|
SERPENT / DRAGON
[ δρακων ] |
Snakes have been called immortal because they shed their skins,
constantly renewing themselves. They were
kept in the Temple of Eleusis, and a well-known
relief of Demeter is shown
handling snakes and sheaves of grain. Her first high priest Triptolomos was
pictured driving a chariot
with snake for wheels. The
Cista Mystica,
a basket containing the tools of the Greater Mysteries, used only by
priestesses upon the occasion of the ritual, contained snake symbols.
Snakes are also considered
phallic symbols due simply to their shapes. In the Orphic Hymns,
Persephone was said to be seduced by one (rather like Eve), and
though they state the seducer was a transformed Zeus, we cannot ignore
Hades' title of Zeus Katachthonia and the powerful connection
between snakes and the Underworld.
Consider also the
caduceus (kadukeos, from "kedeuo"
meaning "to guide and attend a corpse") staff of Hermes in his role as psychopomp
to the Underworld - it features two snakes intertwined.* The caduceus is also an amazingly
accurate representation of the DNA double helix, referring back to
immortality. The staff of the healer Askelpios - a
living leafy branch with a single snake wrapped around - represents life and
death joined together, a symbol of renewal and healing. The two symbols have become
somewhat confused in modern times, with the human medical community using
Hermes' staff rather than the more appropriate staff of Askelpios, which
veterinarians wisely adopted.
Various oracles kept
snakes, such as the Delphic Pythoness. The snakes were messengers from the
Underworld, traveling through Gaia the earth to bring knowledge of what lay
beyond the mortal world (what reason there was for Apollo to later take over
at Delphi, I don't understand). The Cretan
snake goddess of the Labyrinth was also a symbol of death and rebirth -- one
must travel the underworld labyrinth to gain wisdom.
The Greek
word "drakon" means both "serpent" and "dragon", which gives an
interesting connection. Dragons are reputed to be guardians of great treasures
-- a
very Hades-like behavior, both in his role of Plouton and the method
of securing his marriage to Persephone (what more priceless treasure
than a goddess?). Another dragon, Ladon, guarded the golden apples in the
Garden of the Hesperides (hints of Eden there). And the giant serpent Ouraboros -- from "oura"
("tail") and "boros" ("devouring") -- was seen as an embodiment of Oceanos
circling the world, or as the world serpent dwelling in the belly of the
Underworld, protecting and guarding the earth.
The Latin version of
Persephone derives her name from the serpent, Proserpina (pro
"first", serpein "serpent"). This serves some modern, more strictly
feminist, interpretations of the myth which prefer to assume that she was an
Underworld goddess by herself without any involvement from Hades.
Alas, snakes, like the gods they are sacred to, have long been misunderstood and
maligned.
* (It is my own personal theory that the
caduceus is an icon of Hades and Persephone
themselves, intertwined forever as one.)
|
PIG
[ χοιρος ] |
Pigs symbolise most completely the sacrifice leading to renewal. They were
sacrificed at almost every initiation and festival to the Two Goddesses,
and sometimes to Hades as well. A piglet, usually a black one, would
be first washed (baptised) alongside the initiate, as a method of mystical
transference -- i.e. the piglet would become the person, in effigy. When at
the temple altar, the throat of the pig was slit and the blood spilled either
in a cup or on the floor. After this, the body would be thrown into a pit
(sometimes filled with snakes, which are described as having eaten smaller
parts of the pigs) and allowed to decompose for a year. At the end of the
year, right after the Greater Mysteries were completed, special priestesses
would dig up the mess and ceremoniously spread it on the fields, to fertilize
and consecrate the crops to be planted. Statues of
young pigs were found at Eleusis.*
The
sorceress Kirke transformed men into pigs, and being well-acquainted with
the Underworld perhaps she intended them as sacrifices of a sort. In the myths of Adonis and Aphrodite, and of Rhea-Kybele
and Attis, both men are killed by wild boars who all but castrate the
victim.
In other cultures, from Celtic to Hindu, pigs were sacred animals. The white
sow belonged to several goddesses, and the boar was seen as a sacrificial
symbol of the Dying God. As well, it is interesting that pigs were
later considered unclean by Jehovah's followers, very probably in direct disapproval of the goddesses they eventually deposed.
* (It is my
own personal theory that the piglet
symbolized Persephone, sacrificed to the pit of the Underworld and
the snakes of Hades, then in Springtime brought forth to bless the
plants to renewed life.)
|
HONEYBEES
[ μελισσα ]
|
Bees are viewed
as sacred to several goddesses, Demeter, Persephone, and Artemis
especially. Priestesses at Eleusis and Delphi were called "melissae"
("honeybees") and their movements throughout temple life, keeping
harmony and tending to the needs of people, were very beelike. Honey was
one of the earliest forms of preservative, keeping food and even dead bodies
from decaying. This alone shows its connection to Persephone, and
she has at least two titles relating to honey (Melitodes, Meliboea).
Bees were also used by oracles, in predicting deaths. Most insects, like
birds, were considered to be symbols of the soul taking flight after death.
Bees were important enough to Greek life that they appeared on several coins.
The very blood of the gods, ichor, was reputed to look like honey, a clear
golden fluid. When Zeus was hidden in a cave as an infant, the Meliae nymphs
("meli", meaning "honey") protected and fed him from
their honeycombs. Later, Kronos was given honey to make him drunk so that
Zeus and the other gods could overpower him.
|
BULL, SHEEP, GOAT
[ ταυρος, αρνος, αιξ ] |
Nearly
every god in the ancient world at some time has been connected to the bull
or ram. They are usually seen as fertility symbols, and their horns were
signs of divine power and strength.
More than one god took on bull form or sent
a bull to be sacrificed by their chosen human servant. Dionysos was
commonly "sacrificed" in effigy as either goat or bull-shape by his followers. A few mentions were
made of the blood of black sheep and bulls being offered to Hades or Hekate, mostly
as a means of communicating with the dead, who drank their blood to gain enough
"life" to speak. Of course
the Minotaur was a prominent bull figure, and his association with the labyrinth,
a symbol of sub-consciousness and death, makes him an Underworld creature.
At Eleusis, sheep's wool was used as a symbol of Demeter's grief, because
she reportedly sat on a sheepskin while she mourned her daughter. Hercules brought the horn of
the goat Amalthea, who nursed the infant Zeus, down to the Underworld as
a gift to the god and goddess (named as Ploutos and Tyche)
in the form of the Cornucopia. But this was already known as the symbol
of Demeter, the harvest goddess, and Hades, the god of wealth and
prosperity so again I cannot imagine Ploutos as another god but Hades.
|
ROOSTERS, EGGS
[ αλεκρυων, ωεον ]
|
Roosters were seen sometimes in carvings of the Underworld, specificially
in throne scenes of Hades and Persephone. They are also considered
sacred to Dionysos. There is an obvious sexual reference to be made through
the rooster (or "cock"), and it was not unknown in ancient times.
A peculiar statue, a man's body with a rooster's head, its face transformed
to a phallus, features the Greek phrase "Soter Kosmou" ("savior
of the universe"). The rooster was also considered a harbinger of death
and resurrection whenever it crowed, and was thus supposedly able to communicate
with the Underworld. Being that both Hades and Dionysos are seen
as phallic gods with an Underworld association, this makes some sense.
Eggs,
on the other hand, were actually forbidden food at the Greater Mysteries
of Eleusis, probably a reflection on the very same idea. Sometimes young
people were buried with an egg, symbolizing their "marriage" to
death, but usually in reference to Dionysos in his Underworld aspects. Overall,
they are simple symbols of regeneration. The World Egg, according to Orphics,
was brought forth by Nyx, identified with the moon itself. Supposedly, heaven
and earth were made from the halves of the broken egg, from which emerged
the bisexual being Eros (an original amorphous entity, not the later son
of Aphrodite). It was this deity who caused his brother and sisters to mate
and produce the gods to follow. The World Egg is often pictured encircled
by a snake
|
DOG
[ κυνας ] |
Dogs are sacred to Hekate, more so than any other Underworld entity. They
followed her on her nightly journeys, and myth mentions them howling their
way through towns. The howls of dogs have usually been associated with announcing
death. Another very important dog figure is Kerberos ("ker", "death",
"boros", "eater"), the three-headed monster canine who
guards the entrance to the Underworld. He is described in most myths as
having a snake-like tail, and some versions also claim each head is a different
color: red, white, and black, which seem refer to the colors of the Triple
Goddess. However, there was no specific system of triplicity among the Greek
goddesses other than with Hekate, who was shown sometimes this way. Though,
interestingly enough, there were several sets of triples among goddess -
especially so Hestia, Demeter, and Hera. Triple Goddesses appeared more
often in Celtic myth, yet similarly the Greek, Kells, and Egyptians all
place canines to guard the gates of the afterlife. In other cultures, dogs
or wolves carried the souls of the dead to the afterlife directly.
|
FROGS
[ βατραχος ] |
Frogs are another creature associated with Hekate, as well as her Egyptian counterpart
Heket. Because of its shape, similar to a human fetus, this animal represents
birth and rebirth. It is also a strong fertility symbol, due to the enormous
amount of eggs it can lay. Sometimes it is considered a symbol of transformation
as well, because of its change from a tadpole to a totally different adult
form. Frogs are very common familiars to witches. On a side note, singing frogs
were featured in the Underworld-based play by Aristophanes, titled appropriately
"The Frogs"
|
FALCONS
[ κιρκος ]
PHOENIX
[ Φοινιξ ]
CARRION BIRDS |
Not
as commonly viewed as an Underworld creature, but birds, especially birds
of prey, are often seen as representatives of the human soul flying away
after death. It was used sometimes in funeral rites for this purpose. Its
Greek name "kirkos" is where the name Kirke (Circe) was derived, and her
island of Aiaia means "to bewail and lament". She was strongly
connected to death and the Underworld. Some interpretations claim Kirke's
name was related to "phoenix" as well, and who can deny this creature's
symbolism of death and rebirth. The Greek word "phoinix" means
"blood-red, or purplish red".
The vulture, crow and raven are
also birds of death, but as carrion eaters this makes sense. They survived
most prominently around sites of battle. Death and Sleep (in
the form of Thanatos and Hypnos) are often seen as being winged,
and those wings are black as the wings of the carrion birds.
The vulture particulary was sacred to Ares, god of battles. Though not specifically
an Underworld god, he nevertheless has much power associated with death.
Of course the Egyptian god of the Underworld, Osiris, is represented by
a falcon as well.
|
ANTS, BUTTERFLIES
[ μορμηζ, πετομενον ] |
Ants are symbolic of many Harvest Goddesses, because of their methods of
carrying and storing grain and other foods for the winter. They are also
connected to the Underworld, as they constantly travel between the upper
and lower world. In the later myth of Cupid and Psyche, ants were sent to
aid the girl in separating seeds and grain to satisfy the first task given
by Aphrodite. Occasionally they were used in divinations, by watching their
movements.
Butterflies, while not entirely an Underworld creature, nevertheless
have great associations with the soul and resurrection. Consider its life
cycle and you will see the connection easily. The butterfly is the symbolic
creature of Psyche, whose name has been said to mean both "soul"
and "butterfly". In beliefs of reincarnation, some thought human
souls became butterflies while searching for their next lifetime. Other
cultures believed this as well, from the Kells to the Chinese.
|
HARPIES
[ αρπαγος ]
FURIES
[ Ερινυες ]
GORGONS
[ Γοργον ]
SPHINX
[ σφινξ ] |
The
word harpy comes from "harpazo", meaning "to steal",
and they spent much time doing this. Some claim they stole children, while
other compare them to vultures and other carrion birds of death. As they
had birds bodies and human features, this does make some sense, and connects
them strongly to the Underworld.
The Furies, or
Erinyes, were closely associated
with Hades, and in some stories are declared to be his children.
They were bringers of divine justice, though always harsh and often bloody.
Sometimes they were said to work with Demeter, though in what capacity is
never made entirely clear. Myths about them show that they wreaked havoc
on those who committed murder, especially going for ones who killed their
own mothers. They are often depicted as having Gorgon-like features, snake
hair and blood-red eyes, as well as bird or bat wings.
Gorgons themselves,
with their ability to turn people to stone, obviously have a strong connection
to death and the earth.
Contrary to popular belief, there was more than
a single female sphinx. The Androsphinx was the male counterpart. Sphinx
means "strangler" and they were prone to testing mortals for their
worth, then destroying them upon failure. This made them both judge and
jury. They are sometimes viewed as being related to various matriarchal
goddesses with lions as their token animal, such as Rhea and the Egyptian Hathor. Interesting indeed that most of the creatures who brought destruction
and justice upon the wicked were generally female.
|
DEMONS, LAMIAE
[ δαιμον, λαμια ] |
The Greek word "daimon" does not mean demon as we know them
today. It
actually translates as "god or goddess, deity, divine power" and
in particular "the divine within a person's soul". (Therefore,
we all have inner demons.) The Latin "Manes" or "Di Manes"
was a direct reference to this, though they considered it to be the souls
of the dead coming to haunt them. The word "daimonao" meant to
be possessed or mad, or specifically "to be under the power of a divine
visitation". And "daimonios" was considered to be anything
coming from the hand of a deity. The concept of demons as we know them does
derive from these words, but an evil demon was called "kakodaimon"
whereas a helpful demon was called "agathodaimon", marking a clear
differentiation between types. Unfortunately, all these definitions served
to convince later Christians that gods of other cultures were, in fact,
nothing more than evil demons.
The lamia has an equally confusing history.
Some versions of myth say it began as a mortal woman who was seduced by
Zeus, driven mad by Hera, who then died and haunted the world stealing babies
to replace her own. Others say it is the name of a type of demoness, either
with a snakelike body or the ability to shape-shift into many forms. Some
of these forms included attractive human females which were used to seduce
men and kill them afterward. As destroyers and seducers, this combined them
with myths of succubi and vampires alike.
|
S+S home
|