Thread: One of several gold and silver statuettes of a worshipper (probably a king) carrying a sacrificial goat. Susa, Iran, c. 1500–1200 BC (Middle Elamite period)...The statuette is really cool, but this next thing is even cooler:
"...in order to make the neglected rites appear magnificently, in order to restore Nippur, as the lead GOAT of the nation"...
This is an excerpt from an inscription of Ur-Ninurta (1859 – 1832 BC) found in Nippur, which commemorates setting up of a bronze image of the king holding a votive goat...
Apparently, in Sumerian language, goat was used as a metaphor for a leader. And no one really knows why, cause the explanation found in asor.org/anetoday/2019/… is that "This is related to the fact that the Sumerian society was highly dependent on agriculture and animal husbandry"
Which of course is a complete rubbish...Why not sheep? Sheep were a lot more important in Mesopotamian agriculture...Or cows? Equally significantly more important to the early Mesopotamians than goats....
So why then goat=first, most important?
The leader is the first, the most important person. So goat must have been seen as equally first and most important animal...Was it? Well of course it was...Before there was god, there was goat...
In Eastern Mediterranean, Mesopotamia, Iran, Central Asai, the beginning of the Ibex mating season (Oct/Nov) coincides with the start of the rain season...
Which is why during the Neolithic, and Bronze Age, ibex was the most depicted animal in these lands. Ibex, The Goat of Rain, whose mating brings rain...
Ibex goat was directly linked with rebirth of nature...With the transformation of the dead yellow desert into lush green pasture...Kind of a very very very bid deal in Mesopotamia...
The Goat of Rain was the first God...The most important god before irrigation was invented...Then The Goat of Rain, became a Goat Dude, a dude with goat horns... oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/12/stride…
And then finally a god to whom you sacrifice a goat...Gods' favorite...So no wonder the word "goat" also meant "the first" and "the most important"...
And considering the sacred status of goats, what was the actual meaning of the statues and plaques, depicting kings carrying goats (baby goats, kids)? This one is from Tello and is kept in Louvre...
In this article jstor.org/stable/1359846 the author proposes that this is because goats were used by kings for extispicy, a practice of using anomalies in animal entrails to predict the future...But sheep were used in these rituals as much as goats... oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/12/humbab…
And I can't really see how that would make the "goat carrier" into "standard royal representation type"...How that would make kings write inscriptions like this: "The year in which Ammisaduqa, the king, had made the image of him carrying a kid against his chest"...
But if goat was god, the first, the most important god...
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
Ahura-Mazda in a circle "worshiped" 🙂 by two rampant horses, below a flying sun disk with tail and streamers. Impression of the stone seal of Ellil-mukîn-aplu son of Nasir. 413 BC. Penn Museum...
What does this really mean?
The natural breeding season of horses typically begins around mid-April and finishes around mid September...It is marked by wild stallion fights for mares...
Bottlenose dolphin female fertility peaks in June, male fertility peaks in July"..."Gestation last 12 months"...Which means that it is June-July when most dolphin babies are born too...Not something you would easily miss, if you are a sailor...
I talked about the significance of this in this thread
Thread: A very very interesting Old Babylonian cylinder seal, circa 1700-1600BC. The official description:
"A supplicant (the one who prays to god), wearing long robe, stands before a deity. The deity is standing with one foot resting on a lying animal (?), holding a staff with elaborate top part, which is positioned directly under a crescent and circle with an inscribed cross"...
There are three lines of cuneiform text reading: "Nin-Subur (Ninshubur), wise in all things, have mercy on me" en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ninshubur
sekira (sikira) is Slavic word for axe. sekirica (sekiritsa), sikirica (sikiritsa) is an axe with long handle and small head. Like this one traditionally used by Carpathian shepherds en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shepherd%…
Thread: Impression from a cylinder seal from Babylonia, 8th century BC; in the Pierpont Morgan Library, New York City themorgan.org/seals-and-tabl… Here is the official description of the scene depicted on the seal:
"A demonic lion faces a winged superhuman hero. The lion's threatening gesture and the tension of his sharp claws suggest his evil power. But the hero will prevail. Taller than the lion, he calmly dominates it, and the bull—the victim of the contest—remains in his power"...🙂
What does this seal really depict?
Well, it depicts Nergal, the Mesopotamian god of death, war, and destruction, who was most often depicted holding a scimitar...