have Panes "rustic spirits" of the mountains and highland pastures who protected the goat herds and sheep flocks which grazed these lands. Panes were depicted as goat-footed men with the horns, tail, beard, snub nose and ears of a goat. They sometimes had actual goat-heads instead of just a few goatish features. As lascivious fertility spirits they were often depicted with erect members...



Jumping, noise making, horny Ibex Goats during their mating season, which announce the arrival of life bringing rain to Minoan Crete, springs to mind immediately...No wonder Panes were "the attendants upon the sacred rites of Rhea and Dionysos"...Life bringing sacred rites of Mother Goddess and...That is another story for another time...

Soooooo....

The bottom bit of my article, which few people probably ever get to 🙂 about "why Slavic, Baltic and Norse Thunder gods ride on chariots pulled by goats". This article "Goat riding thunder gods" looks for the root of this myth in Minoan goat mythology...You can read more about Minoan goat mythology in my posts "Sanctuary rhyton" and "Saffron"...