T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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91.1 | Tehuti | PEN::KALLIS | | Mon Mar 17 1986 07:51 | 19 |
| My favorite of the ancient little-g gods was Tehuti, or as the barbaric
Greeks called him, Thoth. Tehuti was one of the great gods of the
pantheon of Khem (Pharaonic Egypt), and was the patron god of science,
writing, mathematics, and magic, all of which I both have experience
with and identify with.
I admire Tehuti because he was the most intellectual of the ancient
pantheon, and a key member of the Annead, of great gathering of
gods.
There is no other of the little-g gods ("neteru," in Egyptian
terminology) in any of the other pantheons whom I admire as much.
However, I have a sneaking fondness for Bast, of the Khemite pantheon,
for she was the goddess of cats, and I really am very fond of cats
of all sizes.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
91.2 | Respect, Not More | PEN::KALLIS | | Mon Mar 17 1986 13:07 | 10 |
| re .1:
Lest anybody get the wrong idea, I do not worship any little-g god;
my Christianity is sufficiently conventional to preclude that.
But some of the Khemite pantheon are considerably more civilized
than the overgrown juvinile delinquents found in many of the other
pantheons.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
91.3 | More little g gods. | SCORPI::MORGAN | MIKIE_MOUSE | Wed Mar 19 1986 18:05 | 9 |
| Please don't think that I am abandoning this topic. I am busy getting
some information on Cernnunos and possibly Mithra.
Steve, I understand that Toth is also called Hermes Trismegistus. I also
undertand that hw wrote Tabulae Smaragina. Was Toth human at one time
then diefied?
(*)
|
91.4 | My vote for favorite god. | SCORPI::MORGAN | MIKIE_MOUSE | Wed Mar 19 1986 22:17 | 28 |
| This is my entry to the little gods topic.
I am particurarly drawn to the Cernnunos because it is a representation of
the old Religion that worshiped the Horned God. The Horned God was a
personalization of fertility, the change of seasons, the thrust of
life upon the Goddess (mother earth) and also the guardian of the
underworld.
Cernnunos was widely worshiped through out the Euorpeian and Mediterrian
areas under different names. The local version of the god was called by
different names and I suppect that Cernnunos was origionaly Amun Ra.
Another name may have been Dispater.
Cernnunos may have beerrn the shaman diefied and is reasonable beleived
to be the father or fist of the Celtic pantheon.
Cernnunos dosen't have as many surviving relics as do other more well
known gods becuase the Roman armies and later the christian church attempted
to remove all vestments of this shaman become god Cernnunos.
The druids were very active with Cernnunos. When the druids died out
Cernnunos went with them.
The reason I like this legend is that Cernnunos was turned into and
villified by the christian churches.
Cernnunos is the prime reason that Satan (Satrun?) has horns. The christians
fear Cernnunos because Cernnunos was the god of the underworld. He was
the god of return to the elemintial nature.
|
91.5 | Another vote | CFIG1::DENHAM | Life is complex; it has real and imaginary parts | Thu Mar 20 1986 00:37 | 9 |
| for a "little g" god I am particularly drawn to the goddess
Habandonia, consort of Cernnunos. She represents growth and fertility,
life, light, warmth and the manifestation of the "big G" God in the
creation of the universe. She has been identified with Isis and Diana.
Other gods that I appreciate are Thoth, for his wisdom, and Krishna
(Vishnu) for his gifts to mankind on exposing God to humans.
/Kathleen
|
91.6 | More Than Human | PEN::KALLIS | | Thu Mar 20 1986 08:26 | 33 |
| re .3:
>Steve, I understand that Toth is also called Hermes Trismegistus
Well, sort of. Thoth (Tehuti) really was around long before the
Greeks had sorted out their pantheon. However, since the educated
Greeks generally went to Khem to study during the hjeight of their
culture and after (so much for Greece as the "cradle of civilization";
they got some of their ideas from a much older and wiser culture),
in the typically arrogant fashion they had at the time, they identified
the Khemite gods as aspects of their own. One of theit identifications
was Thoth with Hermes. However, Hermes was nowhere near being the
god Thoth was, so to characterize Thoth, he was referred to as the
Thrice-greatest Hermes (i.e., Thoth=3*[Hermes]). An actual comparison
of the attributes of the two would reveal an acute case of
Hellenocentrism on the part of the Greeks.
On his writing any works, that's more complex. Although originally
Apollo was more or less the god of magic under the Greek pantheon,
the identification (inappropriate as it was) of Hermes with Thoth
led to Hermes acquiring a magical component; by the Medieval period,
the study of magical and alchemical subjects was collectively called
"Hermetics," and several writings were executed under the Hermes
Trismegiistus signature. They haven't been demonstrated to be of
Khemite origin, and probably are much later.
As fas as I 've been able to find out, Thoth started out as a little-g
god. And a very unusual one, since his effectiveness was as one
who brought thought, reason, and things often not associated with
little-g gods.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
91.7 | | OLD750::MCCUTCHEN | | Sun Jul 13 1986 17:39 | 2 |
| Does LOKI count?
|
91.8 | Loki?? Sure.... | NEXUS::MORGAN | Walk in Balance... | Sun Jul 13 1986 19:29 | 1 |
|
|
91.9 | Since we've turned North ... | CYCLPS::BAHN | Well yes, I DO live on an island ... | Sun Jul 13 1986 23:01 | 10 |
| I guess Thor is probably my favorite ... I've always assumed that he's the Norse
equivalent of Aries/Mars, ruler of my birth sign. However, Thor has always
seemed to have more compassion associated with his incredible power ... sort of
the "fist in a velvet glove" picture. Besides, I've always been fond of
thunderstorms.
Of course, I've held a fondness for the Goddess and God of the Old Religion
(mentioned earlier) since I learned of them about a decade ago.
Terry
|
91.10 | | INK::KALLIS | | Mon Jul 14 1986 08:53 | 6 |
| re .7:
At least to ten... :-)
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
91.11 | Since you asked... | RAINBO::HARDY | | Mon Jul 21 1986 14:36 | 8 |
|
Xochipilli. He is Prince of Flowers, patron of weaver, craftworkers,
lovers, musicians, and gameplayers. Worshipped (without human
sacrifice) by the Aztecs, but predates that culture and outlasted
it.
Pat Hardy
|
91.12 | The Falcon vs. Toth...some help please! | ELMO::STAFFON | | Wed Jun 03 1987 11:50 | 35 |
| I just started reading this notes file and am intrigued with what
I have found in it so far. Anyways, maybe some of you can help
out.
Just the other weekend on the Cape I frequented my favorite antiques
shop. this shop has many eccentric things and some of them are
ancient egyptian artifacts. Trinkets if you will. Well, dying
for a new charm to put on my necklace, and not having the dough
for a nice antique gold charm, I noticed some of the egyptian amulets
that he had there. They were quite unique, and wanting something
different, I chose one.
He had four or five of a falcon, according to the mans wife, it
was the egyptian god Toth, god of power and wisdom. I held the
one amulet that I have now, and I looked at the others, but they
just didn't do anything for me. My Toth felt like the best.
Now don't get me wrong, I don't worship this icon by any means.
This amulet is neat! A good converstaion piece, and for $15 a neat
price for a piece of the past. (There is a 9 in 10 chance that
it is about 3500+ years old).
I referenced one of my ancient egyptian books, and it appears that
Toth was one of the first three: there was Isis, Osiris, and Horus.
Toth came around to avenge the death of Horus by killing someone-
I think Osiris. Anyways, in the book that I looked at, Toth is
usually represented as a Baboon or Ape, and Horus is the Falcon
or Hawk. It didn't mention anywhere that Toth represented the god
of power and wisdom.
Can some of you folks give me some assistance here? i would really
appreciate what you could pass along, or any books that you know
of that are good reference points. thanks!
Leigh Staffon
|
91.13 | some clarifications, I hope | ERASER::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Jun 03 1987 12:48 | 28 |
| Re .12:
Your books have the mythologies mixed up a bit.
Thoth (as said in the Greek fashion) is generally represented by
an ibis (a crane-like bird). Thoth (or Tahut, to use something
more Egyptian) is sometimes also represented by a baboon, though
more often the baboon isd an attendant.
The three you're thinking of are Osiris (Egyptian = Asar), Isis
(Egyptian = Ast), and their son, Horus (Egyptian = Heru). Osiris
was killed by his brother, Set, who claimed rulership of the gods.
He was challenged by Horus (who indeed is represented as
falcon-headed); a long trial ensued, and the final judgement, rendered
through Thoth, was that Horus was the legitimate claimant to rulership.
Thoth was often called upon to act as a judge, and was supposed
to be involved in the judging of the souls of the dead (those who
passed went to Tuat, the Egyptian afterlife; those who failed were
destroyed utterly. An interesting feature of Tuat was that it was
_exactly_ like "live" Egypt. Osiris ruled Tuat, though Anubis was
the god of the dead.
So, any falcon figure won't represent Thoth; it'll represent Horus.
Hope that helps.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
91.14 | With More Clarification comes More Questions! | ELMO::STAFFON | | Wed Jun 03 1987 13:46 | 18 |
| That does indeed help! thanks! 8^>
So, now that I know that Horus IS the Falcon, what were his definite
powers? Were they "all knowing" and "all powerful", or was he
connected to one ideal , i.e as the god Mars is affiliated with
war?
Another interesting fact about Horus is that Thoth (Toth, whatever!)
saved or resurrected Horus with some of his "magic". Apparently
on many of the tombs there is the "Eye(s) of Horus" which in actuallity
is a fration equalling 63/64. i can't draw in the details,
unfortunately, but the last 1/64 was supplied by Thoth.
Still curious as to the "meaning" of this amulet. With a little
of the superstitious in me, I am not too keen on wearing the god
of the dead!!! ;^>
Leigh
|
91.15 | | INK::KALLIS | Hallowe'en should be legal holiday | Wed Jun 03 1987 14:39 | 36 |
| Well, sort of inverse order:
Actually, Thoth is the god of writing, science, mathematics, and
magic. All things where one is using ones head, as it were.
Resurrection wasn't something he was known to indulge in much.
As to Horus. He's listed primarily as a solar deity, but he takes
on other sky attributes (there was a lot or overlap among some of
the ancient Egyptian gods -- for instance, the world was created
either by Re, Ptath, or Khephera, depending upon which story you
read). The right eye of Horus is the general "eye of Horus," "all-
seeing eye," or good-luck sign seen on many Mediterranean fishing
vessels. It represents the sun. the left eye of Horus, the
complement, represents the moon.
Horus had many god attributes, but he was best known as the avenger
of Osiris (though Set wasn't killed in the process). The early
Egyptian Copts (primitive Christians) identified Osiris, Isis, and
Horus with the Holy Family of Joseph, Mary, and Jesus respectively.
One difficulty with Egyptian gods was that they could merge into
multiple gods like Re-Horus-Khephera, with combined attributes.
These usually were triple gods, and it may be no coincidence that
when the Council of Nicea was convened to determine doctrine on
the relation of Jesus to Jehovah (among other things), many of the
participants were Egyptian Christians.
Horus often is shown in statues and drawings as a child -- usually
about eight to ten years old, but sucking his thumb. This aspect
of Horus, "the Child Horus," was named by the Greeks "Harpokrates."
Whatever else one could say about Horus, he's been considered to
be a protector.
Hope that helps more.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
91.16 | 2 years later.... | CSC32::HOUGH | | Wed Nov 22 1989 22:13 | 14 |
|
...well, after having read Tom Robbins "Jitterbug Perfume", I can
easily say that my favorite (little g) god (though I guess I almost,
actually consider him a big g God) is ...PAN..!!!
i've always been interested in him, and the book (although it is
fiction) gave me some better insight to him...
rowdy, lusty, lover of free-wheeling nymphs...who couldn't love
him...!! maybe it's cuz i'm rowdy, lusty, and a free-wheeling
nymph myself..!!!
kat
|
91.17 | What's another year ... ;-) | WIENER::SCHUBERT_K | Watching my inner Fire ... | Tue Aug 14 1990 08:08 | 10 |
| Arionrhod ...
This is just another name fore Diana/Isis/Astarte ... who's meaning
has already been mentioned years ago :-)
What I especially like is the name - Arionrhod means Silver Circle
- and the trinity Virgin - Mother/Lover - Hag. I like the wholeness
this image represents, not denying the "destructive" side.
Karin
|
91.18 | | HKFINN::STANLEY | What a long strange trip its been... | Tue Aug 14 1990 12:12 | 4 |
| Can you tell us more about her Karin? I'd love to hear whatever
information you have.
Mary
|
91.19 | | USAT05::KASPER | Being dreamed by the BIG Dream | Tue Aug 14 1990 13:45 | 7 |
| re: .18 (Mary)
There is a book titled _The Triple Goddess_ that deals with these
three aspects of various goddess figures (Mother,maiden, and hag).
Very interesting. I can't remember the author's name :-(
Terry
|
91.20 | More on Arionrhod ... | WIENER::SCHUBERT_K | Watching my inner Fire ... | Tue Aug 21 1990 10:57 | 115 |
| Mary,
I haven't been reading in Dejavu since about a week, so please
excuse my late reply.
As you probably know the Celts were not very favourable of writing
so there are many stories about gods and goddesses which slightly
vary. Also different names were used in Ireland, Wales and Gallia
which makes things even more complicated. So I hope I can remember
the stories well (if not, someone my please correct me).
Anyway, here goes the story of Arionrhod (sometimes also spelled
Arianrod):
The Saga (Wales)
MATH, father of all magic, who may be associated with the roman god
JUPITER, cannot live in another way, than having both his feet resting
in the womb of a virgin - a symbol for the unseperated resting in
the womb of the mother. To split this unit the myth uses two sons
of MATH's cousin DON. One of DON's sons falls in love with the
virgin and the other, GWYDION, assists him in his desire. Now the
only problem they have is making MATH leave the womb. Therefore
they provocate a war.
GWYDION convinces MATH, Lord of the North, to ask PRYDERI, the
Lord of the South, for his boars of the Other World, animals MATH
does not know at all. GWYDION offers 12 wonderful horses to
PRYDERI in exchange for the boars. These horses have been created
by GWYDION's magic, which only lasts for a day, so PRYDERI and
his knights ride into MATH's land to catch GWYDION, the thieve
and gain back the boars. The battle begins.
During MATH's absence the brother who's in love steels the
Virgin. When MATH comes back from the battle he punishes the two
brothers by turning them inta a deer, a wild boar and a woolf
time after time. All these animals are of both sexes at the same
time (hermaphrodites). At the end of each year, when the animals
come to greet MATH he takes away their children.
After a "reasonable" time MATH turns the brothers back into their
human appearance. Now GWYDION offers his sister ARIONRHOD to MATH
to replace the former virgin, GOEDWIN. ARIONRHOD claims to be a
virgin. To proof this she has to walk over MATH's magic stick. In
this very moment, unseen by MATH, two children drop out of
ARIONRHOD'S womb. On of these boys immediately turns towards the
sea and swimms faster than any fish. GWYDION hides the other one
to bring him up himself.
The names of the two children stand for water and fire. The first
shows his nature immediately the second turns into an eagle when
he is hurt by a spear. Due to GWYDION's healing abilities he
gains back his human body and becomes king of some land MATH
gives to him. His name becomes LLEW LLAW GYFRES and he is the
last of the solar kings.
The Creation (Wicca)
The Goddess flows, alone, resting within herself, She, who has
many names and yet may not be named, in the abyssos of the outer
darkness, befor the beginning of anything. She looked into the
mirror of the black space and recognized her own marvelous image,
She fell in love with it. By the power within Herself she pulls
the image towards herself and unifies with it in love. She calls the
image "Miria, the Wonderful".
Her ecstasy broke up in a song about everything that is and has
been and will be. And out of this song came motion, generating
waves that whirled and became the spheres and circles of all
worlds. The Goddess was filled with love, She became round and
warm and gave birth a rain of shining spirits which settled down in
the worlds and became their creatures. During this wild motion
Miria was seperated from the Goddess and by being seperated from
the Goddess she became more and more masculine. First she was the
Blue God, the gentle, smiling god of love; then she became the
Green God, surrounded by wine leaves, whose roots are in the
earth, the spirit of all growing things. Finally she became the
Horned Hunter whose face is like the red glowing sun and yet as
dark as death. His longing brings the Horned Hunter back to the
Goddess and he will eternally try to unify with Her in love
again.
Love is the origin of all there is. All searches to come back to
love. Love is the rule, mother of wisdom, revealing the
mysteries.
The wheel of the year (Wicca)
Arionrhod is the Great Mother who gives birth to the Horned
Hunter as the sacrified child of the sun at winter solstice.
During spring he is sawer and seed, growind with the incrementing
light, green as a young sprig. She is the priestess, showing him
the great mysteries. He is the young bull. She is the young nymph,
the tempter(ess). At midsummer they unify and the energy they set
free in their passion is what keeps the world up. Bu the face of
the God darkens as the sun becomes weaker, until he offers
Himself with the corn at the harvest so every living may have
food. She is the cutter, the womb of the earth to which
everything has to return. Through the long nights and dark days
He sleeps in Her womb. In His dream is the Lord of Death reigning
over the Land of Youth beyond the doors of day and night. His
dark grave turns to the vessel of rebirth, 'cause in the middle
of winter She gives birth to Him again. The cycle ends and
beginns again, and the wheel of the year turns round and round
...
Books about the Goddess:
The Golden Bough (Sir James Frazer)
The White Goddess (Robert Graves)
The Spiral Dance (Starhawk)
The Secret of the Celts (Lancelot Lengyel)
Love,
Karin
|
91.21 | | ZEKE::STARBRIGHT | Whatever you believe is true, is true for you | Sun Nov 28 1993 16:35 | 5 |
| My favorite God is Pan and my favorite Goddess is Gaia. These two
personify everything for me as the All Mother/Father God.
Bright blessings!
Serenity
|
91.22 | mine are... | CALS::GELINEAU | | Mon Nov 29 1993 10:53 | 4 |
| Diana (goddess of the moon, among other things)
Bacchus (god of revelry, among other things)
--ag
|
91.23 | Momus - God of Laughter | DELNI::JIMC | California bound | Tue Nov 30 1993 15:28 | 0 |
91.24 | Viking and for a Sailing man. | CSC32::D_ROYER | Chi beve birra campa cent'anni. | Fri Dec 03 1993 13:15 | 9 |
| Two...
Thor
And
Poseidon.
Dave
|
91.25 | | HOO78C::ANDERSON | Where did all the snow go? | Mon Dec 06 1993 03:28 | 3 |
| Ganymede.
Jamie.
|