#MythologyMonday Thread: Codex-style plate depicting the rebirth of the Maize god. Maya, Late Classic Period. 680–740AD...Currently kept in the Museum of Fine Arts Boston collections.mfa.org/objects/36320
In this thread I would like to analyse the scene description which says:
"Maize god emerges from the Underworld through a cracked turtle shell, symbolizing the earth. The Hero Twins pour water onto their father to facilitate his resurrection, as Maya farmers water maize seeds to help them sprout"...
So corn god "emerging from the Underworld" is a symbolic depiction of a corn sprouting...So when does corn sprout in the Maya land? In the 1848 book "Incidents of Travel in Yucatan, Vol. I" (gutenberg.org/files/33129/33…) by John L. Stephens we read that:
"In the dry season...Jan/Feb...a place is selected in the woods, from which the trees are cut down and burned. In...May/Jun...the corn is planted...by making little holes in the ground with a pointed stick, putting in a few grains of corn and covering them over..."
Local farmers in the old Maya lands even today plant corn in Apr/May/Jun, with planting season peaking in May...And, it takes only 4 days at 25 degrees celsius or more for corn to sprout...
Soooo...Turtle...Why "emerging through cracked turtle shell"...
Any guesses? Maaaaaybe this is another animal calendar marker, derived from a major turtle annual reproductive lifecycle event?
Bingo...
When Maya made their mythology, every year, from May to Sep, thousands and thousands of sea turtles descended on the beaches of Central America to lay their eggs...They still do today...
Guess what happens in Maya land, right when the first turtle comes to lay its eggs, in May? Corn planting begins...
Guess what happens in Maya land right when the last turtle lays its eggs, in Oct? Corn harvest begins...
So corn god "emerging through cracked turtle shell"...
I am sure that turtles were a major food source for the Mayas...You can only hunt turtles during their nesting season, which is also corn growing season...And to get to the turtle meet you have to break the turtle's shell...
BTW, this is not the only place in the world where we find turtles (tortoises) as animal calendar markers...
Remember this thread about turtles in Indian mythology?
All animal calendar markers linked with fertility of the land and grain agriculture...
Now what about "The Hero Twins pour water onto their father to facilitate his resurrection"?
Well here we have to look at the climate in the Maya territory. Here is Yucatan climate chart...It is hot year-round. The wet season usually starts in Jun and ends in Oct...
See how rain season proper starts in Jun, right after the planting of corn? Do you know of any twins which like to hang around Jun? I do...All the horse twins from Eurasia...oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2022/06/hayagr…
They mark summer solstice...The moment which marks the middle of the solar year. Solar year which starts when the old sun dies and is reborn as the new sun, on winter solstice...Two halves...Twins?
Mayan calendar also started on winter solstice...And considering that in Maya land, the time of the twins, Jun/Jul, is also the time when the rains arrive, we have the twins (rain season) pouring water on the resurrecting (growing) corn (god)...
BTW, this just reminded me of another pair of twins...Well actually it's a single god, Hapi, the god of the annual flooding of the Nile, who was "often depicted as twins, tying papyrus and lotus flowers together". I talked about him/them 🙂 here oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2022/09/lotus-…
In my article I said that "this depiction of Hapi as twins, is depiction of flooding Nile, which rises between flowering of papyrus and flowering of lotus, when it floods...
But I completely missed the fact that in the middle of this period between flowering of papyrus (Apr/May) and flowering of lotus (Jul/Aug) is Summer solstice...The twins central...🙂
Does this make sense? For more about ancient animal and plant calendar markers, start here oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/p/animal-solar… then check the rest of the blog posts I still didn't add to this page, then check my twitter threads I still didn't convert to blog post...I am 9 months behind.
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In Baltic countries, quern stones were once buried as "corner stones", the most important stones in the house foundation...And milk libations were poured into the hollow "for the house snake", which was believed to contain the spirit of the ancestors... oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2016/02/stones…
Thread: Ojibwe pictograph of a "mishibizhiw" as well as two giant serpents and a canoe, Lake Superior, Ontario, Canada. Pic by D. Gordon E. Robertson.
I just discovered this mythical creature. I can bet it is a complex animal calendar marker. Let's check (realtime research log🙂)
Mishibizhiw (Mishipeshu) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Underwate… translates into "the Great Lynx". It has the head and paws of a giant cat, bison horns and is covered in scales and has dagger-like spikes running along its back and tail...
Great Lakes tribes believed that this creature lived in the deepest parts of lakes and rivers. It had power to create storms. It often needed to be placated for safe passage across a lake...
Thread: Seated Apollo with laurel wreath, holding a lyre and pouring a libation. Attic white-ground kylix. Found in Delphi and dated c. 460BC. Archaeological Museum of Delphi...
In this thread I would like to talk about this lyre...Its origin, and its symbolism...
First, this lyre was given to Apollo by his younger brother Herms...In exchange Apollo gave Hermes caduceus...All very important...Symbolically...But why did this exchange of gifts take place? Remember this post in which I figured out Hermes's birthday? oldeuropeanculture.blogspot.com/2022/09/when-g…
This post is an analysis of (some) animal and plant calendar markers contained in the Homeric hymn to Hermes (perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?do…) which describes what Hermes did the day he was born (4th of May, when grapes flower)...
Thread (longish but hopefully interesting): The other day I came across this illustration from the 1489 book "De Lamiis et Pythonicis Mulieribus" (archive.org/details/delami…) by Ulrich Molitor...It depicts "two witches conjuring up a destructive (hail) storm"...
Ulrich Molitor wrote his book as a response to Heinrich Kramer's 1486 book "Malleus Maleficarum" which "elevates witchcraft to the criminal status of heresy"...And which pretty much ignited "the witch-hunt craze in Europe"... en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malleus_M…
Now Molitor didn't dispute the existence of witches and witchcraft. He just claimed that "witches couldn't have any powers without god giving it to them"...You can read the analysis of "De Lamiis et Pythonicis Mulieribus" in this article: scholarworks.unr.edu/bitstream/hand…
In Oct/Nov, huge flocks of pink-footed geese arrive to Scotland from Northern Europe...They spend winter in Scotland and leave in Mar/Apr... nature.scot/geese-put-spec…
In Oct/Nov, huge shoals of salmon arrive to Scotland and run up the Scottish rivers to their spawning grounds. This is the best time to see salmon leaping in Scotland...scotlandsnature.blog/2020/10/23/the…
Thread: This amazing Scythian artefact, dated to the period 4th–3rd c. BC is a perfect illustration of everything I hate about the way artefacts with the depictions of animals are treated by (most) archaeologists and pretty much everyone else...
Here comes the rant: 🙂
When I first saw this artefact, it had this English description: "A reconstruction of a leather flask found in one of the en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pazyryk_b…. Based on excavations by S. I. Rudenko...It is decorated with two identical images showing a griffin fighting a black grouse"...
"a griffin fighting a black grouse"???
I spent good few minutes eyeballing the photographs, trying to see either a Scythian griffin (L) or a black grouse (R)...After I failed to see either, I decided to see if I can find original Russian description of the image...