Thread: I want to thank @realgavinlee for posting this pict of a very interesting, 1-3 C. AD Eastern Han Empire, bronze mirror.

The mirror is decorated with repeated scenes of "a tiger following a goat" and "a dragon facing a monkey". Except these are not ordinary decorations...
These are animal calendar markers for

winter - "a tiger following a goat"
and
summer - "a dragon facing a monkey"

Tiger (winter) and Dragon (summer) are found as two opposing symbols in China since Neolithic Yangshao culture. I talked about this here:
oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2021/08/tiger-…
The reason for this kind of symbolic division of the calendar year is because of the climate in the North Eastern china: The climatic year is divided into cold, dry winter (tiger) and hot, wet summer (dragon)...Xian climate. But the climate for the whole Han area is very similar.
Tiger is a winter symbol because the mating season of the Siberian / Amur tiger, which once lived in the North Eastern China, is Dec/Jan...Midwinter...
Ibex is a winter symbol because Siberian ibex, which lives in North Eastern China starts mating in Oct/Nov and mates throughout the winter...

Which is why "tiger" (Dec/Jan) follows (comes after) goat (Oct/Nov)...
Snake is the only true solar animal. It is in our world when sun is in our world (day and hot part of the year) and it is in the underworld when sun is in the underworld (night and cold part of the year)...Hence snake as a symbol of the sun and more specifically of sun's heat...
Now summer (Apr/May - Jul/Aug), the domain of the sun, starts with the beginning of the mating season of Eurasian viper snakes and ends with the beginning of the mating season of Eurasian lions...
Dragon is also a symbol of sun, and sun's heat during the hottest time of the year, Jul/Aug...Which is why dragon is just "an old snake which looked at the sun for a long time". And why dragon was depicted as lion with snakes heads...Or snake with lion's head...
In Western Asia, North Africa, Europe, Jul/Aug is also the driest part of the year...The time of droughts...

Which is why in these parts of the world dragons breath fire, steal water and cause droughts and death...

And we have all the thunder gods chasing them away...
But in China, the hottest part of the year is also the wettest part of the year...Xian climate again...

Hence in China, the fire breathing dragons bring rain...

oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2021/08/chines…
According to the Chinese mythology, dragon was helped in its water fetching duties by en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kui_(Chin…, a "one-legged mountain demon or rain-god, variously said to resemble a Chinese dragon, a drum made of a skin of a water ox with no horns, or a monkey with a human face".
At first I wasn't sure what the dragon was facing on the Eastern Han mirror, but have a look at this:

Left: archaic oracle script symbol for "nao" (monkey)
Right: monkey from the Eastern Han mirror facing the dragon
The most common identification of this "monkey with the human face" is en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_sn… Which is in China known as "Sichuan golden hair monkey" cause it lives in the mountains of Sichuan...Which was, I think, within the area of the core Han land...
Now I think it is interesting that the monkey is facing, stopping the rain bringing dragon...Why? Have a look at the climate in Sichuan...The rain stops in October...And the mating season of the "Golden snub-nosed monkey" is...October...
Oh yeah. Why "one legged mountain monkey/dragon rain god"? Apparently no one knows..."The Confucianists, detested the idea that K'ui had only one leg..." Cause they couldn't explain it. Maybe because...
Or maybe because dragon, which is the symbol of the sun's heat during the hottest part of the year, late summer, is "just an old snake" which is the symbol of the sun's heat in general...And snakes only have "one leg", or none, depending how you look at it...
To see that I am not barking mad: Groot infers that the in "one-legged dragon" Kui, "which was amphibious, and caused wind and rain", "we immediately recognize the Dragon, China’s god of Water and Rain". Carr interprets this as "a crocodile-dragon with its tail seen as 'one leg'"
And, why was the thunder drum made from the hide of an "blue ox with no horns who comes out of the eastern sea"? Well, remember that the bull, ox, cow and calf, are animal calendar markers that mark the beginning of the calving season of the wild Eurasian cattle, Apr/May...
Ox with no horns is a wild cattle calf...Which start being born in Apr/May...Which is when the summer monsoon winds arrive from the eastern sea carrying the clouds full of rain and thunder and lighting...Hence blue ox with no horns...

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More from @serbiaireland

29 Dec 21
Thread, longish: In which I will talk about two (actually three) sacrifices, which marked the beginning and the end of the Trojan war...

7th c. BC Mykonos pithos. It contains the oldest depiction of the Trojan Horse, the way Homer described it in Iliad

ir.lib.uth.gr/xmlui/bitstrea…
Now in my article about Trojan horse, I talked about the proposition by the Italian naval archaeologist, Francesco Tiboni, that the famed Trojan horse was not a horse at all, but a ship, with a horse head on the prow...

oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/06/trojan…
Like this one, from a depiction of Phoenician ships found in the palaces of Assyrian kings from the 7th and 8th centuries BCE.

It is because of this that the Greeks called the Phoenician ships "horses", and the Phoenicians "the horse people".
Read 74 tweets
19 Dec 21
Thread (longish but hopefully interesting): The other day I came across this beautiful mural from a Neolithic (7th millennium BC) site Tell Bouqras en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bouqras from Syria...
It is believed that this mural depicts a group of Common Cranes en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_cr…
While looking for more info about this image I came across this very interesting paper entitled "Dance of the Cranes: Crane symbolism at Çatalhöyük and beyond" birds.cornell.edu/crows/rusmcg03…
Read 46 tweets
19 Dec 21
Thread: A very very interesting figuring from Çatalhöyük...

"This figure depicts a human, hybrid representation perhaps of life and death..."
"The front portrays the typical robust female with large breasts and stomach...The back portrays an articulated skeleton with a modeled spinal column, a pelvis and scapulas that project above shoulders...ribs are depicted using horizontal scoring..."
"A prominent dowel hole indicates that originally the piece had a separate, detachable head. A circular ‘footprint’ around the dowel hole suggests that the
head fit snugly into this curved space..."

Me: Used to place a head of a newly deceased???

From:

web.stanford.edu/group/figurine…
Read 4 tweets
17 Dec 21
Thread: Forget about the wings...What about the hands and feet...Which animal has extremities like these?
I don't think these are bird talons as they are depicted as obvious talons on artefacts from this period...

Example 1: "Two headed dragon" 🙂 golden cup, 1000 BC, Iran. oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2021/06/two-he… Image
Example 2: A Bactrian gold stamp seal, c. 2200-1900 BC...oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2020/12/giant-… Image
Read 11 tweets
10 Dec 21
Thread: "On Christmas morning in Norway every gable, gateway, or barn-door, is decorated with a sheaf of grain, called "Julenek", fixed on the top of a tall pole, wherefrom it is intended that the birds should make their Christmas dinner"...Julenek, Karl Uchermann 1855-1940...
On Christmas Eve, the Swedes hang out the last sheaf of grain from the harvest, known as the Julkarve, as an offering to the birds. And they believe that the more birds come to feed, the better the next year's grain harvest will be...Bird sheaf, Siegwald Dahl 1827-1902...
The usual explanation for this custom is that that the birds were fed to stop them eating grain from grain stores...But the belief that feeding the birds has influence on the next year's harvest points at another explanation for this custom...Preserved in Slavic folklore...
Read 7 tweets
8 Dec 21
Thread: Winter Solstice Celebration, by the Latvian painter Evalds Dajevskis, Acrylic, 1989...

The traditional masked characters dancing in the room are all symbols of death and resurrection of nature...

stork
bear
goat
white horse
death, the dead
bride
sheaf of wheat Image
Stork:

Storks are migratory birds, which disappear in the autumn and reappear in the spring...Slavs believed that migratory birds spent winter with the sun in Iriy, the land of the dead...So stork = death - resurrection

oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2017/01/leto.h… Image
Read 22 tweets

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