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

Saturday, 20 April 2024

Swallow tattoo

A swallow tattoo means 5000 nautical miles a sailor has traveled. For regular seamen, this is about 5,750 miles (ca. 9,254 km).


This article is about swallows as animal calendar markers for the beginning of the sailing season in Ancient Rome, about Isis, as the goddess of the sea, and about the climate change...and roses...

A group of children, somewhere in Greece, holding wooden spinners decorated with flowers, with a model of a swallow on a spindle, acting as a weathervane. They are getting ready to sing the "swallow song", a song welcoming swallows as the heralds of spring...


You can actually hear the children singing the "swallow song" in this documentary:

Χελιδονίσματα στο Σιτοχώρι Σερρών την 1η Μαρτίου 1967

This is an ancient custom. In "Cultural responses to the migration of the barn swallow in Europe" by Ashleigh Green we can read that:

Athenaeus of Naucratis (3rd c. CE) writes that after the first swallow was spotted, the Rhodians would hold a festival.


During the festival the Rhodian children would sing: 

He comes! He comes! 

Who loves to hear

Soft sunny hours, and seasons fair:

The swallow hither comes to rest

His sable wing and snowy breast.

The children then ran to different houses and "played the swallow", demanding food.

Ashleigh Green then goes on to talk about animal calendar markers 🙂 without knowing that she is talking about animal calendar markers: "In ancient times, people did not rely on calendars or clocks to tell them the time or the passing of the seasons..."

"...They watched and listened to birds. Cockcrow heralded sunrise and roused them from sleep; cranes migrating told them it was time to sow; and swallows returning from worlds unknown told them spring had arrived."

And then she says: The sailing season was also marked by the swallow’s return. Taking the swallow’s appearance as their cue, centuries of Greek poets sang to sailors to weigh anchor and  unfurl the sails...the swallows are here. Winter storms have passed, it is time to go to sea.

These poems are written by Leonidas, Antipater of Sidon, Marcus Argentarius, Thyillus and Agathias Scholasticus respectively, and although they stretch from the third century BCE to the sixth century CE, they are almost identical in form and substance.

Such evidence suggests that swallows truly were linked as closely to sailing as to spring. The spring wind was even called chelidonia after the swallow, and Horace suggests that the swallow actually helps to calm the sea...Very interesting...Why would people believe such a thing?

Cause the return of the swallows from Africa in Mar/Apr and their nesting in Apr/May coincides with the change of wind. Sun, heating up the Eastern Mediterranean, creates an updrift, which sucks the cooler air from Europe to start streaming southward, creating the etesian winds.

This table, from a South Aegean Yachting site, gives directions of the prevailing winds in Aegean sea during the sailing season: Apr-Oct...Even today, with much better boats, this is the safe sailing season...

I talked about Etesian winds and the sailing in the Eastern Mediterranean in this post about "Three sacrifices" performed during the Trojan war. 

7th c. BC Mykonos pithos. It contains the oldest depiction of the Trojan Horse, the way Homer described it in Iliad

So, swallows return, start nesting, it's time to go sailing...Another animal calendar marker embedded into mythology. Swallow was apparently a holy bird of Isis, who also apparently, had a control of the sea, and was the goddess people prayed for calm waters and good winds...

Marisa Marthari in "From swallows to figure-of-eight shields: detecting the substrate of ideas behind the depiction of the swallow in Theran and South Aegean iconography" tells us this about swallows and sailing:

The swallow was also associated by the Ancient Greeks, and the Romans, with "euploia" (a pleasant voyage). Indeed it is attested that during the Roman festival Navigium Isidis, the festival in honour of Isis for good sailing, the devotees held models of swallows...

The Navigium Isidis was an annual Roman religious festival, held on March the 5th, in honour of the goddess Isis, when people prayed for the safety of seafarers and then a model of a ship was carried in a procession from the local Isis temple to the sea or to a nearby river...

This is a fresco from the sanctuary of Isis in Pompeii, currently in the Museo Archeologico Nazionale, Napoli. It depicts cista mystica between two snakes (similar to a lararium) and above it navigium Isidis (boat of Isis) on the left and another boat with a swallow in it...

Why did sailors pray to Isis for calm seas and good winds? In the article entitled "Isis, goddess of the seas and the Navigium Isidis, Celebrate the beginning of the maritime season with Isis" by Rhakotis Magazine we can read:

By the Roman period, Isis has become the predominant sea goddess to such an extent that her festival marked the official beginning of the sailing season across the empire. This seems strange when we consider the fact that Egypt was not known for its maritime prowess.

River sailing was an important aspect of its society and economy for millennia. Indeed, the sail may have first emerged from Egypt, with south blowing winds powering ships up the Nile against the current. Yet Egypt did not really have any sea gods for much of its early history.

It was perhaps outside of Egypt that the association of Egyptian gods and the sea first began. Byblos was an important trade center with Egypt for centuries. A text from the Middle Kingdom calls Hathor "Mistress of Byblos [who] holds the rudders of barques" (!!!)

During the New Kingdom Isis took over more and more functions of Hathor, ultimately becoming the predominant goddess in the Egyptian pantheon. About this time, she also became the Egyptian goddess in Byblos, "taking over" Hathor’s maritime goddess role. 

Very interesting...

I talked about Hathor as a deified animal calendar marker for Apr/May, the beginning of the calving period of the the wild Eurasian cattle in my post "Cow and calf ivory". Which is exactly when etesian winds start blowing in the Eastern Mediterranean...

Speaking about sailing in ancient Egypt, in the "No easy option: Nile versus Red Sea in ancient and medieval north-south navigation" by John P. Cooper there is some interesting data about sailing on the Nile:

Navigating the Nile was fundamentally a seasonal occupation, closely tied to the cycle of the flood. Changing water levels meant variable navigability in the river channel, especially for larger cargo vessels. The optimal time for sailing was during the height of the inundation.

Even in the main channel of the Nile, water levels effected navigability. A dwindling river made sand banks an increasing hazard, threatening not only to block a vessel’s passage, but also to trap it and, at worst, capsize and wreck it...

By happy coincidence, it is also during this high-Nile season that the maxim of ‘current from the south, wind from the north’ is most valid. The Nile valley and the Nile Delta are subject to two quite different wind regimes.

In the Nile valley, northerly winds blow year round because of the cyclonic highs that sit over the Sahara desert year round...

In the Delta, northerly winds blow only during the summer...because the Delta is under the influence of Mediterranean weather systems...

And so, if you wanted to sail up the Nile delta and then further up the Nile river, you had to wait for Hathor, the holy cow to give birth to a holy calf in Apr/May. And then when the water level of the Nile starts to rise, in Jun/Jul, catch the northerly wind and sail south...

So is this why Hathor was associated with sailing and was the Goddess "who holds the rudders of barques"? And why Isis, Hathor's replacement, was known as the Goddess "that opens the seas"?

For the end I want to ask two questions:

Why was Navigium Isidis celebrated on the 5th of March, when all the old Roman texts tell us that the safe sailing season in the Mediterranean was Apr to Oct? In Ships and Fleets of the Ancient Mediterranean, J. Rouge summarised the problem of winter navigation as follows:

Vegetius (fourth century AD) says that the seas were (generally) closed between Oct/Nov and Apr/May

So why were the Romans opening the seas on the 5th of March then? Maybe some people sailed in March too? Well, yes, they did. The above quotes are from the article "Mare Clausum? Sailing Seasons in the Mediterranean in Early Antiquity" by Oded Tammuz.

And in this article, Oded Tammuz goes on to propose that even though the main sailing season in the Mediterranean was Apr to Oct, the sea was never really closed. Here are 5th century BC Egyptian customs records, noting down ships that arrived to the Elephantine harbour.

We also have many Roman sources which say that opportunistic captains would sail outside of the main sailing season, because the gains that could be made were very high. But so were the risks...I wonder how many Mediterranean shipwrecks are ships trying to sail the closed seas?

Romans started celebrating Navigium Isidis, around 100BC. Now I wonder if the reason why the Romans celebrated the opening of the seas at the beginning of March, was because the Mediterranean sea was around 100BC indeed fully navigable in March. Due to climate change...

This chart shows polar temperature variation in last 10,000 years. We can see that the temperature has been going up and down madly all the time. And one of the big temperature spikes, which centres around 100BC, when Navigium Isidis became a thing,  is marked as Roman warming.This warming must have affected the weather in Mediterranean. Making sailing safe a month earlier, in March? I think so. Which is why Navigium Isidis was celebrated on the 5th of March...

And here I come to the second question: Are there any roses blooming in Italy and Greece on the 1st of March?

Why am I asking this? Because, according to Lucius Apuleius, who in the 2nd c. AD wrote "The Golden Ass", roses were already blooming on the 5th of Mar during his time.

The Golden Ass is a story about certain Lucius, who drank a magic potion which accidentally turned him into an ass. He spends the rest of the book trying to turn back into a man. Finally, he succeeds on the day of Navigium Isidis...

The night before the festival of the opening of the seas, Lucius, still an ass, is on the seashore watching the moon emerging from the sea. He prays to Isis to turn him back into a man.

He then falls back to sleep, and dreams (has a vision) of the goddess herself emerging from the sea. She tells him tomorrow there will be a festival "when the ocean’s storm-blown waves are calmed".

And then she tells him: "My priest...will be carrying in his right hand as part of his processional equipment a sistrum wreathed with a garland of roses...Approach the priest and...gently take a bite of the roses". 

Here is a fresco from the Temple of Isis in Pompeii depicting priestesses of Isis holding a sistrum...Currently in the Naples National Archaeological Museum.

And so, on the morning of the 5th of Mar in the middle of the 2nd c. AD, an ass turned into a man on the streets of Corinth after eating a rose. Just like the Goddess Isis told him it would happen...

Today, in Italy and Grece, as far as I know, roses start blooming in Apr/May. Maybe (big maybe) you can find them blooming at the end of Mar. But, it is very unlikely, that a donkey wandering around Corinth on the 5th of Mar today would be able to find a blooming rose and eat it.

Yet Lucius Apuleius wrote that donkey ate a rose on the day of the opening of the sea, and no one batted an eyelid...Like of course, why wouldn't it? Roses are already blooming in and around Coritnh at the 5th of March. Everyone knows that...

Interesting right? Roman warming? Also, did you know that equids (horses and asses) start mating in Apr/May, at the beginning of the "safe sailing season"? Interestingly, all Eastern Mediterranean sea gods seem to be obsessed with horses...I talked about this in my post "Trojan horse"...

A type of merchant ship which had horse figurehead on its prow and which Greeks called "hippos" (horse), and used for delivering tributes...

And finally...I wonder if all this assing around in Golden Ass is kind of symbolic, in a calendaric kind of way? Maybe someone should look into it...That's it...That's all I have to say about that...

Thank you an I hope you enjoyed this meandering article, originally published as an X thread.

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...

Saturday, 24 September 2022

Minoans spring fresco

The so called "Spring Fresco" from the Akrotiri Site at Thera (Santorini), dated to 1550 – 1500 BC, depicts swallows flying in the air above blooming flowers...


The fresco should really be called "Beginning of summer fresco"...Here is why:

The birds on these frescoes are identified as barn swallows...

And the flowers look like Lilium chalcedonicum

But are mostly identified as Lilium candidum, also known as Madonna Lilies where the red colour is a result of an "artistic freedom"...

You can read more about this in "Seasonal flux—three flowers for three seasons: seasonal ritual at Akrotiri, Thera". 

The Minoan artist depicted what actually happened on Santorini and Crete every May: Madona Lilies began to bloom, right at the time when barn swallows began to nest. And fight...In mid air...

Yup, apparently, the "kissing swallows" are not kissing at all. They are fighting over feathers which they collect to insulate their nest...

At least according to this paper: "A Flight of Swallows" by Karen Polinger Foster...

The blooming of Madonna Lilies, which on Santorini and Crete takes place in May/Jun overlaps with the nesting, hatching and fledgling of barn swallows...

So here we have another example of animal and plant calendar markers...Two things that happen every year at the same time (in May) are depicted together...Marking the beginning of summer...

Hence "Beginning of summer fresco" 🙂

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...

Thursday, 2 July 2020

Year Without a Summer

The year 1816 is known as the Year Without a Summer (also the Poverty Year and Eighteen Hundred and Froze To Death) because of severe climate abnormalities that caused average global temperatures to decrease by 0.4–0.7 °C (0.72–1.26 °F). This resulted in major food shortages across the Northern Hemisphere.

Evidence suggests that the anomaly was predominantly a volcanic winter event caused by the massive 1815 eruption of Mount Tambora in April in the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia). This eruption was the largest eruption in at least 1,300 years (after the hypothesized eruption causing the extreme weather events of 535–536), and perhaps exacerbated by the 1814 eruption of Mayon in the Philippines.



Medieval records tell us that Slavs had a god called Radegast without other details. Interestingly, a lion headed idol with the duck on his head, found in 18th c. in the lake Tollensesee near Prillwitz, Mecklenburg, Germany, has inscription that says "Radegast"...


Finding of these idols was a big event in Europe at the time and initially researchers accepted their authenticity. But this was challenged in the mid-nineteenth century. The idols were alleged to be "clumsy bronze replicas of other idols unrelated to Slavs"...

Considering that there is no Perun or Veles in sight, no wonder that these idols were dismissed as non Slavic...But knowing what we know about the symbolism of Bull and Lion and how this two animals are related to Slavic, especially Serbian, mythology, I would beg to disagree...

Summer, the growing season, starts in Bull (Taurus) and ends in Lion (Leo). The Lion headed figure has bull on his chest because the Leo sun, the old sun contains bull Taurus sun, the young sun. The old Sun is the young sun in its heart...

Also it is the lion that kills the bull. The Leo is the end of summer, the death of summer. Also it is the beginning of autumn, the harvesting season, and this is when the bull gets slaughtered, killed, as a sacrifice for the good harvest...

In my post "Radegast", I identified the lion headed deity as Beli, Belen, Belenos, Belbog (Bel + Bog = White + God)...The god of the white part of the year...  

The white part of the year which starts on Bealtine in Gaelic calendar (Djurdjevdan in Serbian calendar) and ends on Samhain in Gaelic calendar (Djurdjic in Serbian calendar). You can read more about this in my post "Two Georges"...

This deity is opposed by Chernunos, Chernbog (Chern + Bog = Darkness + God), the god of the other, dark half of the year Samhain (Djurdjic) to Bealtaine (Djurdjevdan)...



I remembered seeing this idol for the first time and immediately asking: what the hell was a duck doing on its head? Knowing what I know now, I am certain that he has a duck on his head because ducks, which are migratory birds announce the beginning of the white part of the year...

They return to Europe and have ducklings at the end of April, just before the beginning of summer, which starts on the 6th of May. Duck is the Radegost,Radegast (Rad Gost = Welcome Guest). This is an euphemism for the herald of the return of summer...

Slavs believed that at the end of autumn, migratory birds fly to Irij, the "otherworld", the land of the dead. The sun went there with them, which is why winters are cold and dark... 

Slavs counted the beginning of summer from the day when the migratory birds returned from Irij. They even called summer "leto" which probably comes from "let" (flight). Basically the time between the arrival and departure of migratory birds. You can read more about Slavic migratory bird worship in my post "Leto"...

For Slavs, the most imprtant of all migratory birds was swallow. Swallow is considered to be "the herald of spring" by many peoples, like Ancient Greeks for instance. You can read more about this in my post "Herald of spring"

Bur for Slavs, swallow was also the bringer of luck and abundance. And protector of mankind. One South Slavic legend says that swallow "saved human race during the great flood" when it fought and defeated "the great snake". You can read more about the Slavic swallow folklore in my post "Swallows"...

Another Serbian legend says that once there were three suns, but dragon ate two. It would have eaten all three, if it wasn't for a swallow who managed to hide the last, third one, under her wing. This is why today we only have one sun...


There is also a version in which a snake devours the other two suns...In Slavic mythology dragon was considered to be "a very old snake". I wrote about "snake (dragon) vs Sun" Slavic folklore in my post "The enemy of the sun

In my post "Three suns" I postulated that "three suns" are description of perihelium, an atmospheric phenomenon that consists of two bright spots on each side of the Sun, mostly at sunrise or sunset, which are most prominent and striking during the winter. 

I then proposed that the swallow saving only one sun from a dragon is a description of the disappearance of the perihelion phenomenon in the spring...

It gets warmer and snakes come out right at the time when the "other two suns disappear". Fortunately, swallows come back from the south at the same time, right on time to save the last, third sun from the snake (dragon)...

In the same article I also asked a question: why does the legend says that "once there were thee suns"? Does it mean that once there were always three suns in the sky? How could that be possible?

I suggested that maybe this is the memory of the last ice age, when because of the freezing cold, the three suns rose and set every day, year round. When Europe warmed again, the perihelion stoped being every day event, two extra suns disappeared, leaving behind only one, our sun

Now here is the question that I didn't ask at that time: What happened with snakes and migratory birds during the ice age?

Depending how sudden the onset of the last ice age was (apparently very sudden), snakes either slithered down south or died from cold. When the land thowed and warmed, they probably slithered back up north...Eating the two suns in process. 🙂

But what about the migratory birds, like swallows? European swallows spend the winter in Africa south of the Sahara, in Arabia and in the Indian sub-continent. But they don't mate there during the winter. They only mate in Europe, during the summer...

So if one day summer never came, what happened with swallows? I alsways presumed that migratory patterns of birds are ancient and unchanging. But imagine you are a swallow, flying back from Africa, Arabia, India to Europe and finding it covered in ice. What do you do?

Go on and die from freezing and starvation? Are these migratory patterns so strongly encoded into birds that they would have indeed continued on into frozen Europe and all died?

If so who are today's European swallows? Did some African, Arabian and Indian swallows just decide one day to go up north to Europe toe check it out, because they heard it was neat?

Or did swallows turn back when they saw the frozen wasteland that was once their home? And if so did they find themselves flying back south wandering: now what? And what if the same thing happened year after year again and again?

How long before they stopped trying to go back to Europe? And if they did stop, why did they start flying up north to Europe again? Tourism? I woneder if anyone thought about this? What do you think? But boy were Slavs happy to see them again...

Wednesday, 22 January 2020

Herald of spring

At the Minoan site of Akrotiri, which was devastated by the Thera eruption in the mid-second millennium BCE, the Minoan ‘Spring Fresco’ (c. 1600 BCE) features blooming lilies and dancing swallows...




Hesiod (c. 700 BCE), one of the earliest Greek poets, believed that swallows proclaimed spring. This drawing, copied from an Attic red figure vase (c. 510 BCE), shows three men looking at a swallow and cheering: "Look, a swallow. It must be spring!"...




The people of Rhodes particularly loved the swallow; you were considered lucky if a swallow nested in your house... Terracotta scent bottle found in Kameiros, Rhodian, c. 610–550 BCE...




Athenaeus of Naucratis (3rd c. CE) writes that in ancient times, after the first swallow was spotted, the Rhodians would hold a festival. The only other festival celebrating the return of the migratory birds (that I know of) is recorded in Macedonia...I talked about this in my post "Leto".



During the festival the Rhodian children would sing:

He comes! He comes! Who loves to hear
Soft sunny hours, and seasons fair:
The swallow hither comes to rest
His sable wing and snowy breast.

The children then ran to different houses and "played the swallow", demanding food...

This Rhodian "obsession" with swallows is interesting. They are also the only Classical Greeks who were "obsessed" with Helios, at the time when "no cultured Greek would worship him"...The Colossus of Rhodes was a statue of Helios...




Helios is usually depicted as a handsome young man crowned with the shining aureole of the Sun, who drove the chariot of the Sun across the sky...Homer described Helios as a god "who gives joy to mortals"...So he was the young sun, the bringer of Spring...


The swallows announced the arrival of Helios, the bringer of spring. Passage from Greek Magical Papyri says of Helios, "the earth flourished when you shone forth and made the plants fruitful when you laughed, and brought to life the living creatures when you permitted."...

Just like in Slavic mythology, where the return of the migratory birds announced the arrival of the young sun Jarilo, the bringer of spring...It is his return from the land of the dead which was celebrated by the spring festivals across Europe...

The word for swallow in Ancient Greek was χελιδών (/kʰhttp://e.liː.dɔ̌ːn/ → /xe.liˈðon/ → /çe.liˈðon/). This was also a name of a constellation, which is today part of the Pisces (fishes)...

This constellation was called swallow: "...in consequence of the entrance of the sun into this constellation, when the swallow appeared in Greece as the herald of Spring..." Pisces: 19 February – 21 March, just before Spring equinox...From: "Astronomia"

At this time, at the beginning of the Spring, the constellation swallow rises at twilight, just before the sun, Helios, to announce his arrival. Very poetic indeed. Interestingly, swallow was in Ancient Greece associated not just with spring but with the time just before dawn...



So here is another example of constellation named after an animal, which marks a significant yearly reoccurring event from this animal's lifecycle. In this case return of swallows. Just like all the animal constellations from the Zodiac. 



More in my posts about zodiac signs.

Slavs also venerated swallows as solar animals. 

You can read about slavic swallow folklore in my post "Swallows". 

There is even a legend that says that if it wasn't for swallow the sun would not be shining in the sky...



You can read more about this in my post "Three suns".

Great web page about the Cultural responses to the migration of the swallows.