Monday, August 11, 2014

A Desert Tree Alphabet

From my chum Anne Brannen.

Translating Robert Graves' Celtic Tree Alphabet into a localized form for the New Mexico high desert. Here's her explanation:

"My own little project has been to translate, as far as I’m able, the trees and plants native to New Mexico into the Celtic Tree pantheon.  I don’t think I’m really done with this project, but it’s far enough along I’ll share it with you here.  I’m focusing not so much on the trees’ place in the eco system, but the trees’ place in the human imagination.  I don’t see how you can have both; I picked one."

More Information

  • Emma Kathryn, "Folklore & Superstitions - Connecting With the Land Where You Live," A Beautiful Resistance (Apr. 5, 2019) : https://abeautifulresistance.org/site/2019/4/5/folklore-amp-superstitions-connecting-with-the-land-where-you-live

Revised Oct. 28, 2019


Thursday, September 19, 2013

War Between the Gods of East and West

There is an odd feature in "Indo-European" cultures, a divide between east and west.

In the ancient Indo-Iranian system there are two categories of gods:

  • Asuras / Ahuras
  • Devas

In India, the Asuras are the old gods displaced by the devas

In Iran, under the influence of Zoroastrianism, Ahura Mazda is the good guy, and the daevas are the demons.

We see in Rome and Greece that Dyaus-Pitar is Zeus and Jupiter, the king of the gods. He is a deva. We have the words Deo, Deus, divinity. In other words, the fringes of Europe follow the Indian system, not the Iranian.

  • Sanskrit Dyaus and Deva
  • Baltic Dievas
  • Old Germanic Tiwaz or Ziu
  • Greek Zeus
  • Latin Deus

In the Gathas, the oldest hymns of Zoroastrianism and thought to have been composed by Zoroaster himself, the poet exhorts his followers to pay reverence to only the ahuras, and to rebuff the daevas and others who act "at Lie's command". <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahura>, accessed Sept. 20, 2013.

In the Younger Avesta, three divinities of the Zoroastrian pantheon are repeatedly identified as ahuric. These three are Ahura MazdaMithra and Apam Napat, and hence known as the "Ahuric triad". Other divinities with whom the term "Ahuric" is associated include the six Amesha Spentas and (notable among the lesser yazatasAredvi Sura of The Waters and Ashi of Reward and Recompense.<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahura>, accessed Sept. 20, 2013.

In early Vedic texts, both the asura and the devas were deities who constantly competed with each other, some bearing both designations at the same time. In late-Vedic and post-Vedic literature the Vedic asuras became lesser beings; whilst in Avesta, the Persian counterpart of the Vedas, the devas began to be considered as lesser beings. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asura>, accessed Sept. 20, 2013.

While it is likely that the daevas were once the "national" gods of pre-Zoroastrian Iran,[1] "no known Iranian dialect attests clearly and certainly the survival of a positive sense for [Old Iranian] *daiva-."[2] This "fundamental fact of Iranian linguistics" is "impossible" to reconcile with the testimony of the Gathas, where the daevas, though rejected, were still evidently gods that continued to have a following.[2]<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daeva>, accessed Sept. 20, 2013.

Norse

War between Aesir and Vanir.

In the religious mythology of the Nordic-Germanic people, there is fascinating evidence for the interaction between the Indo-European Kurgan invaders and the Old European cultures.<http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/vida_alien/alien_humanitymanipulationalien04.htm>, accessed Sept. 10, 2013.

We find this in the myths of the prolonged warfare and eventual peacemaking between two families of deities, the Aesir and the Vanir. The clashing and hybridizing of religions and worldviews between Indo-Europeans and Old Europeans is clearly discernible here, even although the later Indo-European layer is obviously dominant. In that sense Nordic-Germanic mythology serves as an example of a pattern of cultural transformation that occurred all over Europe, and the Near East, over the course of many centuries. For a detailed reexamination and interpretation of the Nordic-Germanic myths, including the conflicts between the Aesir and Vanir deities, in the light of Marija Gimbutas’s concept of hybrid mythologies, see John Lash, The Well of Remembrance - Rediscovering the Earth Wisdom Mythology of Northern Europe (Shambhala, 1994).<http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/vida_alien/alien_humanitymanipulationalien04.htm>, accessed Sept. 10, 2013.

The Aesir are primarily sky- and warrior-gods, including Odin, Tiwaz or Tyr, and Thor the Thunderer. On the other hand, the Vanir, including Nerthus, Njörd and the brother-sister pair Freyr and Freyja, are primarily earth- and nature-deities. Archaeological evidence in the form of carved inscriptions and images on stelae or ornaments, indicates that both the Aesir and Vanir deities were worshipped at particular sites. They are portrayed in the myths as two different families or clans of divinities who are often at odds and even at war. <http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/vida_alien/alien_humanitymanipulationalien04.htm>, accessed Sept. 10, 2013.

Presumably this reflects the conflict, drawn out over many centuries, between the invading Indo-Germanic tribes from the East and the aboriginal populations of Old Europe who resisted the attempted assimilation. It seems probable that after the Indo-Germanic people had settled in Central Europe, the Vanir continued to be the gods of the farmers and fishermen, while the Aesir were worshipped by the military aristocracy, who had appropriated the land and established their domination.<http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/vida_alien/alien_humanitymanipulationalien04.htm>, accessed Sept. 10, 2013.

Several earlier scholars had proposed that the myth of the war between Aesir and Vanir reflects the actual historical conflict, in the 2nd millennium BCE, between the indigenous "Megalith culture" of Southern Scandinavia and Western Europe, whose gods were the Vanir, and the invading Indo-Aryan "Battleax culture", whose gods were the Aesir. Snorri Sturluson, the Icelandic author who in the 13th century compiled the Prose Edda (also called Younger Edda), one of our main sources for Germanic myth, himself stated in his introduction, that the Aesir were the (human) leaders of warrior bands who came from Asia. The etymological connection he made between "Aesir" and "Asia" is however regarded as spurious by contemporary scholars. See Rudolf Simek, Lexikon der Germanischen Mythologie, (Stuttgart: Alfred Kröner Verlag, 1984), pp 460-461. See also The Well of Remembrance, op. cit. pp. 165 - 172.<http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/vida_alien/alien_humanitymanipulationalien04.htm>, accessed Sept. 10, 2013.

Celtic

War between Formorians and De Danaan.

Egyptian

War between Horus and Set (Tryphon).

**Haéus(ōs)*, is usually a Sun Goddess (p. 409, 410, 432, Oxford Introduction) with forms in Hittite, aššu ‘lord, God’; Sanskrit, Ushās, Goddess of Dawn, but later the Ashuras are demonized; Avestan, Ahura Mazda, the good god of the Zoroastrians, and ahura, a good spirit; Greek, Éōs, a Dawn Goddess; and Latin, Aurōra, a Dawn Goddess. Gallic Esus is a God of Hearths; and Old Norse, Aesir (pl.), and Old English Ôs (m.sg.) and Ose (f.sg.), are general words for ‘a god, any god or goddess.’ Slavic, Jarilo or Iaro, is a God of Summer; and Lithuanian Aušra is ‘dawn’; while both Latvian Auseklis, and Lithuanian Aušrinė are Goddesses of the Morning Star, i.e. the planet Venus. The form Arap Ushas appears in Albanian folklore, but there it is a name of the Moon.

Deva or Deos, ‘god’ (masculine) is reconstructed as **deiwós-*, (p. 408, Oxford Introduction and G&I, Vol. I, p. 196, but from *dhy-, according to Jaan Puhvel) from Hittite sius ‘God’; and Sanskrit Devá ‘God; His/Your Majesty.’ In Avestan, the daēvas ‘demons’, (later Persian divs, who are seen also in Armenian folklore) were demonized by Zarathustra, but Armenian also has tir, tiwr ‘God, idol’ (p. 150, Mann in An Indo-European Comparative Dictionary). Greek, dios ‘god’ (but usually theós); Oscan, Diovis; Latin, Jove, a particular God, also with forms deus, dives, ‘a god, a rich man.’ Other forms are Welsh dewi; Irish dia, a God; Old Norse Týr; Old High German Ziu; Old English Tīw, a particular God; Old Polish Żywie; Lithuanian Dievas; and Latvian Dievs, a God who causes the rye fields to ripen.

Deus Pater or *dyēus pHatēr is believed by Christians to have been the “original name of the god of the daylit sky and the chief god of the Indo-European pantheon.” This was based (p. 409, 431, Oxford Introduction) on Sanskrit Dyáus Pitā; Greek Zeus with a vocative form Zeu patēr; Illyrian Dei-pátrous; and Etruscan Jūpiter, borrowed into Latin alongside the native form Dispater, cf. also deus pater in the Vulgate, e.g. Jude 1:1. However this appears to be merely a descriptive appositive in the form of a kenning: “Kennings drawn from family relationships are extremely common” p. 34, Olson and Sens in Archestratos of Gela. An additional problem is that these deities lack corresponding features in the various languages. For example Dyáus Pitā is mentioned in the Rig Veda mainly as the husband of Prthivi (the Euphrates River) and that is almost all that is known about him. The Illyrian form is actually a mountain.

Resources

More Information

Draft; updated Oct. 29, 2019; Nov. 3, 2019 to add link.


Sunday, July 7, 2013

Life After Death

The Romans had many different ideas about life after death. The traditional view was that the soul separated from the body, then traveled to the realm of the dead, the world ruled by Pluto (Hades in Greek). The various philosophical schools had other ideas.

"The Roman emperor and Stoic philosopher, Marcus Aurelius, offered three possibilities, 'extinction, dispersal, or survival (Med. 11.3).' The first possibility is that the Mind, cut off from the brain that produced it, is extinguished forever. The second possibility offers some consolation but amounts to the same thing. The body dissolves and its component parts are recycled by Nature to create new life. . . . The third possibility is that the mind and other component parts of the human form survive death."

The Stoics were vague about life after death. They emphasize the Good Life here and now, and that's been my default position as well. I fell in love with Marcus Aurelius in high school, and never quite got over him. For most of my adult life I've had a copy of Meditations on my bedside table.

Even so, for all practical purposes I'm a Neoplatonist. Although it's not obvious, Neoplatonism is the philosophy behind astrology, and other traditional occult sciences. So, the soul survives death and continues its journey toward ascent and eventual reunification with the One.

It's well worth exploring the different philosophical schools, here. There's a lot more nuance than just Heaven / Hell / Reincarnation.

More Information


Saturday, March 23, 2013

Viking Sunstone

"For centuries, it has been a crystal of legend locked in the verses of Norse myth with little or no evidence that it was ever real. Now it seems scientists at last have grounds for believing that the Viking 'sunstone' used to navigate the seas did indeed exist."

I need to do some more reading here. I've been under the impression we understood exactly what the sunstone was; no mystery here.






Monday, July 30, 2012

Five Myths About Vikings

The five myths are:

  1. Vikings were dirty and unkempt
  2. Vikings wore horned helmets
  3. Vikings looked like we do today
  4. Vikings’ clothing style was admired throughout the world
  5. Vikings’ appearance was marked by battle wounds

Do we need to elaborate? I don't think so, but if you want to read more:

Petersen , Irene Berg. "What Vikings really looked like". ScienceNordic, July 29, 2012. Retrieved July 30, 2012.


Thursday, July 26, 2012

Morning Prayers

Salve Lar Familiaris!
Salvete Di Penates!

I'm fascinated by the different ways people think about and create home altars.

"The first task for a new cultor Deorum is to establish a lararium. There is a process to it, in ritually cleansing the house and inviting your ancestors to visit your lararium. Usually it starts out simple. An image of the Lar familiaris or that of one’s Genius is flanked by two Lares offering food and drink.  Oil lamps and candles, an incense holder, a bowl to receive libations or other offerings. Over the years the offerings can build. On the birthday of every family member, as one example, a pebble is added to the lararium and relics of various kinds may be stored there, as well as articles  used in our rituals." (Piscinus, 2013)

More Information

Updated to add links.


Wednesday, July 4, 2012

Last Pagans

Last Pagans of Rome by Alan Cameron
The Last Pagans of Rome

Interesting new book: The Last Pagans of Rome by Alan Cameron.

This online reviews says, "Cameron’s mission here is to topple once and for all the “myth” of a concerted resistance movement coordinated by a select group of late fourth-century pagan aristocrats to oppose Christianity’s infiltration of state and society. For more than four decades Cameron’s scholarship has been edging that romantic vision of the religious, literary, and social history of late fourth-century Rome to the brink of destruction. With the publication of this book the classic formulation of paganism’s fourth-century “revival” lies well beyond reconstitution."

The 4th century pagan revival is so much a part of how we think about this period of Roman history, it's a disappointment -- although not a surprise -- to find out that it has little foundation. 


On the Edge of the World

Our ancestors lived on the edge of the world, and they knew it. We who live in the European diaspora place ourselves at the center. We'r...