Thread: Why did Assyrian kings like lion hunt so much? According to the Assyrian reliefs, the favorite occupation of the Assyrian kings in peace was a lion hunt...The earliest depictions show the king hunting lions from a chariot using bow and arrows...
The later depictions show the king fighting lions on foot. On some of these depictions the king still used bow and arrows to kill the lion...
But on most of the reliefs, the king was depicted killing a lion with a spear...
Or killing a lion with a sword...
I wonder if this was just a sport or was there some religious reason for this lion hunt? This image depicts the Assyrian king pouring libation in a temple on 4 dead lions...Why? As a thanks to the gods for helping him kill the lions? Or are the lions an offering to the gods?
You know how lion is the animal calendar marker which represents the hottest and driest part of the year in Mesopotamia and Levant...The time of death caused by drought...Because beginning of August, middle of Leo, is the beginning of the main mating season of Eurasian lions...
This is why we find lion depicted with the same heat rays radiating from his back also depicted radiating from the back of the sun god Utu/Shamash oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/12/lion-r…
This is also why in the oldest Mesopotamian depictions, dragons, symbols of the Mesopotamian summer (Apr/May - Oct/Nov) and destructive sun's heat, have lion's bodies oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/07/seven-…
And you know how it is "the killing of the lion dragon by the thunder god", which signals the end of the hot dry half of the year...And the beginning of the cool wet part of the year, when rain and abundance return to Mesopotamia and Levant...
Was the Assyrian king slaying the lion a symbolic reenactment of the Sky, Rain, Thunder god, slaying the lion dragon? Did Assyrian kings actually have to kill lions to prove that they are indeed divinely ordained to rule?
Any Assyriologists with nothing better to do, who can contribute to this thread?
Images are from "The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World Volume II" by George Rawlinson. English scholar, historian, and Christian theologian (1812-1902)" gutenberg.org/files/16162/16…
There is already one very interesting contribution. Thank you @GOTtheJs
Thread: This is a drawing of a relief from Persepolis (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persepolis), depicting "The King killing Angra Mainyu", the main adversary of Ahura Mazda, the highest deity of Zoroastrianism...
In the earliest texts, Angra ("destructive", "chaotic", "disorderly", "inhibitive", "malign") Mainyu ("Energy", "Force", "Sprit", "Mind") was the antithesis of Spenta ("Holy", "Creative", "Bounteous") Mainyu ("Energy", "Force", "Sprit", "Mind")...
Eventually Angra (Destructive) Mainyu became Aka (Evil) Mainyu...Because of course everything destructive caused disorder and disorder is evil...And so Zoroastrian devil, Ahriman, was born...en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ahriman
Thread: Years ago, I saw a documentary about Anatolia. In it the crew went to eat in a restaurant which only served one dish: a sort of a thick spicy lamb (mutton) stew, slow cooked for hours, and served in a copper bowl in which it was quickly fried over a blowtorch 🙂
So I decided to make it today...Here is the recipe if anyone wants to try it at home. Warning, definitely not for faint hearted (it can induce a heart attack) 🙂
Ingredients:
2 lamb shanks
1 large onion
1 head of garlic
2 red chillies
2 sticks of celery
2 medium carrots
1 medium parsnip
4 large cherry tomatoes
1 glass of red vine 1/2 glass of warm water
olive oil
salt, pepper, paprika, bayleaf, rosemary, thyme, vegetable stock cube
Thread: Saint Tsar Lazar fresco from Curtea de Arges
Monastery, Romania. Pic from the paper: "Medieval name and ethnicity: Serbs and Vlachs" by Ştefan Stareţu, University of Bucharest. pressto.amu.edu.pl/index.php/bp/a…
This beautiful monastery church was built in the early 16th c. by Princess Milica Despina Branković, wife of the Duke Neagoe Basarab, Ruler of Wallachia... Milica was of Serbian origin, and closely related to Serbian noble houses of Branković and Lazarević...
Now there is an interesting legend about the building of the church. For some reason, the builders were not able to keep the church walls standing up. Whatever they build during the day, collapsed during the night...
Thread: If Christ is life, living nature, then his immaculate conception and virgin birth become easy to understand...
If Christ is life, living nature, then his death and resurrection become easy to understand...
If Christ is life, living nature, and we are part of life, living nature, then we are Christ. We truly live and move and have our being in Christ...This too then becomes easy to understand...
Date palms typically begin to bear fruit in April or May, and are "ripe for the picking" around late August to September. Horse mating season begins in Apr/May and ends in Aug/Sep...Basically hot, sunny part of the year...I Persephone symbol of winter? Maybe just a coincidence...
#FolkloreThursday Thread: I can vividly remember once walking through the garden hopping with tiny black frogs...After a late spring thunderstorm rumbled away...I must have been 6 or 7 or thereabouts...
I also remember that for a while I ran out after every storm looking for frogs...Eventually I stopped...I guess frog showers were not that common even then...
BTW, this frog rain memory was not a product of my overactive imagination. Frog showers do happen...It is now believed that these apparently inexplicable weather events are caused by small, localised tornadoes known as waterspouts...