;jj!fs Cornell littivetJjsiitg J 'ilrai^g BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME FROM THE • SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND THE GIFT OF Hetirg W. Sage 1891 6a^9ps«\ M dt^ 9724 OLIN LIBRARY - CiRCUlATIOrM DATE DUE 1 ftl\l ^ '^7 uu o rt * \ ""ir^ '^■■■^>*»ft "*•*•**- . _.-*i*'^' i iRRl^ J88MH,aj i>-^ ■ JUM- ^'T5jU tfua^ rf^'^^^Pi SSP* !fO a^o GAVLORD •'RINTCOINU.S-A Cornell University Library BL785.F23 G7 Greece and Babylon : a comparative sketc olin 3 1924 029 137 615 3b &7 GREECE AND BABYLON GREECE AND BABYLON A COMPARATIVE SKETCH OF MESOPOTAMIAN, ANATOLIAN AND HELLENIC RELIGIONS BY LEWIS R. FARNELL, D.Litt., M.A. FELLOW OF EXETER COLLEGE, OXFORD AUTHOR OF "CULTS OF THE GREEK STATES" "EVOLUTION OF RELIGION" "HIGHER ASPECTS OF GREEK RELIGION" (hIBBERT LECTURES) Edinburgh : T. & T. CLARK, 38 George Street 191 1 /iJr' 1'^ V^ -=*fr 1^ ^ J Printed by Morrison & Gibb Limited, FQR T. & T. CLABK, EDINBURGH. LONDON: SIUPKIN, MIUBHALL, HAUILTON, KENT, AND CO. LIMITED. NEW YORK : CHARLES SCRIENER'S SONS. Jj3 TO Dr. henry WILDE THE FOUNDER OF THE WILDE LECTURESHIP IN NATURAL AND COMPARATIVE RELIGION IN THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD THESE FIRST-FRUITS OF HIS ENDOWMENT ARE DEDICATED BY THE FIRST WILDE LECTURER Exeter College, Oxford, November 191 1. The original of tiiis book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/cletails/cu31924029137615 CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. PAGE Inaugural Lecture . . . . . i CHAPTER II. Statement of the Problem and the Evidence. Indebtedness of primitive Greek religion to Mesopotamian influences — Various kinds of evidence to be considered : Texts and Monuments of Mesopotamia, Syria, Canaan, Hittite Kingdom, Asia-Minor coast, Minoan-Mycenaeau area — Necessity of determining when the North- Aryan tribes entered Greece, and what they brought with them — Influences from Mesopotamia on Greece of the second millennium at least not direct — Precariousness of theory of religious borrowing — Special lines that the inquiry will pursue . ..... 29 CHAPTER III. Morphology of the Compared Religions. Distinction between nature religions and ethical religions unsound — The degree of personality in the cult-objects a better criterion — The earliest system known in Mesopo- tamia a polytheism with personal deities, but con- taining certain products of animism and polydaimonism — Other Semitic and non-Semitic peoples of Asia Minor, the Minoan-Mycenaean races, the earliest Greek tribes, already on the plane of personal theism in the second millennium B.C. . . .40 CHAPTER IV. Anthropomorphism and Theriomorphism in Anatolia and THE Mediterranean. Mesopotamian religious conception generally anthropomorphic, but the anthropomorphism " unstable " — Theriomorphic viii CONTENTS features, especially of daim'oniac powers — Mystic imagina- tion often theriomorphic — Individuality of deities some- times indistinct — Female and male sometimes fused — ^The person becomes the Word — Similar phenomena in other Semitic peoples — Theriolatry more prominent in Hittite religion, though anthropomorphism the prevalent idea — The Minoan -Mycenaean religion also mainly anthro- pomorphic — The evidence of theriolatry often misinter- preted — The proto-Hellenic religion partly theriomorphic — Some traces of theriolatry even in later period, in spite of strong bias towards anthropomorphism . 51 CHAPTER V. Predominance of the Goddess. Importance of the phenomenon in the history of religions — In Mesopotamia and other Semitic regions the chief deit}' male, except Astarte at Sidon — Evidence from Hittite kingdoms doubtful, but at points on the Asia-Minor coast, such as Ephesos, and notably in Phrygia, the supremacy of the goddess well attested — The same true on the whole of Cretan religion- — The earliest Hellenes, like other Aryan communities, probably inclined to exalt the male deity, -, and did not develop the cult of Virgin goddesses — There- j fore Athena and Artemis probably pre-Hellenic . .81 CHAPTER VI. The Deities as Nature-Powers. Shamash the sun-god derives his personal character from the nature-phenomenon ; but the Babylonian deities develop their personality independently of their nature-origin, which is often doubtful — Importance of Sin, the moon-god ' — Star- worship in Babylonian cult — No clear recognition of an earth-goddess — Tammuz a vegetation-power — ^Western Canaanites worship nature-deities in the second millennium, probably with moral attributes — The Hittites a thunder- r god and corn-god — The Phrygians a mother-goddess of the '- earth and lower world — On the whole, pre-Homeric Hellas ' worships ethical personalities rather than nature-powers — Distinguished from Mesopotamia by comparative insig- nificance of solar, lunar, astral cults — Also by the great prominence of the earth-goddess and the association of certain eschatological ideas with her . . 99 f; CONTENTS ix PAGE CHAPTER VII. The Deities as Social-Powers. The religious origin of the city — Slight evidence from Mesopo- tamia, more from early Greece — Early Mesopotamian king- ship of divine type — The king inspired and occasionally worshipped — The Hittite monuments show the divine associations of the king — Proto-Hellenic kingship probably of similar character — Social usages protected by religion in the whole of this area — No family cult of the hearth at Babylon — The code of Hammurabi — Comparatively secular in its enactments concerning homicide — Religious feeling perceptible in the laws concerning incest — The legal system attached to religion at certain points, but on the whole, independent of it — In early Hellas the religion an equally stiong social force, but many of its social manifestations different — Religion tribal and " phratric " in Greece ; not so in Babylon — Purification from blood- shed could not have been borrowed from Mesopotamia . II 6 CHAPTER VIII. Religion and Morality. The deity conceived on the whole as beneficent and righteous, but the divine destructive power more emphasised in Babylonia — Every Babylonian deity moralised, not every Hellenic — In both societies perjury a sin, untruthfulness only in Babylonian religious theory — International mor- ality — The ethics of the family very vital in both societies, but more complex in Babylonia — Ritualistic tabus a, heavier burden on the Babylonian conscience — Morality more daimonistic than in Greece — In the Babylonian con- fessional stress laid on unknown involuntary sin, hence tendency to pessimism — In Greece less timidity of con- science, less prominence of magic — Mercifulness a prominent divine attribute in both religions — More pan- theistic thought and a clearer sense of the divinity of all life in Babylonian theology, as in the Tammuz-myth 141 CHAPTER IX. Purity a Divine Attribute. Ritual purity generally demanded — Babylonian mythology far ~1 purer than the Greek — Character of Ishtar — Virginity a J divine attribute — Mystic conception of a virgin-mother, -■ the evidence examined in East and West . . . 163 X CONTENTS PAGE CHAPTER X. Concept of Divine Power and Ancient Cosmogonies. Neither in Babylon nor Greece any clear and consistently main- tained dogma of divine omnipotence — Yet the divinities collectively the strongest power in the universe — No de- veloped theory of dualism — The divine power combined with magic in Babylonia, but not in Greece — No early Hellenic consciousness of the Word as a creative force — The magic power of the divine name felt by the Hellenes, but not realised as a creative force — Babylonian cosmogonies not traceable in the earliest Greek mythology, nor in Hesiod, but the myth of Typhoeus probably from Babylonian sources — Babylonian myths concerning creation of man not known in early Greece — ^Organisation of the polytheism into divine groups — Evidence of Trinitarian idea and of monotheistic tendency — No proof here of Greek indebted- ness to Mesopotamia ... 173 CHAPTER XI. The Religious Temperament of the Eastern and Western Peoples. The relation of the individual to the deity more intimate in . Mesopotamia than in Greece — ^The religious temper more ecstatic, more prone to self-abasement, sentimentality, rapture — Humility and the fear of God ethical virtues in Babylonia — The child named after the god in both societies — -In some Semitic communities the deity takes a title from the worshipper — Fanaticism in Mesopotamian religion, entire absence of it in the Hellenic . . 190 CHAPTER XII. ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST. General resemblances between Mesopotamian and early Hellenic rites of tendance of dead — ^Mesopotamian theory of the lower world gloomier — The terror of the spectre •stronger in the East than in the West ; yet both fear the miasma of the dead — In both, the literary evidence clashes somewhat with the evidence from the graves — Certain important differences in tendance of dead — Water essential in later Babylonian, wine and the triple libation in early Hellenic — Hero-cult strong in early Hellas, at least very rare in Mesopotamia-^Hellenic idea of re-incarnation not CONTENTS xi yet found in Babylonian records — The evocation of ghosts, and the periodic meals with or in memory of tBe dead, common to both peoples — General All Souls' festival — But in Babylonia no popular belief in posthumous punishments and rewards — The powers of the lower world more gloomy and repellent than in Hellas — No mysteries to develop the germs of a brighter eschatologic faith . . ' zo4 CHAPTER XIII. Comparison of the Ritual. In the second millennium all Semitic communities had evolved the temple, and Babylonia the idol — I n Greece, temple - building was coming into vogue, bu t th e cults still aniconi c — The p illar and the phal lic emblem common in early Greece, very rare m Mesopotamia — Sacrifice b oth in East and West of two types, the blood-sa crifice and the bloodless, but in He llas vri ^dXta iepd in early vogue, not y6t fOUIld in the Kast — Incense unknown to the pre-Homeric Greeks — The distinction between Chthonian and Olympian ritual not found at Babylon — Comm union-sacrifice and sacr a- ment i n early Greece, not found a s yet m Mesopotamia -^Vicarious piacular sacrifice common to both regions, but human sacrifice rife in _early Greece, not found in Meso- potamia — Mystia_ use of blood i n Greek ritual, immola- t ion or expulsion of the scape-goat^ot yet~3 iicovered in Mesopotamia — The death of the divinity in Babylonian ritual — ^Mourning for Tammuz — In other Semitic communi- ties — In Hittite worship, Sandon of Tarsos — Attis of Phrygia — Emasculation in Phrygian ritual, aUen to Babylonian as to Hellenic religious sentiment — Death of divinity in Cretan ritual, and in Cjrprus — In genuin e Hpllpnir rpligrin n. found only in agr3 , ri a.n, hern-r.nlts, .such as Linos, Eunostos ; the^ e having no connection with Tammuz — Babylonian liturgy mainly a service of sorrow, Greek mainly cheerful — A holy. marriage at Babylon, on Hittite relief at Boghaz-Keui, lh'" Miiiuair "and H ellenic ritu al — ^ mortal the consort of divinity, an idea founa m many races widely removed — Greek evidence — Consecrated women in Mesopotamia, two types — Their functions to be distinguished from the conse- cration of virginity before marriage mentioned by Herodotus — Other examples of one or the other of these customs in Asia Minor — Various explanations of these customs offered by anthropology — Criticism of different views — Their religious significance — Ri inal nf purification. — Cathartic- use of wa ter and fire — Preservation of peace during public purification — Points of agreement between Hellas and xii CONTENTS Babylonia — Points of difference, Babylonian confessional ■ — Value of Homer's evidence concerning early Hellenic purification — Babylonian magic in general contrast witl^ Greek — Astrologic magic — Magic value of numbers, of the word — Babylonian exorcism — ^Magic use of images — No severance in Mesopotamia between magic and religion — Babylonian and Hellenic divination CHAPTER XIV. Summary of Results ..... . 304 GREECE AND BABYLON. CHAPTER I. Inaugural Lecture. The newly-elected holder of a University professorship or lectureship, before embarking on the course of special discussion that he has selected, may be allowed or expected to present some outlined account of the whole subject that he represents, and to state beforehand, if possible, the line that he proposes to pursue in regard to it. This is all the more incumbent on me, as I have the honour to be the first Wilde Lecturer in Natural and Comparative Religion — the first, that is, who has been officially charged by the University to give public teaching in the most modern and one of the most difficult fields of study, one that has already borne copious fruit, and will bear more in the future. I appreciate highly the honour of such a charge, and I take this opportunity of expressing my deep sense of the indebtedness of our University and of all students of this subject to Dr. Wilde for his generous endow- ment of this branch of research, which as yet has only found encouragement in a few Universities of Europe, America, and Japan. I feel also the responsibility of my charge. Years of study have shown me the magnitude of the subject, the pitfalls that here — more, perhaps. 2 GREECE AND BABYLON than in other fields — beset the unwary, and the multi- pUcity of aspects from which it may be studied. Having no predecessor, I cannot follow, but may be called upon rather to set, a precedent. One guidance, at least, I have — namely, the expressed wishes of the founder of this post. He has formulated them in regard to Comparative Religion in such a way that I feel precluded, in handling this part of the whole field, from what may be called the primitive anthro- pology of religion. I shall not, therefore, deal directly with the embryology of the subject, with merely savage religious psychology, ritual, or institutions. It is not that I do not feel myself the fascination of these subjects of inquiry, and their inevitableness for one who wishes wholly to understand the whole of any one of the higher world-religions. But we have in the University one accomplished exponent of these themes in Mr. Marett, and until recently we have been privileged to possess Professor Tylor ; and Dr. Wilde has made his wishes clear that the exposition of Comparative Religion should be mainly an elucidation and comparison of the higher forms and ideas in the more advanced religions. And I can cheerfully accept this limitation, as for years I have been occupied with the minute study of the religion of Greece, in which one finds much, indeed, that is primitive, even savage, but much also of religious thought and religious ethic, unsuspected by former generations of scholars, that has become a rich inheritance of our higher culture. He who wishes to succeed in this new field of arduous inquiry should have studied at least one of the higher religions of the old civilisation au fond, and he must have studied it by the comparative method. He may then make this religion the point of departure for wide INAUGURAL LECTURE 3 excursions into outlying tracts of the more or less adjacent religious systems, and he will be the less likely to lose himself in the maze and tangle of facts if he can focus the varying light or doubtful glimmer they afford upon the complex set of phenomena with which he is already familiar. And the Greek religion serves better than any other that I know for such a point of departure, the influences being so numerous that radiated upon it. It had its own special inheritance, which it fruitfully developed, from the North, from its proto- Aryan past, and which we shaU be able to define with greater clearness when comparative religion has done its work upon the religious records of the early Aryan peoples. Also, the Hellene had many intimate points of contact with earlier and alien peoples of the ancient Mediterranean culture whom he conquered and partly absorbed, or with whom he entered into intellectual or commercial relations. There- fore the religions of the Minoan Age, of the Anatolian peoples, of Egypt, and finally of Babylon and Persia, come inevitably to attract the student of the Hellenic. As far, then, as I can see at present, I may have to limit my attention in the lecture-courses of these three years during which I fill this post, to the phenomena of the Mediterranean area, and these are more than one man can thoroughly elucidate in a lifetime, as the manifold activity in various departments of this field, attested by the Transactions of our recent Congress of the History of Religions, wiU prove to those who read them. And I shall endeavour in the future to follow out one main inquiry through a short series of lectures, as this is the best method for a reasoned statement of consecutive thought. But I propose in this lecture to sketch merely in outlines the salient features of some 4 GREECE AND BABYLON of the religions of the Mediterranean area, and hope thereby to indicate the main problems which the student of comparative religion must try to solve, or the leading questions he must ask, and thus, perhaps, to be able to suggest to others as well as to myself special lines of future research and discussion. What, then, are the questions which naturally arise when we approach the study of any religion that has advanced beyond the primitive stage ? We wish to discover with definiteness what is the idea of divinity that it has evolved, in what forms and with what con- cepts this idea is expressed — whether, for instance, the godhead is conceived as a vague " numen," or as a definite personality with complex character and functions, and whether it is imagined or presented to sense in anthropomorphic forms. The question whether the religion is monotheistic or polytheistic is usually answered at a glance, unless the record is unusually defective ; but in the case of polytheism careful inquiry is often needed to answer the other morphological questions that press them- selves upon us, whether the polytheism is an organised system of co-ordinated and subordinated powers or a mere medley of uncorrelated deities. If the former, whether the unifying tendency has developed in the direction of monotheism or pantheism. Again, the study of the attributes and functions ascribed and the titles attached to the deity will enable us to answer the questions concerning his relation to the world of Nature, to the social sphere of law, politics, and morality ; and in this quest we may hope to gain fruitful suggestions concerning the interaction of religion, social organisation, and ethics. We shall also wish to know whether the religion is dogmatic or not — that is INAUGURAL LECTURE 5 to say, whether it lays stress on precise theological definitions ; whether it claims to possess sacred books or a revelation ; whether it contains the idea of faith as a cardinal virtue. Further, it is always interesting to consider whether it has engendered a cosmogony, a theory of the cosmos, its origin, inaintenance, and possible dissolution ; and whether it is instinctively favourable or antagonistic to the growth of the scientific spirit, to the free activity of the intellect ; and, finally, whether it gives prominence to the belief in the immortality of the soul and to the doctrine of posthumous rewards and punishments. There are also certain special questions concerning the nature and powers of the divinity that are found to be of importance. The distinction of sex in the anthropomorphic religions, the paramountcy of the god or the goddess, is observed to produce a singular effect in religious psychology, and may be associated with fundamental differences in social institutions, with the distinction, for instance, between a patrilinear and a matrilinear society. As regards the powers attributed to the divinity, we may endeavour to discern certain laws of progress or evolution in progressive societies — an evolution, perhaps, from a more material to a more spiritual conception, or, again, from a belief in divinities finite and mortal to a dogma that infinity, omniscience, , and immortality are their necessary attributes. On this line of inquiry we are often confronted with the phenomenon of the death of the god or goddess, and no single fact in the history of religions is of more interest and of more weight. Also, we frequently find an antagonism between malevolent and benevolent P9wers, whence may arise a philosophic conception of dualism in Nature and the moral world. 6 GREECE AND BABYLON There are, further, the questions concerning ritual, often very minute, but of none the less significance. What are the forms of worship, sacrifice, prayer, adora- tion ? As regards sacrifice, is it deprecatory merely, a bribe to avert wrath, or is it a gift to secure favour, or is it a token of friendly trust and affection, or a mystic act of communion which effects between the deity and the worshipper a temporary union of body and soul ? In the study of ritual we may consider the position of the priesthood, its power over the religion, and through the religion over the State, and the sources of that power. This enumeration of the problems is long, but I fear by no means exhaustive. I have not yet mentioned the question that may legitimately arise, and is the most perplexing of all — that which is asked concerning the vital power and influence of a certain religion, its strength of appeal, its real control of the people's thoughts and acts. The question, as we know, is difficult enough when we apply it to modem societies ; it may be quite hopeless when applied to an ancient State. It is only worth raising when the record is unusually ample and varied, and of long continuity ; when we can believe that it enshrines the thoughts of the people, not merely of the priest or of the philo- sopher. We are more likely to believe this when the record is rich not only in literature, but in monuments. It may also be demanded that the history of religions should include a history of their decay, and, in his briUiant address at the recent Congress, Professor Petrie has formulated this demand as one that Egyptology might fulfil. Certainly it belongs to the scientific treatment of our subject to note the circumstances and operative causes that induced a certain people to abandon their ancestral beliefs and cults ; but whether from the INAUGURAL LECTURE 7 careful study of each special case certain general laws will emerge by process of induction may be doubted. It will depend partly on the completeness of our records and our skill in their interpretation. I will conclude this sketch of an ideal programme, which I, as least, can never hope to make actual, with one last query — Is it the main object of this comparative study to answer the inquiry as to the reciprocal influences of adjacent religions, to distinguish between the alien and the native elements in any particular system — to estimate, for instance, what Greece owed to Babylon, to Egypt, to India ? Certainly the problem is proper to our province, is attractive, and even hopeful, and I have ventured to approach it myself. But I should hesitate to allow that it is the main one, and that the value of our study is to be measured by our success in solving it ; for, whatever answer we finally give to such questions, or if we abandon in despair the attempt to answer them precisely, it is none the less fruitful to compare the Babylonian, Indo-Iranian, Egyptian, and Hellenic systems of belief — for instance, to consider the Orphic eschatology in relation to the Buddhistic, even if we reject the theory that Buddhistic influences could have penetrated into early Orphism. I will now sketch what I have perceived to be the higher elements or more developed features in Hellenic religion, and will consider in regard to each of these how it contrasts with or resembles the cults of the other leading peoples of this area. The Hellenic high divinity is, in the first place, no mere shadowy " numen," no vague spirit-power or semi-personal divine force, such as the old Roman belief often seems to present us with, nor is he usually conceived as a divine element immanent in certain things ; but he appears as a concrete personal 8 GREECE AND BABYLON individual of definite physical traits and complex moral nature. Vaguer and cruder ideas no doubt survived right through the historic period, and the primitive ancestor of the Hellene may once have lived in the religious phase of thought in which the personal god has not yet emerged or not yet been detached from the phenomenon or the world of living matter. But I believe that the Greek of the historic, and even of the Homeric, period had left this phase far more remotely behind him than certain modern theorists have lightly supposed, and I am convinced that the proto-Hellenic tribes had already before the conquest of Greece developed the cult of certain personal deities, and that some, at least, of these were the common heritage of several tribes. It is quite possible that before they crossed the northern frontier of Greece they found such divinities among their Aryan kinsfolk of Thrace, and it is certain that this was the type of religion that they would mainly find among the peoples of the Minoan- Mycenaean culture. We discern it also, where the record allows us to discern anything, among the nearer and remoter stocks of the Asiatic side of the Mediterranean area. In the Zend-Avesta, the sacred books of the Persian religion, Ahura-Mazda is presented as a noble ethical figure, a concrete personal god, hke Jahwe of Israel, whatever his original physical significance may have been. Marduk of Babylon, whom Hammurabi, the consolidator of the Babylonian power, raised to the rank of the high god, may once have been a sun-god, but he transcended his elemental nature, and appears in the records of the third millennium as a political deity, the war-god, and leader of the people, as real a personality as Hammurabi himself. The same is true of Asshur, once the local INAUGURAL LECTURE 9 deity of the aboriginal land of the Assyrians, but later raised by the imperial expansion of this pebple almost to the position of a universal god, the guardian of the land, the teacher and the father of the kings ; nor can we discern that he was ever an elemental god. Speaking generally, in spite of many important differences, we may regard the religious structure to which the cults of Anatolia and Egypt belonged as morphologically the same as that which I am defining as Hellenic. Also, among all these peoples, by the side of the few higher deities who have developed moral personalities, we find special elemental divinities, as, in Hellas, we find Helios and the deities of the wind, Hephaistos the fire-god. The distinction between the reUgions of the Hellenes and " the barbarians," which Aristophanes defines as the difference between the worship of ideal divine personages, such as Zeus, Apollo, and Demeter, and the direct worship of elementary powers, such as sun and moon, is not borne out by modern research. Where we find sun-worship or moon- worship in the East, it does not appear to have been directed immediately to the thing itself regarded as a living or animate body, but to a personal god of the sun or the moon — Bel, Shamash, or Sin. We can only distinguish the Greek from the Oriental in respect of Nature-religion by the lesser degree of devotion that the Hellene showed to it. Only those of his divinities whose names connoted nothing in the material or natural world, could develop into free moral personalities, and dominate the religious imagina- tion of the people. Nowhere, for instance, had Helios any high position in the Greek world except at Rhodes, where we must reckon with pre-Hellenic, Minoan, and later with Semitic influences. Therefore, when, shortly 10 GREECE AND BABYLON before and after the beginning of the Graeco-Roman period, a wave of sun-worship welled from the East over the West, it may have brought with it religious ideas of high spirituality and ethical purity, yet by the race-consciousness of the Hellenes it must have been judged to be a regress towards a barbaric past. The instinct of the Greek in his creation of divine forms shows always a bias towards the personal and the individual, an aversion to the amorphous and vague, and herein we may contrast him with the Persian and Egyptian. A certain minor phenomenon in these rehgions will illustrate and attest this. All of them admitted by the side of the high personal deities certain subordinate personages less sharply conceived, divine emanations, as we may sometimes call them, or personifications of moral or abstract ideas. Plutarch specially mentions the Persian worship of Truth, Good- will, Law-abidingness, Wisdom, emanations of Ahura- Mazda, which in the light of the sacred books we may, perhaps, interpret as the Fravashis or Soul-powers of the High God ; and in certain Egyptian myths and religious records we hear of a personification of Truth, whose statue is described by the same writer. But at least in the Persian system we may suspect that such divine beings had little concrete personality, but, rather, were conceived vaguely as daimoniac forces, special activities of divine force in the invisible world. Now the Greek of the period when we really know him seems to have been mentally unable to allow his consciousness of these things or these forces to remain just at that point. Once, no doubt, it was after this fashion that his ancestors dimly imagined Eros, or the half-per- sonal Curse-power 'Apa ; but he himself could only cherish Eros under the finished and concrete form of a INAUGURAL LECTURE ii beautiful personal god, and the curse was only vitalised for him when it took on the form of the pergonal Erinys. This topic is a fruitful one, and I hope to develop it on a later occasion. It suggests what is now the next matter I wish to touch on — the comparison of the Mediterranean religions in respect of their anthropomorphism. Philosophically, the term might be censured as failing to distinguish any special type of religion ; for we should all admit that man can only envisage the unseen world in forms intelligible to his own mind and reflecting his own mental structure. But, apart from this truism, we find that religions differ essentially and vitally according as this anthropomorphism is vague and indefinite or sharply defined and dominating ; according as they picture the divinity as the exact though idealised counterpart of man, and construct the divine society purely on the lines of the human, or refrain from doing this either through weakness and obscurity of imagina- tion or in deference to a different and perhaps more elevated law of the religious intellect. Now, of the Hellenic religion no feature is salient as its anthropo- morphism, and throughout its whole development and career the anthropomorphic principle has been more dominating and imperious than it has ever been found to be in other religions.^ At what remote period in the evolution of the Hellenic mind this principle began in force, what were the influences that fostered and strengthened it, in what various ways it shaped the religious history of the Hellenic people, are questions that I may be able to treat more in detail in the future. ' I am aware that there are exceptions to this principle, which I propose to consider in a future course ; no single formula can ever sum up all the phenomena of a complex religion. 12 GREECE AND BABYLON But there are two important phenomena that I will indicate now, which we must associate with it, and which afford us an illuminating point of view from which we may contrast the Greek world and the Oriental. In the first place, the anthropomorphic principle, combining with an artistic faculty the highest that the world has known, produced in Greece a unique form of idolatry ; and, in the second place, in consequence chiefly of this idolatry, the purely Hellenic religion remained almost incapable of that which we call mysticism. Now, much remains still to be thought out, especially for those interested in Mediterranean culture, concerning the influence of idolatry on religion ; and not only the history, but the psychology of religion, must note and estimate the influence of religious art. It may well be that the primitive Greeks, like the primitive Roman, the early Teuton, and Indo-Iranian stocks, were non- idolatrous, and this appears to have been true to some extent of the Minoan culture. Nevertheless, the Mediterranean area has from time immemorial been the centre of the fabric and the worship of the eikon and the idol. The impulse may have come from the East or from Egypt to the Hellene ; he in his turn imparted it to the Indian Aryans, as we now know, and in great measure at least to the Roman, just as the Assyrian- Babylonian temple-worship imparted it to the Persian. Nowhere, we may well believe, has the influence of idolatry been so strong upon the religious temperament as it was upon that of the Hellenes ; for to it they owed works of the type that may be called the human- divine, which surpass any other art-achievement of man. I can here only indicate briefly its main effects. It INAUGURAL LECTURE 13 intensified the perception of the real personal god as a material fact. It increased polytheism by 'multiplying the separate figures of worship, often, perhaps, without intention. It assisted the imagination to discard what was uncouth and terrifying in the Hellenic religion, and was at once the effect and the cause of the attachment of the Hellenic mind towards mild and gracious types of godhead. The aniconic emblem and uncouth fetich- formed figures were here and there retained, because of vague ideas about luck or for superstitious fetichistic reasons ; but the beautiful idol was cherished because it could arouse the enthusiastic affection of a sensitive people, and could bring them to the very presence of a friendly divine person. The saying that the Olympian deities died of their own loveliness means a wrong interpretation of the facts and the people. But for a beautiful idolatry, Hellenic polytheism would have passed away some centuries before it did, the deities fading into alien types or becoming fused one with the other. Nor was its force and influence exhausted by the introduction of Christianity, for it shaped the destinies of the Greek Church, and threw down a victorious challenge to the iconoclastic Emperors. If now we were to look across the Mediterranean, and could survey the religious monuments of Persia, Assyria and Babylonia, Phoenicia, and the Hittite people, we should find a general acceptance of the anthropomorphic idea. The high personal deities are represented mainly in human form, but the art is not able to interpret the polytheistic beliefs with skilfuUy differentiated types. In Chaldaic and Assyrian art one type of countenance is used for various divinities, and this such as might inspire awe rather than affection. And the anthropomorphism is unstable. Often animal traits 14 GREECE AND BABYLON appear in parts of the divine figure. Nergal has a lion's head ; even the warrior Marduk is invoked in the mystic incantations as " Black Bull of the Deep, Lion of the dark house." ^ In fact, over a large part of an- terior' Asia, anthropomorphism and theriomorphism exist side by side in religious concept and religious art. We may say the same of Egypt, but here theriomorphism is the dominating factor. As regards the explanation of this phenomenon, many questions are involved which are outside my present province. I would only express my growing conviction that these two distinct modes of representing the divine personage to the worshipper are not neces- sarily prior and posterior, the one to the other, in the evolution of religion. They can easily, and frequently do, coexist. The vaguely conceived deity shifts his shape, and the same people may imagine him mainly as a glorified man of human volition and action, and yet think of him as temporarily incarnate in an animal, and embody his type for purposes of worship or religious art in animal forms. I would further indicate here what I cannot prove in detail — that theriomorphism lends itself to mysticism, while the anthropomorphic idolatry of Greece was strongly in opposition to it. The mystic theosophy that pervaded later paganism, and from which early Christianity could not escape, originated, as Reitzenstein has well shown, mainly in Egypt, and it arose partly, I think, in connection with the hieratic and allegorical interpretation of the theriomorphic idol. There was nothing mystic about the Zeus of Pheidias, so far as the form of the god was concerned. The forms were ' Vide Langdon, in Transactions of Congress of the History of Religions, 1908, vol. i. p. 251. INAUGURAL LECTURE 15 entirely adequate to the expression of the physical, moral, and spiritual nature of the god. The god was just that, and there was nothing behind, and, as the ancient enthusiast avers, " having once seen him thus, you could not imagine him otherwise." But when a divinity to whom high religious conceptions have already come to attach is presented, as it might be in Egyptian religious art, with the head of a jackal or an ape, the feeling is certain to arise sooner or later in the mind of the worshipper that the sense-form is inadequate to the idea. Then his troubled questioning will receive a mystic answer, and the animal type of godhead will be given an esoteric interpretation. Plutarch, in the De Iside et Osiride} is one of our witnesses. He finds a profounder significance for theosophy in the beetle, the asp, and the weasel than in the most beautiful anthropomorphic work of bronze or marble. He here turns his back on his ancestors, and goes over to the sect of the Egyptian mystic. But the most curious testimony to my thesis is borne by an inscription on an Egyptian lamp — an invocation of the God Thoth : "0 Father of Light, O Word {"Koyog) that orderest day and night, come show thyself to me. O God of Gods, in thy ape-form enter." ^ Here the association of so mystic a concept as the " Logos," the divine Reason, an emanation of God with the form of an ape, is striking enough, and suggests to us many reflections on the contrast between the Egyptian theriomorphism and the human idolatry of the Greek. The Hermes of Praxiteles was too stubborn a fact before the people's eyes to fade or to soar into 1 P. 382, c. ' Vide Petrie, in Transactions of Congress of the History of Religions, 1908, vol. i. p. 192. i6 GREECE AND BABYLON the high vagueness of the " Logos," too stable in his beautiful humanity to sink into the ape. But before leaving this subject I would point out a phenomenon in the Hellenic world that shows the working of the same principle. The Orphic god Dionysos-Sabazios-Zagreus was •s-oXv/Juopcpos, a shape- shifter, conceived now as bull, now as serpent, now as man, and the Orphic sects were penetrated with a mystic theosophy ; and, again, they were a foreign element embedded in Greek society and religion. While we were dealing with the subject of anthropo- morphism, we should consider also the question of sex, for a religion that gives predominance to the god is certain to differ in some essential respects from one in which a goddess is supreme. Now, although the con- ception of an All-Father was a recognised belief in every Greek community, and theoretically Zeus was admitted to be the highest god, yet we may believe Athena counted more than he for the Athenians, and Hera more for the Argives. And we have evidence of the passionate devotion of many urban and village communities to the mother Demeter and her daughter Kore, to whom the greatest mysteries of Greece, full of the promise of posthumous salvation, were conse- crated. Also, in the adjacent lands of earlier culture we mark the same phenomenon. In Egyptian religion we have the commanding figure of Isis, who, though by no means supreme in the earlier period, seems to dominate the latter age of this polytheism. In the Assyrian-Babylonian Pantheon, though the male deity is at the head, Ishtar appears as his compeer, or as inferior only to Asshur. Coming westward towards Asia Minor, we seem to see the goddess overshadowing the god. On the great Hittite monument at Boghaz- INAUGURAL LECTURE 17 Keui, in Cappadocia, skilfully interpreted by Dr. Frazer, we observe a great goddess with her son coequal with the Father-God. In the lands adjacent to the coast a Mother-Goddess, sometimes also imagined as virgin, Kybele of Phrygia, Ma of Cappadocia, Hipta of Lydia, Astarte of Askalon, Artemis of Ephesos who was pro- bably a blend of Hellenic and Oriental cult-ideas, appears to have been dominant from an immemorial antiquity ; and Sir Arthur Evans has discovered the same mysterious feminine power pre-eminent in the Minoan religion. We may even affirm that she has ruled a great part of the Mediterranean down to the present day. The various questions suggested by this predominance of goddess-worship are fascinating and subtle. The sociological one — how far it is to be connected with a system of counting descent through the female, with a matrilinear society — I have partly discussed elsewhere.^ I may later be able to enter on the question that is of more interest for the psychology of religion — the effect of such worships on the religious sentiment. Here I can merely point to the phenomenon as a natural and logical product of the principle of anthropomorphism, but would call attention to the fact that in the East it sometimes developed into a form that, from the anthropomorphic point of view, must be called morbid and subversive of this principle ; for the rivalry of divine sex was here and there solved by the fusion of the two natures in the divinity, and we find a bisexual type — a male Astarte, a bearded Ishtar.2 The healthy- minded anthropomorphism of the Hellene rejects this Oriental extravagance. * Archiv fur Religionswissenschaft, 1904. ' Vide Jastrow, Religion Babyloniens u. Assyriens, vol. i. p. 545. 2 i8 GREECE AND BABYLON If we now could consider in detail the various moral conceptions attached to the high State divinities of Greece and the East, we should be struck with a general similarity in the point of view of the various culture- stocks. The higher deities, on the whole, are ethical beings who favour the righteous and punish transgressors ; and the worship of Greece falls here into line with the Hebraic conceptions of a god of righteousness. But in one important particular Hellenic thought markedly differs from Oriental, especially the Persian. In the people's religion throughout Hellas the deities are, on the whole, worshipped as beneficent, as doing good to their worshippers, so long as these do not offend or sin against them. The apparent exceptions are no real exceptions. Ares may have been regarded as an evil god by the poet or the philosopher, but we cannot discover that this was ever the view of the people who cared to establish his cult. The Erinyes are vindictive ; nevertheless, they are moral, and the struggle between them and Apollo in the Aeschylean drama is only the contest between a more barbaric and a more civilised morality. In the list of Greek divine titles and appellatives, only one or two at most can be given a significance of evil. Doubtless, beneath the bright anthropomorphic religion lurked a fear of ghosts and evil spirits, and the later days of Hellenic paganism were somewhat clouded with demonology. But the average Greek protected himself sufficiently by purification and easy conventional magic. He did not brood on the principle of evil or personify it as a great cosmic power, and therefore he would not naturally evolve a system of religious dualism, though the germs from which this might grow may be found in Orphic tradition and doctrine. Con- trast this with the evidence from Egypt, Ass5n:ia, and INAUGURAL LECTURE 19 Persia. The Egyptian and Assyrian records bear strong impress of the prominence and power of the belief in evil spirits. The high gods of Assyria were continually being invoked and implored by the wor- shipper to save him from the demons, and one of these, Ira, a demon of pestilence, seems to have received actual worship ; and much of Egyptian private ritual was protective magic against them. But nowhere did the power of evil assume such grand proportions as in the old Mazdean creed of Persia, and the dualism between the good and evil principle became here the foundation of a great religion that spread its influence wide through the West. The religion had its prophet, Zarathustra, in whose historic reality we ought not to doubt. In his system the faithful Mazdean is called upon to play his part in the struggle between Ahura-Mazda and Angra-Mainyu, and this struggle con- tinues through the ages till in the final cataclysm the Daevas, or evil demons, will be overthrown. We note here that this faith includes the idea of a final Judgment, so familiar to Judaic and Christian thought, but scarcely to be found in the native Hellenic religion. Further, it should be observed that the Mazdean dualism between good and evil has nothing in common with the Platonic antithesis between mind and sense, or St. Paul's between spirit and flesh, or with the hatred of the body that is expressed in Buddhism. The good Mazdean might regard his body as good and pure, and therefore he escaped, as by a different way did the Greek, from the tyranny of a morbid ascetism. Only he developed the doctrine of purity into a code more burdensome than can be found, I think, elsewhere. The ideas of ritual-purity on which he framed this code are found broadcast through the East and in Egypt, and appear 20 GREECE AND BABYLON in the Hellenic religion also. The Greek, however, did not allow himself to be oppressed by his own cathartic system, but turned it to excellent service in the domain of law, as I have tried to show elsewhere.^ Generally, as regards the association of religion and morality, we find this to be always intimate in the more developed races, but our statistics are insufficient for us to determine with certainty the comparative strength of the religious sanction of morals in the ancient societies of the Mediterranean. The ethical-religious force of the Zarathustrian faith seems to approach that of the Hebraic. We should judge it to be stronger, at least, than any that was exercised in Hellas, for Hellas, outside the Orphic sects, had neither sacred books of universal recognition nor a prophet. Yet all Hellenic morality was protected by religion, and the Delphic oracle, which occasionally was able to play the part of the father- confessor, encouraged a high standard of conduct — as high as the average found elsewhere in the ancient world. We may note, however, one lacuna in the Hellenic code : neither Greek ethics, on the whole, nor Greek religion, emphasised or exalted or deified the virtue of truth ; but we hear of a goddess of Truth in Egypt, and it becomes a cardinal tenet and a divine force in the Zarathustrian ideal. Again, in all ancient societies religion is closely inter- woven with political, legal, and social institutions, and its influence on these concerns the history of the evolution of society and law. It is only in modern society, or in a few most ideal creeds at periods of great exaltation, that a severance is made between Caesar and God. Save Buddhism, the religions of the ancient societies of the East and of Egypt were all in a sense political. Darius 1 Vide my Evolution of Religion, pp. 139-152. INAUGURAL LECTURE 21 regards himself as specially protected by Ahura-Mazda, and we are told by Herodotus 1 that in the private Persian's prayers no separate personal benefits were besought, but only the welfare of the King and the Persian community. The gods of Assyria inspire counsel and order the campaign ; Shamash, the sun-god, is " Just Ruler " and the " Lord of Law " ; and Ninib is styled the god " who lays for ever the foundation-stone of the State," and who, like Zeus opiog, and the Latin Terminus, " protects the boundaries of the cornfield." The Syrian goddess of Bambyke, Kybele of Phrygia, Astarte of Askalon, all wear the mural crown, the badge of the city goddess. But I doubt if our materials are as yet rich enough to inform us in what precise way religion played a constructive part in the oldest civilisations, — namely, those of Assyria and Egypt. We may observe that the code of Hammurabi, our oldest legal document, is curiously secular and in many respects modern. The question can be most fruitfully pursued in the study of the Greek societies ; for no other religion of which we have any record was so political as the Hellenic, not even, as I should judge, the Roman, to which it bears the closest resemblance in this respect. The very origin of the TToXtg, the city-state, was often religious ; for the name or title of the deity often gave a name to the city, and the temple was in this case probably the centre of the earliest residence. In the organised and complex Greek societies, every institution of the State — the as- sembly, the council, the law-courts, the agrarian economy, all the regulations of the family and clan — were conse- crated and safeguarded by the supervision of some deity. Often he or she was worshipped as in a literal sense the ' 1. 132- 22 GREECE AND BABYLON State ancestor, and in one of the temples might be found burning the perpetual fire which symbolised the per- manence of the city's hfe. And in Greece we find a unique phenomenon, which, though small, is of great significance — the deity might here and there be made to take the office and title of a civic magistrate. For instance, Apollo was ffre(puti}j(p6pog in Asia Minor cities, and in the later days of Sparta, as the recent excavations have shown, the ghost of Lykourgos was elected as the chief inspector of the education of the young. To the superficial observer, then, the Greek civic society might appear a theocracy. But such a view would imply ignorance of the average character of the ancient Greek world. There can be no theocracy where there is no theocrat. In Asia Minor the priest might- be a great political power, but in Greece this was never so. Here the political, secular, utilitarian interest dominates the religion. The high divinities become politicians, and immersed in secular affairs, and even take sides in the party strife, as some of the religious titles attest. Thus Greek religion escaped morbidity and insanity, becoming genial and human, and com- pensating by its adaptability to the common needs of social life for what it lacked of mystery and aloofness. Therefore, also, in Greek invocations and hymns we do not often hear the echo of that sublimity that resounds in the Iranian, Assyrian, and still more in the Hebrew liturgies. Another interesting point of comparison is the relation of religion to the arts and sciences. Their association may be said to have been more intimate in Hellenism than it has been found to be in any other creed. We can estimate what music and the drama owed to Apollo and Dionysos, and how the life of the INAUGURAL LECTURE 23 philosopher, artist, and poet was considered consecrated to certain divinities. We hear of the Delphic oracle encouraging philosophic pursuits. The name " Museum " is a landmark in the religious history of education, and we know that the temple of Asklepios in Kos was the cradle of the school of modern medicine. The records of the other religions of this area show glimpses of the same association, and more extended research may throw further light on it. The Babylonian gods Nebo and Ea were divinities of wisdom and the arts, and to the former, who was the inventor of writing, the library of Ashurbanapal was consecrated. Chaldean astronomy was evolved from their astrology, which was itself a religious system. But demonology was stronger in Assyria, Persia, and Egypt than in Hellas, and demon- ology is the foe of science. In the Zend-Avesta the priestly medicine-man, who heals by spell and exorcism, is ranked higher than the scientific practitioner. A chapter might be written on the negative advantages of Greek religion, and none was of greater moment than this — that it had no sacred books or authoritative rehgious cosmogony to oppose to the dawn and the development of scientific inquiry. Asklepios had been a practitioner in the method of thaumaturgic cures, but he accepted Hippokrates genially when the time came. As regards the relation between Greek philosophy and Greek religion, something may remain to be dis- covered by any scholar who is equally familiar with both. It would be absurd to attempt to summarise the facts in a few phrases here. I wish merely to indicate the absence in pure Hellenic speculation of any elaborated system of theosophy, such as the late Egyptian " gnosis," till we come to Neo-Platonism, when the Greek intellect is no longer pure. We discover 24 GREECE AND BABYLON also a vacuum in the religious mind and nomenclature of the earlier Greek : he had neither the concept nor any name to express the concept of what we call " faith," the intellectual acceptance and confessional affirmation of certain dogmas concerning the divinity ; and in this respect he differed essentially not only from the Christian, but also from the Iranian and Buddhistic votary. A great part of the study of ancient religion is a study of ritual, and it is interesting to survey the Mediterranean area, so as to discern similarities or divergencies in the forms of religious service. Everywhere we observe the blood-sacrifice of animals, and very frequently the harm- less offering of fruits and cereals, and now one, now the other, in Greece as elsewhere, was regarded as the more pious. The former is of the higher interest, for certain ideas which have been constructive of higher religions — our own, for example — have grown out of it. At first sight the animal oblation seems everjrwhere much the same in character and significance. The sacrificial ritual of Leviticus does not differ in any essential trait from that which commended itself to the Greeks and the other peoples of these lands. Certain animals are everywhere offered, at times as a free and cheerful gift, at other times as an atonement to expiate sin and to deprecate wrath. Certain other animals are tabooed, for reasons that may repay searching out. In most regions we have evidence of the practice of human sacrifice, either as an established system or as an occasional expedient. The motives that prompted it present an important and intricate question to the modern inquirer. The two nations that grew to abhor it and to protest against it were the Hebrew and the Greek, though the latter did not wholly escape the taint INAUGURAL LECTURE 25 of it ; for he had inherited the practice from his ancestral past, and he found it indigenous in fhe lands he conquered. Repellent as the rite may be, it much concerns the study of the religions of the cultured races. Now, an interesting theory concerning sacrifice was expounded and brought into prominent discussion by Professor Robertson Smith in his Religion of the Semites, and in an earlier article in the Encyclopedia Britannica — namely, that a certain type of ancient sacrifice was a mystic sacramental communion, the worshipper par- taking of some sacred food or drink in which the spirit of the deity was temporarily lodged. This mystic act, of which there is no clear trace in the Old Testament, is reported from Egypt,^ and it appears to have been part of the Attis ritual of Phrygia. We find doubtful traces of it in the Eleusinian and Samothracian mysteries ; also a glimpse of it here and there in the public religion of Hellas. But it is best attested as a potent force in the Dionysiac worship, especially in a certain savage ritual that we may call Thracian, but also in the refined and Hellenised service as well. I cannot dwell here on the various aspects of this problem. The Hellenic statistics and their significance I have partly collected and estimated in a paper pub- lished some years ago.^ The application of the sacra- mental idea to the explanation of the Eleusinian mysteries, ingeniously attempted by Dr. Jevons, I have discussed in the third volume of my Cults of the Greek States ; and the Dionysiac communion-service is considered at length in the fifth. The attractiveness of the mystic appeal of the ' Transactions of Congress of History of Religions, 1908, vol. i. p. 192. ' Hibbert Journal, 1904, " Sacrificial Communion in Greek Religion." 26 GREECE AND BABYLON Sacrament appears to have increased in the later days of paganism, especially in its period of struggle with Christianity. That strangest rite of the expiring polytheism, the ravpo^okiov, or the baptism in bull's blood, in the worship of Kybele, has been successfully traced back by M. Cumont to the worship of the Babylonian Anaitis. The sacramental concept was the stronghold of Mithraism, but can hardly be regarded as part of its heritage from Persia, for it does not seem to have been familiar to the Iranian rehgion nor to the Vedic Indian. In fact, the rehgious history of no other Aryan race discloses it with clearness, save that of the Thraco- Phrygian and Hellenic. Was it, then, a special product of ancient " Mediterranean " religious thought ? It would be important to know, and Crete may one day be able to tell us, whether King Minos took the sacrament. Meantime, I would urge upon those who are studying this phenomenon in the various religions the necessity of precise definition, so as to distinguish the different grades of the sacramental concept, for loose state- ments are somewhat rife about it. Apart from the ritual of the altar, there is another mode of attaining mystic union with the divinity — namely, by means of a sacred marriage or simulated corporeal union. This is suggested by the initiation formulae of the mysteries of Attis-Kybele. The cult of Kybele was connected with that of the Minoan goddess, and the strange legend of Pasiphae and the buU- god lends itself naturally to this interpretation. The Hellenic religion also presents us with a few examples of the holy marriage of the human bride with the god, the most notable being the annual ceremony of the union of the " Queen," the wife of the King Archon, at Athens, with Dionysos. And in the mysteries of INAUGURAL LECTURE 27 later paganism, as well as in certain forms and symbolism of early Christianity, Professor Dieterich has ti^ced the surviving influence of this rite. Among aU the phenomena of ritual, none are more interesting or in their effects more momentous than the rites that are associated with the dogma of the death of the divinity. That the high gods are naturally mortal and liable to death is an idea that is certainly rare, though it may be found in Egyptian and old Teutonic mythology ; but the dogma of the annual or periodic death and resurrection of the divinity has been, and is, enacted in much peasant ritual, and worked for the purposes of agrarian magic in Europe and elsewhere. More rarely we find the belief attached to the mystic forms and faith of some advanced religion, and it is specially in the Mediterranean area where it appears in a high stage of development. It is a salient feature of the Egyptian worship of Isis ; of the Sumerian- Babylonian ritual, in which the dead Thammuz was bewailed, and which penetrated Syria and other parts of Asia Minor ; of the worship of Attis and Adonis in Phrygia and the Lebanon ; and of certain shrines of the Oriental Aphrodite. It is associated often with orgiastic sorrow and ecstatic joy, and with the belief in human immortality of which the resurrection of the deity is the symbol and the efficacious means. This idea and this ritual appears to have been alien to the native Hellenic religion. The Hellenic gods and god- desses do not die and rise again. Only in one Aryan nation of antiquity, so far as I am aware, was the idea clear and operative — the Thraco- Phrygian, in the religion of Dionysos-Sabazios. This alien cult, when transplanted into Greece, retained still some savagery in the rite that enacted the death of the 28 GREECE AND BABYLON god ; but in the Orphic sects the ritual idea was developed into a doctrine of posthumous salvation, from which the later pre-Christian world drew spiritual comfort and some fertile moral conceptions. This Thracian-Dionysiac in- fluence in Hellas, though chastened and sobered by the sanity of the national temperament, initiated the Hellene into a certain spiritual mood that was not naturally evoked by the native religion ; for it brought into his polytheism a higher measure of enthusiasm, a more ecstatic spirit of self-abandonment, than it possessed by its own traditional bent. Many civilised religions appear to have passed beyond the phase of orgiastic fervour. It emerges in the old Egyptian ritual, and most power- fully in the religion of Phrygia and of certain districts of Syria ; but it seems to have been alien to the higher Semitic and the Iranian religions, as it was to the native Hellenic. I have only been able here, without argument or detailed exposition, to present a short summary of the more striking phenomena in the religious systems of our spiritual ancestors. Many of the problems I have stated still invite further research, which may con- siderably modify our theories. I claim that the subject possesses a masterful interest both in its own right and for the light it sheds on ancient philosophy, ancient art, and ancient institutions. And it ought in the future to attract more and more the devotion of some of our post-graduate students. Much remains to be done even for the Hellenic and Roman religions, still more for those of Egypt and Assyria. Here, in our University of Oxford, under whose auspices the Sacred Books of the East were translated, and where the equipment for the study is at least equal to that of any other centre of learning, this appeal ought not to be made in vain. CHAPTER II. Statement of the Problem and the Evidence. The subject I have chosen for this course may appear over-ambitious ; and the attempt to pass critical judg- ment upon the facts that arise in this wide comparative survey may be thought premature. For not only is the area vast, but large tracts of it are still unexplored, while certain regions have 5delded materials that are ample and promising, but of which the true interpreta- tion has not yet been found. We have, for instance, abundant evidence flowing in with ever-increasing volume of the Sumerian-Babylonian religion, but only a portion of the cuneiform texts has as yet been authoritatively translated and made available for the service of Comparative Religion. The Hittite monuments are witnesses of primary value concerning Hittite rehgion : but the Hittite script may reveal much more that is vital to our view of it, and without the help of that script we are not sure of the exact interpretation of those religious monuments ; but though we have recently heard certain encouraging expressions of hope, the master-word has not yet been found that can open the door to this buried treasure of knowledge. And again, the attempt to gauge accu- rately the relation and the indebtedness of Greek religion to that of the near East cannot be wholly successful, until we know more of the Minoan-Mycenaean religion ; 29 30 GREECE AND BABYLON and our hope hangs here partly on the discovery of more monuments, but mainly, I am convinced, on the decipherment of the mysterious Minoan writing, to which great achievement Sir Arthur Evans' recent work on the Scripta Minoa is a valuable contribution. Therefore the time is certainly not yet ripe for a final and authoritative pronouncement on the great questions that I am venturing upon in this course. But even the early premature attempts to solve a problem may contribute something to the ultimate satisfy- ing solution. And often in the middle of our investiga- tions, when new evidence continues to pour in, there comes a moment when it is desirable to look around and take stock, so to speak, to consider whether we can draw some general conclusions with safety, or in what direction the facts appear at this stage to be pointing. In regard to the religions of anterior Asia and South- Eastern Europe, and the question of their relation- ships, this is now, I feel, a seasonable thing to do — all the more because the Asiatic region has been mainly explored by specialists, who have worked, as was profit- able and right, each in his special province, without having the time or perhaps the training to achieve a comparative survey of the whole. We know also by long experience the peculiar dangers to which specialists are prone ; in their enthusiastic devotion to their own domain, they are apt to believe that it supplies them with the master-key whereby to unlock many other secret places of human history. This hope, soon to prove an illusion, was regnant when the interpretation of the Sacred Vedic Books was first accomplished. And now certain scholars, who are distinguished speci- alists in Assyriology, are putting forward a similar claim for Babylon, and are championing the view that the STATEMENT OF PROBLEM AND EVIDENCE 31 Sumerian-Assyrian religion and culture played a domin- ating part in the evolution of the Mediterranean civilisation, and that therefore much of the religious beliefs and practices of the early Greeks and other European stocks must be traced back to Mesopotamia as their fountain-head. ^ This will be encouraging to that distinguished writer on Greek religion, Dr. O. Gruppe, who almost a generation ago proclaimed in his Griechische Mythologie the dogma of the emanation of all religion from a single centre, and the dependence of Greece upon the near East. Now there ought to be no prejudice a priori against such a theory, which stands on a different footing from what 1 may call the Vedic fallacy : and it is childish to allow to the Aryan, or any other racial bias, any malignant influence in these difficult discussions. Those who have worked for years upon the marvellously rich records of Mesopotamian culture, whether at first hand or, like myself, at second hand, cannot fail to receive the deepest impression of its imperial grandeur and its force- ful vitality, and of its intensity of thought and purpose in the sphere of religion. Naturally, they may feel, such spiritual power must have radiated influence far and wide over the adjacent lands ; and no one could maintain that South-Eastem Europe was too remote to have been touched, perhaps penetrated, by it. For we know that, under certain conditions, the race-barrier falls down before the march of a conquering and dominat- ing religion. And now, in the new light of a wider historical survey, instead of saying, as once was said, " What is more its own than a people's gods ? " we '■ Vide the critical remarks on such a view by Prof. Jastrow in Transactions of the Third International Congress of the History of Religions, vol. i. pp. 234-237. 32 GREECE AND BABYLON may rather ask, " What is less its own than a people's gods ? " always, however, remembering that race- tradition, inherited instinctive feeling and thought, is very strong in these matters, and that a people will, often unconsciously, cling to its ancestral modes of religious consciousness and expression, while it will freely borrow alien forms, names, and ritual. The inquiry indicated by the title of these lectures is naturally twofold ; it may be applied either to the earlier or the later periods of the Hellenic and Hellenic-Roman history. The question concerning the later period, though much critical research is needed for its clear solution, is far simpler and more hopeful : for the evidence is immeasurably fuller and more precise, and historical dates and landmarks are there to help. The history of the invasion of the West by Mithraism has been masterfully stated by Cumont ; the general influence of the Anatolian religions upon Graeco-Roman society is presented and estimated by the same writer in his Religious Orientates; by Toutain, in his Les Cultes Paiens dans l' Empire Romain; by our own scholar, Samuel Dill, in Roman Society in the last Century of the Western Empire ; and more summarily by Salomon Reinach in his Orpheus. Therefore I am not going to pursue the inquiry at this end, although I may have to notice and use some of the later evidence. I am going to raise the question concerning the very origins of the Hellenic religious system, so as to test the recently pro- claimed dogma of certain Assyriologists, and to determine, if possible, whether the Orient played any formative part in the organic development of Greek reUgion. For this is just the question which, I venture to maintain, has never yet been critically explored. From what I have said at the beginning, it is obvious that I cannot STATEMENT OF PROBLEM AND EVIDENCE 33 promise final and proved results. It will be gain enough if we can dimly discern something behind the veil that shrouds the origins of things, can reach to something that has the air of a reasoned scientific hypothesis, and still more if we can indicate the paths along which one day light may come. We may then begin at once with stating more clearly what are the necessary conditions for a successful solution of the problem. First, we must accomplish a thorough exploration of the religions of the Anatolian and Mesopotamian lands ; secondly, we must explore the Minoan-Mycenaean religion, and estimate the strength of its influence on the later period ; thirdly, we must be able to decide what beUefs and practices the Hellenes brought with them from the North ; lastly, before we can hope for any precision in our results, we must be able to answer with some degree of accuracy a burning chronological question : What was the date of the arrival through the Balkans from the North of those Aryan-speaking tribes that by mingling with the Southerners formed the Hellenic people of history ? For only then shaU we be able to test the whole question, by considering the position of the Eastern powers at this momentous epoch. The third of these inquiries, concerning the aboriginal religious ideas of the earliest Aryan Hellenes, is perhaps the most troublesome of all. I may venture upon it at a later occasion, but it is far too difficult and extensive to combine it with the others in a short treatise. Nor can I do more than touch lightly on the Minoan-Mycenaean period ; for I wish to devote the greater part of these lectures to the comparative survey of Greece, Anatoha, and Mesopo- tamia, as this task has never yet been critically per- formed. Something like an attempt was made by 3 34 GREECE AND BABYLON Tide in his Histoire des anciennes Religions, but when that book was written much of the most important evidence had not yet come in. But before beginning the exploration of any large area, whether for the purposes of Comparative Religion, archaeology, or anthropology, we must possess or acquire certain data of ethnography and secular history. We must, for instance, face the chronological question that I mentioned just above, before we can estimate the formative influences at work in the earliest phases of Hellenic development. Recent archaeological evidence, which I cannot here discuss, renders us valuable aid at this critical point of our inquiry. We can no longer relegate the earliest Hellenic invasion of Greece to a very remote period of Mediterranean history. The arguments from the Minoan culture, combined with the still more striking evidence, of which the value is not yet fuUy appreciated, obtained by the recent excavations of the British School on the soil of Thessaly,^ point to the conviction that this, the epoch-making event of the world's secular and spiritual life, occurred not much earlier than 1500 B.C. On this hypothesis, our quest becomes less vague. We can consider what influences were likely to be radiating from the East upon the opposite shores of the Aegean during those few centuries, in which the Hellenic tribes were passing from barbar- ism to culture, and the religious beliefs and ritual were developing into that comparatively advanced and complex form of polytheism which is presented about 1000 B.C. in the Homeric poems. By this date we may assert that the Hellenic spirit had evolved certain definite traits and had acquired a certain autonomous power. While continuing always to be quickly responsive to ' Vide Annual of the British School, 1909, 1910. STATEMENT OF PROBLEM AND EVIDENCE 35 alien influence, it would not henceforth admit the alien product with the submissive and infantine docility of barbarians In fact, when we compare the Homeric religion with that of the fifth century, we feel that in this particular sphere of the social and spiritual life the Hellene in many essentials had already come to his own in the Homeric period. Therefore, in trying to track the earliest streams of influences that moulded his religious consciousness, what was operative before the tenth century is of more primary importance than what was at work upon him afterwards. Now the most recent researches into Mesopotamian history establish with certainty the conclusion that there was no direct political contact possible between the powers in the valley of the Euphrates and the western shores of the Aegean, in the second millennium B.C. It is true that the first Tiglath-Pileser, near the end of the twelfth century, extended the Assjnrian arms to the shores of South-Eastern Asia, to Cilicia and Phoenicia ^ ; but there does not seem to have been any permanent Assyrian or Babylonian settlement on this littoral. The city of Sinope in the north, which, as the legend attests and the name that must be derived from the Assyrian god Sin indicates, was originally an Assyrian colony, was probably of later foundation, and geographic- ally too remote to count for the present inquiry. In fact, between the nascent Hellas and the great world of Mesopotamia, there were powerful and possibly independent strata of cultures interposing. We have to reckon first with the great Hittite Kingdom, which included Cappadocia and Northern Syria, and was in close touch with Phrygia and many of the communities • Vide Zimmern, Die Keilinschriften und das alie Testament (K.A.T.)', pp. 37-38. 36 GREECE AND BABYLON of the shore-line of Asia Minor ; and which at the period of the Tel-el-Amarna correspondence was in diplomatic relations and on terms of equality with the Assyrian and Egyptian powers. And the tendency of modern students, such as Messerschmidt in his Die Hettiter, is to extend this ethnic name so as to include practically all the Anatolian peoples who were other than the Aryan and Semitic stocks. As far as I can discern, at the present stage of our knowledge this is unscientific ; and it is at present safer to regard the pre-Aryan in- habitants of the Troad, Phrygia, Lycia, Caria, and Lydia, possibly Cilicia, as varieties of an ancient Medi- terranean stock to which the people of the Minoan- Aegean culture themselves belonged. At any rate, for the purposes of our religious comparison, they are to be counted as a third stratum, through which as through the Hittite the stream of influence from Mesopotamia would be obliged to percolate before it could discharge itself upon the Hellenic world. And these interjacent peoples are races of great mental gifts and force ; they were not likely to transmit the Mesopotamian influence pure and unmingled with currents of their own religious life. Therefore this great problem of old-world religion is no light one ; and fallacies here can only be avoided by the most critical intelligence trained on the best method of comparative religious study. We must endeavour to seize and comprehend the most essential and characteristic features of the Babylonian-Assyrian cults and theology ; we must discover all that is at present possible, and trust to the future for discovering more, concerning the Hittite religion ; and then we must glean all we can of the earliest forms of cult in vogue among the other peoples of the Asia-Minor coast, STATEMENT OF PROBLEM AND EVIDENCE 37 and in the early world of the Minoan-Mycenaean culture. * And if the phenomena of this area present us with certain general resemblances to the Hellenic, we must not too hastily assume that the West has borrowed from the East. For often in comparing the most remote regions of the world we are struck with strange similarities of myth and cult ; and, where the possibility of borrowing is ruled out, we must have recourse to the theory of spontaneous generation working in obedience to similar psychical forces. The hypothesis of borrow- ing, which is always legitimate where the peoples with whom we are concerned are adjacent, is only raised to proof either when the linguistic evidence is clear, for instance when the divine names or the names of cult- objects are the same in the various districts, or when the points of resemblance in ritual or religious concept are numerous, striking, and fundamental, or peculiar to the communities of a certain area. This is all the more necessary to insist on, because many superficial points of resemblance will be found in all religions that are at the same stage of development. Now, in beginning this wide comparative survey, one's first difficulty is to arrange the material in such a way as to enable one to present a comparison that shall be definite and crucial. It would be useless to attempt a mere synoptical outline of the Babylonian- Sumerian religion ; those whom that might content will find one in Dr. Pinches' handbook. The Religion of Babylonia and Assyria, or Mr. King's Babylonian Re- ligion, while those who desire a more thorough and detailed presentation of it will doubtless turn to the laborious and critical volumes of Prof. Jastrow, Die Religion Babyloniens u. Assyriens. But for me to 38 GREECE AND BABYLON try to present this complex polytheism en bloc would be useless in view of my present object ; for two elaborate religious systems cannot effectively be compared en bloc. A more hopeful method for those who have to pass cursorily over a great area, is to select certain salient and essential features separately, and to see how, in regard to each one, the adjacent religious systems agree or differ. And the method I propose to pursue through- out this course is as follows : Ignoring the embryology of the subject, that is to say, all discussions about the genesis of religious forms and ideas that would contribute nothing to our purpose, I will try to define the mor- phology of the Mesopotamian and Anatolian religions ; and will first compare them with the Hellenic in respect of the element of personality in the divine perception, the tendency to, or away from, anthropomorphism, the relation of the deities to the natural world, to the State, and to morality, and I will consider what we can deduce from the study of the famous law-code of Hammurabi. A special question will arise concern- ing the supremacy of the goddess, a phenomenon which may be of some importance as a clue in our whole inquiry. The comparison will then be applied to the religious psychology of the different peoples ; and here it will be useful to analyse and define that element of the religious temper which we call fanaticism, and which sometimes affords one of the crucial distinctions between one religion and another. We may also obtain evidence from a comparison of the cosmogonic ideas prevalent over this area, so far as the records reveal any, as well as of the eschatological behefs concerning man's future destiny and his posthum- ous existence. Finally, we must compare the various cult-objects and forms of ritual, the significance of the STATEMENT OF PROBLEM AND EVIDENCE 39 sacrifice ; the position and organisation of the priest- hood ; and here it will be convenient to consider the ritual of magic as well as of the higher service and the part played by magic within the limits of the higher religion. If under each of these heads we have been able to discover certain salient points of divergence or resemblance between the Hellene and the Mesopo- tamian, we may be able to draw a general deduction of some probability concerning the whole question. In any case we may be encouraged by the assurance that the comparison of two complex and highly developed religions is fruitful and interesting in itself, whether it yields us definite historical conclusions or not. CHAPTER III. The Morphology of the Compared Religions. As I said in a previous lecture,^ " we must regard the religious structure to which the cults of Anatolia and Mesopotamia belonged as morphologically the same as the Hellenic." The grounds of this judgment may be now briefly shown. In his Hist<0de des anciennes Religions, Tiele classifies most of these together under the category of Nature-Religions, which he distinguishes from the ethical : he is thinking of the distinction between that religious view in which the divinity is closely associated, or even identified, with some natural object, and that in which the divinity is a moral being merely, stript of all attributes that are derived from the world of nature. Serious objection may be taken to the terms in which this classification of religions is expressed. The only religions which would fall under the ethical class would be the Judaic, the Moslem, and the Christian : and yet the Hebrews in the most exalted period of their religion prayed to their god for rain and crops, and the Christian Churches do the same to this day. A deity whose interest is purely ethical has only existed in certain philosophic systems : he has never had an established cult. On the other hand, a nature-religion, at the stage when personal deities have been somewhat developed, which is not also ' Vide supra, p. 9. 40 MORPHOLOGY OF COMPARED RELIGIONS 41 moral, has yet to be discovered. Religion, in its origin possibly non-moral, must, as society advances, 'acquire the closest relations with the social moral code. A Sun-god or Thunder-god — Shamash, for instance, of Babylon, Mithras of Persia, Sol Invictus of the later Roman Empire — may become a great divinity of an ethical cult and yet retain his association with the element. And it is fruitless to classify higher religions at least on such a basis of distinction as " moral" and " non-moral." ^ It is more to the purpose of our present comparison to employ as one of our test-standards the degree of personality in the cult-objects of the different races. Is the popular imagination stiU on the level of animism which engenders mere vaguely conceived daimones, shadowy agents, working perhaps in amorphous groups, without fixed names or local habitations or special individuality ? Or has it reached that stage of religious perception at which personal deities emerge, concrete individualities clothed with special attributes, physical, moral, spiritual ? The most superficial study of the cuneiform texts and the religious monuments of the Sumerian-Babylonian society does not leave us in doubt how we should answer these questions in behalf of the peoples in the Mesopotamian valley. When the Semitic tribes first pushed their way into these regions, swarming probably, as usual, from Arabia, at some remotely early date, they found there the non- Semitic Sumerian people possessed of a highly complex religious pantheon. Bringing with them their own Shamash the sun-god, Adad the storm-god, and the ' Westermarck maintains the view in his Origin and Development of Moral Ideas, pp. 663-664, that in many savage religions the gods have no concern with ordinary morahty ; but the statistics he gives need careful testing. 42 GREECE AND BABYLON great goddess Ishtar, and perhaps other divinities, they nevertheless took over the whole Sumerian pantheon, with its elaborate liturgy of hymns and incantations ; and for the record of this great and fascinating hieratic literature the Sumerian language — with interlinear Babylonian-Assyrian paraphrase — was preserved down to the beginning of our era. This religious system of dateless antiquity suffered little change " from the drums and tramplings " of all the conquerors from the time of Sargon ist and the kings before Hammurabi to the day of the Macedonian Seleukos. And in a sketch of this system as it prevailed in the second millennium B.C. it is quite useless for our purpose to try to distinguish between Sumerian and Semitic elements. It is more valuable to formulate this obvious fact, that a wide- spread belief in personal concrete divinities, upon which an advanced polytheism was based, was an immemorial phenomenon in this region. Tide's hypo- thesis ^ that the earliest Sumerian system was not so much a polytheism as a polydaimonism, out of which certain definite gods gradually emerged some time before the Semitic period, is merely a priori theorising. The earliest texts and monuments reveal as vigorous a faith in real divine personalities as the latest : witness ^ that interesting rehef recently found on a slab in the caravan route near Zohab, on which the goddess In- Hinni is bringing captives to the King Aimubanini : the evidence of the text accompanjdng it points to a period earher than that of King Hammurabi. We may compare with this the impressive relief which shows ^ op. cil., p. 170 ; as far as I know, only one fact might be cited in support of Tiele's view, a. fact mentioned by Jastrow, op. cit., p. 52, that the idiogram of Enlil, the god of Nippur, signifies Lord-Daimon ( Lil = Daimon) ; butwe might equally well interpret it " Lord of Winds." ^ Vide Hiising, Der Zagros und seine Viilker, p. 16. MORPHOLOGY OF COMPARED RELIGIONS 43 us the stately form of Hammurabi receiving his code of laws from the sun-god Shamash seated on his throne ^ ; and of a later date, the alabaster relief from Khorsabad showing a sacrifice to Marduk, a speaking witness to the stern solemnity of the Babylonian worship and to the strength of the faith in personal divinity.^ That this faith was as real in the polytheistic Babylonian as in the monotheistic Israelite is evinced not merely by the monuments, but still more clearly and impressively by the Sumerian hymns and liturgies. Nevertheless the phenomena of animism coexist in all this region with those of developed theism. By the side of these high personal deities we find vague companies of divine powers such as the Igigi and the Anunnaki, who are conceived more or less as personal but without clearly imagined individuality, the former being perhaps definable as the daimones of heaven, the latter as the daimones of earth. Similarly, in the Hellenic system we note such nameless companies of divine agencies as the ''Epii/vs? and Hpu^ihixai, conceived independently of the concrete figures of the polytheism. But, further, in the Mesopotamian religion we must reckon seriously with lower products of polydaemonism than these, the demons of evil and disease who so dom- inated the imagination and much of the religious life of the private person that the chief object of the elaborate ritual was, as we shall see, to combat these. Only, as the curtain gradually rolls away from the remote past of this earliest home of human culture, it is not given us to see the gradual emergence of the divine personalities, or trace — as perhaps we may else- ^ Vide Plate in Winckler, " Die Gesetze Hammurabi," in Der Alte Orient, 1906. " Perrot et Chipiez, Hisloire de I'art.Assyrie, p. 109, fig. 29 (Roscher, Lexikon, ii. p. 2358). 44 GREECE AND BABYLON where — the process from polydaimonism to theism. The gods, as far as we can discern, were always there, and at least it is not in the second millennium B.C. that me may hope to find the origins of theistic religion. As regards the other Semitic stocks, the cumulative evidence of early inscriptions, literary records, and legends is sufficient proof that the beUef in high personal divinities was predominant in this millennium. It is not necessary to labour here at the details of the proof ; the other lines of inquiry that I am soon going to follow will give sufficient illustration of this ; and it is enough to allude to the wide prevalence of the designation of the high god as Baal or Bel, which can be traced from Assyria through Syria, in the Aramaean communities, in Canaan and Phoenicia, and in the Phoenician colonies : the Moabite Stone tells us of Chemosh ; the earliest Carthaginian inscriptions of Baal-Hammon and Tanit ; from our earliest witness for Arabian religion, Herodo- tus,^ we learn that the Arabs named their two chief divinities, Orotal and Alilat, a god and a goddess, whom he identifies with Dionysos and Aphrodite Ourania. It is still more important for us to know the stage reached by the Hittite religion in this early period ; for in the latter half of the second millennium the influence of the Hittite culture had more chance of touching the earliest Greek societies than had that of the remote Mesopotamia or of the inaccessible Canaanites. In the last thirty years the explorers of Asia Minor, notably Sir William Ramsay and Dr. Hogarth, have done inestimable service to the comparative study of the Mediterranean area by the discovery and interpretation of the monuments of Hittite art : and the greatest of them all, the rock-cut reliefs of Boghaz-Keui in Cap- '3,8. MORPHOLOGY OF COMPARED RELIGIONS 45 padocia, has given material to Dr. Frazer for construct- ing an elaborate theory of Hittite sacrifice in his ' Atiis, Adonis, Osiris.' But, before dealing with the Hittite monuments, the student should note the literary evidence which is offered by the treaty inscribed on a silver tablet (circ. 1290 B.C.) found in Egypt, which was ratified between Ramses 11. and the Hittite King Chat- tusar ; ^ the witnesses to the treaty are the thousand gods and goddesses of the Hittite land and the thousand gods and goddesses of Egypt. We are certainly here not dealing with mere vague pluralities of spirits, such as may be found in an animistic system of Shamanism ; the thousand is only a vague numeral for the plurality of divinities in the Hittite and Egyptian polytheism ; the difference of sex would alone suffice to prove that the Hittite had developed the cult of personal deities, and the document expressly quotes the great heaven- god of the Hittites, called by the Egyptian name Sutekh, and regarded as compeer of the Egyptian Ra. Other personal Hittite deities are alluded to in the document, and among them appears to be mentioned a certain " Antheret of the land of Kheta." ^ Possibly a witness of still earlier date speaks in the Tel-Amarna letters, the earliest diplomatic correspondence in the world ; one of these, written in cuneiform to Amenhotep iii., in the fifteenth century B.C., is from Tushratta, the King of the Mitani people.^ Tushratta sends his daughter in marriage to Pharaoh, and prays that " Shamash and Ishtar may go before her," and that Amon may " make her correspond to my brother's wish." He even dis- patches a statue of Ishtar of Nineveh, that " she may 1 Messerschmidt, Die Hettiter, p. 9 ; Stanley Cook, Religion of Ancient Palestine, p. 73. " So Cook, op. cit., p. 73, who interprets her as Astarte. ' Winckler, Tel-El-Amarna Letters, 17. 46 GREECE AND BABYLON exercise her beneficent power in the land of Egypt " ; for she had revealed her desire by an oracle — " to Egypt to the land that I love will I go." The Mitani chieftains bear names that show a con- vincingly Aryan formation, and we know from the momentous inscriptions found in 1907 at Boghaz-Keui recording treaties between the king of the Hittites and the king of the Mitani (B.C. 1400), that the dynasts of the latter people had Aryan gods in their pantheon. ^ But the Mitani themselves were not Aryans, and are assumed by Winckler and Messerschmidt to be Hittites. ^ If this were proved, the theory which it is the general aim of these lectures to consider, that the Babylonian religious system may have reached the Mediterranean in the second millennium, would receive a certain vrai- semblance from the fact revealed by the letter of King Tushratta, namely, that the Mitani of this period had adopted some of the Mesopotamian personal divinities, and might therefore have transmitted them to the coast of Asia Minor. Yet the Hittites had their own local divine names ; from the cuneiform inscriptions written in the Hittite language found at Van in Armenia, we gather the names of various Hittite gods, Teshup, for instance, who appears on a column found at Babylon holding the lightning, and in his right hand a hammer, which, from the analogy of other religions, we may interpret as the fetich-emblem of the thunder.* In fact, apart from the literary evidence, the Hittite ' Vide Winckler, Mittheil des deutsch. Onentgesellsch., 1907, No. 35. ^ Winckler, Die Volker Vorderasiens, p. 21 ; Messerschmidt, op. cit., p. 5 ; Kennedy, Journ. Royal Asiai. Soc, 1909, p. mo, declares that their language has been proved to belong to the Ural-Altaic group and to be akin to Vannic. ' Vide Messerschmidt, p. 25 (plate) ; Von Oppenheim, Der Tel- Halaf und die verschleierte Gottin, p. 17, publishes a somewhat similar figure holding a kind of club. MORPHOLOGY OF COMPARED RELIGIONS 47 monuments would be proof sufficient of the high develop- ment of personal religion in these regions. A reUef with Hittite inscriptions, found near Ibriz, the old Kybistra, near the Cilician gates north of Tauros, shows us a deity with corn and grapes, and a priest adoring ; ^ he is evidently conceived, like Baal by the Semites of Canaan, as a local god of the earth and of vegetation. But the most striking of all the Hittite monuments, and one that is all-sufficient in itself for our present purpose, is the great series of reliefs on the rock at Bog- haz-Keui in Cappadocia, not far from the site of the ancient Pteria.^ Here is revealed a great and probably mystic pageant of an advanced polytheism with an elaborate ritual and a clear faith in high gods and goddesses : the whole procession seems to be passing along the narrowing gorge towards a Holy of Holies, the inner cave-shrine of the Mystery. As we draw nearer to the Mediterranean, the facts are too well known to need reiteration here. Every- where we find proofs of a personal theism reaching far back into prehistoric times : whether it be the cult of a high god such as the Cilician divinity, called Zeus or Herakles by the later Greeks, or the Lycian " ApoUo," or a great goddess such as Ma of Comana, Cybele of Phrygia and Lydia. And now to all this testimony we can add the recently discovered monuments of a developed Minoan-Mycenaean religion with the elaborate ritual and worship of personal divinities, anthropo- morphically imagined on the whole. Such was the religious world lying before the feet of the Aryan Hellenes descending from the north ; 1 Perrot et Chipiez, Histoire de I'art, iv. p. 354 (fig.). ' Vide Garstang, The Land of the Hittites, pi. Ixiii.-lxxi. ; Messer- schmidt, op. cit., pp. 26-27. 48 GREECE AND BABYLON and when their expansion across the islands to the Asiatic shores began, they would find ever5rwhere a religion more or less on the same plane of development. Therefore if, as some students appear to imagine, the aboriginal Hellene had not developed personal gods before he arrived,^ it would be irrational to conclude that Babylon had taught him to worship such beings in place of the vague and flitting daimon. His im- mediate teachers would be the Minoan-Mycenaean peoples ; and that their theistic system was derived from Babylon is a theory lacking both positive evidence and a priori probability, as I may afterwards indicate. But that the proto-Hellenic peoples were in that back- ward condition of religious thought, is in the highest degree improbable. We must suppose that early in the second millennium they were slowly pushing their way down through the Balkans and through the country that is afterwards Thrace. So far as the earliest myths and records of this region throw some light on its prehistoric darkness, it appears to have been dominated by a great god. When the Thraco-Phrygian race, and possibly their kinsmen the Bith3moi, penetrated into the same region, they brought with them a father-god, who accompanied members of these stocks into Asia Minor, and settled in Phrygia, Pontus, and Bith5aiia by the side of an earher goddess. Their cousins of the Indo-Iranian stock had certainly reached the stage of personal polytheism before 1400 B.C., as the epoch- making discovery of the Hittite-Mitani inscriptions at Boghaz-Keui, referred to above, sufficiently indicates.* We cannot believe that the Hellenes of the earliest * e.g. Outlines of Greek Religion, by R. Karsten, p. 6. " Vide supra, p. 46; cf. E. Meyer, Das erste Auftreten der Arier in der Geschichte in Sitxungsb. d. honigl. Preuss. Akad. Wissensch., 1908, pp. 14 seg. MORPHOLOGY OF COMPARED RELIGIONS 49 migration were inferior in culture to those Thracians, Bithynians, or even Indo-Iranians ; for various reasons we must believe the reverse. And we now know from modern anthropology that peoples at a very low grade of culture, far lower than that which the Aryan stocks had reached at the time of the great migrations, have yet attained to the idea of personal and relatively high gods. In fact, that scepticism of certain philological theorists who, a few years ago, were maintaining that the Aryans before their separation may have had no real gods at all, is beginning to appear audacious and uncritical. At any rate, in regard to the Hellenes, the trend of the evidence is to my mind weighty and clear, making for the conviction that the different stocks not only possessed the cult of personal gods, but had already the common worship of certain deities when first they entered Greece. Otherwise, when we consider the mutual hostility of the various tribes and the geographical difficulties in the way of intercourse in early Greece, it would be difficult to explain the religious facts of the Homeric poems. We might, indeed, if Homer was our only witness, suspect him of representing what was merely local Achaean religion as common to all Greece. But we can check him by many other witnesses, by ancient myths and cults of diverse locahties. Zeus was worshipped by some, at least, of the main tribes, when they were in the neighbourhood of Olympus : he is no more Thessalian than he is Dryopian. One of the earliest Hellenic immigrants were perhaps the Minyai, and their aboriginal god was Possidon. The ritual of Apollo preserves the clearest reminiscence of his entry from the north, and he is the high god of one of the oldest Hellenic tribes, the Dryopes, and the wide diffusion of his cult suggests that aboriginally it was a 4 50 GREECE AND BABYLON common inheritance of several stocks. The force of the evidence that may be urged fdr this view is ignored by Wilamowitz in his brilliant but fallacious theory of the Lycian origin of the god. We must reject the hypothesis of a proto-Hellenic godless period ; but, on the other hand, the mere fact that the early Greek religion appears on the same plane as the Meso- potamian, in respect of the worship of personal beings, gives no support at all to the theory of Oriental influence. If it is to be accepted, it must be sustained by more special evidence. CHAPTER IV. Anthropomorphism and Theriomorphism in Asia Minor and the Mediterranean. A comparison made according to the test we have just applied is not so important as that which arises in the second stage of the inquiry. Assuming that the peoples on the east and west of the Aegean were already on the same religious plane when the first glimmer of what may be called history begins, can we discern certain striking resemblances or differences in their conception and imagination of divinity, sufficient to prove or disprove the theory of borrowing or of a movement across large areas of certain waves of religious influence emanating from a fixed centre ? The comparison now becomes more complex, and can only be summarily attempted. The first leading question concerns the way in which the personal divine being is imagined. In Mesopotamia was the religious percep- tion dominatingly anthropomorphic, not merely in the sense that the higher divine attributes were suggested by the higher moral and spiritual life of humanity, but in the more material sense that the deity was imagined and represented habitually in human form? This question has been summarily treated in the first chapter. The Mesopotamian cults are mainly anthropomorphic ; in the earliest hymns and liturgies, as well as in the art-monuments, the divinities appear to have been 52 GREECE AND BABYLON imagined as glorified human forms. The figure of Shamash on the relief, where he sits enthroned inspiring Hammurabi,* the form of Ninni bringing the captives to Annabanini,^ prove a very early dominance of anthro- pomorphic art in Mesopotamia. And the rule holds true on the whole of nearly all the great divinities of the Pantheon ; the statue of Nebo the scribe-god in the British Museum,* and the representation of him on the cylinders, are wholly anthropomorphic. The seven planetary deities on the relief from Maltaija are human- shaped entirely ; * we may say the same of the procession of deities on the relief from a palace of Nineveh published by Layard,^ except that Marduk has horns branching from the top of his head ; just as on the alabaster relief containing the scene of worship noted above,^ and on the wall-relief in the British Museum he is represented with wings ; but even the rigorous anthropomorphism of Greece tolerated both these adjuncts to the pure human type. The types of Ramman the weather-god,' and the representations of a Babylonian goddess, who is occasion- ally found with a child on her knee, and whom sometimes we may recognise as Ishtar, show nothing that is theriomorphic. On the other hand, we must note exceptions to this general rule. In one of the cuneiform mscriptions that describe certain types of deities, we read the following : " Horn of a bull, clusters of hair faUing on his back ; human countenance, and strength of a ... ; wings . . . and lion's body." And this description ' Vide supra, p. 43. ' Vide supra, p. 43. ' Vide Roscher, Lexihon, vol. iii. p. 48, s.v. " Nebo." ' Vide Roscher, op. cit., iii. p. 67 (Mitth. aus dem Orient. Sammlung. zu Berlin, Heft xi. p. 23). ' Monuments of Nineveh, i. p. 65 (Roscher, op. cit., ii. p. 2350). • P. 43- ' Roscher, op. cit., vol. iv. p. 29. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 53 agrees exactly, as Jeremias has pointed out, with the winged colossal figures, half-lion, half-man, that Warded the gate of the palace of Nineveh. And we must there- fore interpret them as gods, not as mere genii ; and he gives some reason for regarding them as a type of Nergal, the god of the underworld.^ Further, we find in an inscription of Asarhaddon the following prayer : " May the gracious bull-god and lion-god ever dwell in that palace, protecting the path of my royalty." ^ There is some doubt in regard to the winged figures with eagles' heads on the reliefs from Khorsabad, in the British Museum (pi. 38-40) : they are represented holding pine-cones and a " cista mystica " on each side of the sacred tree, and might be genii engaged in worship ; but on one of the rehefs Assur-nasir-Pal is standing before one of them in attitude of adoration. But the most clear and definite evidence on this point is afforded by the legend and monuments of the god whom Berosos calls Oannes,* but whom modern Assyri- ology interprets as the ocean-born god Ea or Ae of Eridu, the god of all wisdom and science. According to Berosos, he had entirely a fish body, but a human head had grown under the head of the fish, human feet out of the fish's tail, and he spoke with human voice : a statue of this type was still existing at Babylon accord- ing to this writer in the time of Alexander. Now the exact type is presented in the form that appears on various Babylonian cyhnders ; there is one that presents the fish-man-god standing before the tree of Life — re- ceiving a ray perhaps from the sun above : * and half ' Roscher, op. cit., iii. p. 254-255. 2 Schrader, Keil. Bibl., ii. p. 141. ' Fmg. Hist. Graec, ii. p. 496. Frag, i, 3. * Nineveh and Babylon, pi. vi. (Roscher, op. cit., iii. p. 580). 54 GREECE AND BABYLON his form from the girdle downwards is preserved on a bas-reUef published by Layard,i showing him holding the bread of life in one hand and in the other a vase contain- ing the water of life. Here, then, is theriomorphism struggling with anthropomorphism as we see it strikingly in the religious monuments of Egypt. But we have no need of the theory, dear to some anthropologists — that the earliest period of Mesopotamian religion was purely theriomorphic, when the deities were imagined and represented merely as animals, and that the human-shaped deities whom we find standing on lions in the Babylonian art had once been divine lions and nothing more, and had at a later period emerged from the animal into divine manhood. Theriomorphism and anthropomorphism can and generally do confusedly co-exist : neither in the lowest savagery or at the highest culture is there found a purely theriomorphic art or theriomorphic religion ; on the other hand, severe anthropo- morphism among the ancient religions is to be found only in the Hellenic, and we may add in the Judaic, though here with a quite different mode of expression and far more sternly controlled. In Mesopotamia we have nothing that points to a direct worship of animals,^ but we discern that the anthropomorphism is unstable ; '■ Layard, Nineveh and Babylon, fig. 2. Roscher, op. cii., iii. p. 580. " In the Amer. Journ. Archael., 1887, pp. 59-60, Frothingliam cites examples from Assyrian cylinders of birds on pillars or altar with worshippers approaching : one of these shows us a seated god in front of the bird (pi. vii. i) ; on another, a warrior approaches a taber- nacle, within which is a horse's head on an altar, and near it a bird on a column (pi. vii. 2 ; cf. the boundary-stone of Nebuchadnezzar I., published by Miss Harrison, Trans. Congr. Hist. Rel., 1908, vol. ii. p. 158) ; we find also a winged genius adoring an altar on which is a cock. But cocks and other birds were sacrificial animals in Babylonian ritual, and might be interpreted in all these cases as mere temporary embodiments of the divinity's power ; the human-shaped divinity is once represented by the side of the bird, and might always have been imagined as present though unseen. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 55 the religious artist mainly clung to it, except when he was embodying forms of terror, the destructive demons, and expeciaUy the powers of the lower world : for this purpose he selected the most portentous types of bestiality, such as we find on that bronze tablet, which used to be regarded as revealing an interesting glimpse into Babylonian eschatology : at least we may be sure that the lion-headed female above the horse in the canoe, at whose breasts two small lions are sucking, is the goddess of Hell.^ It was probably through his associa- tion with the world of death that Nergal acquired some- thing of the Uon's nature, and even the very human goddess Ishtar might assume a lion's head when she was unusually wroth, though this rests on a doubtful text. We may say, then, with fair degree of accuracy, that the theriomorphic forms of Babylonian rehgious art belong to demonology ; and in this domain the Babylonian artist has shown the same powerful imagination as the •Mycenaean: it is the former to whom we are indebted for the attractively alarming type of the scorpion-man. The phrase " unstable anthropomorphism " applies also to the religious literature, to the Sumerian-Baby- lonian hymns. The imagination of the poets in their highest exaltation was certainly anthropomorphic on the whole ; the high divinities are conceived and pre- sented with the corporeal, moral, and spiritual traits of glorified humanity. But often in the ecstasy of in- vocation the religious poets felt the human image too narrow and straightened for their struggling sense of the Infinite. Then the expression becomes mystic, and by virtue of a curious law that I indicated above, it avails itself of theriomorphic imagery .^ I quoted the hymn ' Roscher, Lexikon, iii. p. 268. ' Fiife.chapter i. pp. 14-15. 56 GREECE AND BABYLON to the warrior Marduk that invokes him as " Black Bull of the deep, Lion of the Dark House." Of still more interest is the invocation of Enlil, the earth-god of Sumer : " Overpowering ox, exalted overpowering ox, at thy word which created the world, O lord of lands, lord of the word of life, O Enlil, Father of Sumer, shepherd of the dark-haired people, thou who hast vision of thyself." ^ Seven times the words " overpowering ox " are added in this mystic incantation. In another hymn EnlU is " the Bull that overwhelms " ; Ea, " the Ram of Eridu." But this is mystic symbolism, rather than a clear perception of divine personality ; and we may say the same of such vaguely picturesque phrases as " Bel, the great mountain," " Asur, the great rock," an expression parallel to our " Rock of Ages." ^ It naturally happens in a religion of unstable anthro- pomorphism that the different personalities are unfixed and may melt away one into the other, or may become conceived as metaphysical emanations, thus losing concrete individuality. As Dr. Langdon remarks of Babylonian religious phraseology, " the god himself becomes mystified, he retires into the hazy conception of an all-pervading spirit, and his ivord becomes the active agent." * Thus even the strongly personal goddess " Nana " is identified with the word of Enlil ; she herself exclaims, " Of the Lord his word am I." His statement accords with the general impression that the liturgies and monuments of this vast and complex religion make upon the student. One discerns that the religious art, and to some extent the religious poetry, developed ^ Langdon, Sumerian and Babylonian Psalms, p. 127. ^ Schrader, Keilinseh. Bibl., ii. pp. 79, 83. " Op. cit., p. xix. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 57 and strengthened the anthropomorphic faith and per- ception of the people, but not so powerfully as to preclude a mysticising tendency towards metaphysical speculation that transcended the limits of a poly- theism of concrete personalities. Even AUat, the goddess of Hell, she who was presented with the dog's head and the lions at the breast, was half spirituahsed by the epithet which is rendered "spirit-wind of the consecrate." ^ In the other ancient Semitic communities we find the same phenomenon, a prevaihng anthropomorphism with some slight admixture of theriomorphic idea. At Bambyke, the later Hierapolis, we have the record and tradition of Atargatis-Derketo, of human and fish-form combined. In the cult of Esmun in Phoenicia, Bau- dissin ^ suspects the incarnation of the god in a snake, which brought about his later identification with Asklepios, and he suggests that the bronze serpent that healed the Israelites in the desert was borrowed from a Canaanite idol of a healing snake. The Astarte - images found in prehistoric Palestine are mainly of human type, but one gives her the curving horns of a ram, and a rude bronze was found at Tel Zakariya of an amphibious goddess with human head and the tail of a fish.^ Something real underlies the statement of Sanchuniathon, quoted by Eusebios, ^'La.ngdon, op. cit., p. 159,11. 18. Compare with this the personifica- tion of abstract ideas ; the children of Shamash are Justice (Kettu) and Law (Mesaru), and remain impersonal agencies, unlike the Greek &ifiis. A deified Righteousness (sedek) has been inferred from personal names that occur in the Amarna documents; vide Cook, Palestine, P-93- " Vide his article on " Eschmun-Asklepios," in Orient. Stud, zu Th. Noldeke am yoien Geburtstag gewidmet: the proofs are doubtful, but snake-worship in Phoenicia is attested by Sanchuniathon, Eus. Praep. Ev., 1, 10, 46. ' Cook, Religion of Ancient Palestine, pp. 30-31. 58 GREECE AND BABYLON that Astarte placed on her own head the head of a buU.i But these are exceptional phenomena ; and as the Hellenes in the later period were usually able to identify the leading Semitic deities with their own, we may see in this another proof that the Western and Eastern religions were nearly on the same plane as regards their perception of divine personality. Only, we discern signs in Canaan as in Mesopotamia, that the anthropomorphism is, as I have called it, un- stable ; for not only can the divinity be imagined as embodied in other forms than the human, but the demarcations of individuality tend at certain points to fall away : the most curious instance of this is that the female divinity seems at times to have been almost absorbed in the god. We must, however, distinguish here between what is real belief and what is mere theologic phrasing. In a hymn of praise to Ishtar, composed for the King Ashurbanapal, the equality of the goddess with the great Assyrian god Ahshur is quaintly expressed by the phrase, " like Ashur, she wears a beard " ; but Jastrow ^ protests against the inference that the goddess was therefore really regarded as male in the Mesopotamian religion. And indeed this is prob- ably only a fantastic expression of the idea that Istar is the compeer in power of the god, and has much of the masculine temperament. Even in the full vogue of an anthropomorphic religion which insists on the dis- tinctions of sex, a mystical religious thinker could rise to the idea that the divinity might assume the powers * Praep. Ev., i, lo, 31. Glaser, Miiiheilungen uber einige Sabaeische Inschriften, p. 3-4, gives reasons for affirming the worship of black bulls in heathen Arabia ; but it is not clear in what relation these stood to the high personal divinities. = Op. cit., p. 545. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 59 of both natures, an idea of which we find a gKmpse in the later Greek and Greek-Egyptian theosophy! Thus a Sumerian hymn to EnUl characterises him as " Lord of winds, father and mother who creates himself " ; ^ and a weU-known hymn to Sin speaks of him as " Maternal Body that brings everything to birth," and in the next line as " Compassionate, gracious father." 2 The close approximation of the goddess to the god is more clearly discernible in the Canaanite religion. On the Moabite Mesha stone, Ashtar-Chemosh appears as a double divinity ; and one of the earlier Carthaginian inscriptions refers to a temple of Moloch-Astarte.^ Again Astarte, in the inscription on the sarcophagus of Eshmounazar of Sidon, is called Astart-Shem-Baal, which signifies Astarte the Face of Baal; and in the Carthaginian inscriptions the same designation occurs for Tanit. Renan has interpreted the phrase as expressing the dogma that the goddess is an emanation of the god, but Dr. Langdon would explain it as arising from the close opposition of the two statues face to face, Astart- Shem-Baal merely meaning, then, " She who fronts Baal." Whichever interpretation be correct, such close assimilation of the pair might evolve here and there the concept of a bisexual divinity. Unless the evidence of the classical writers is false, it did so at a later period under Phoenician influences in Cyprus. Macrobius tells us that there was in that island a statue of a bearded deity in female dress, regarded as bisexual, and he quotes Philochoros as witness to the fact, and to the curious phenomenon in the ritual in which the ' Langdon, op. cit., p. 223. 2 Zimmern, Babyl. Hymn. w. Gehete, p. 11. » C. I. Sem., 250. 6o GREECE AND BABYLON men wore female dress and the women male. This explains CatuUus' phrase "duplex Amathusia" of the bisexual goddess. Servius and the Christian fathers repeat the statement, and Joannes Lydus asserts that the Pamphylians at one time worshipped a bearded Aphrodite ; ^ if we trust his authority, we might ex- plain the fact as due to late Semitic influence, which is somewhat attested by inscriptions on the coinage of Pamphylia under the Persian domination.^ But, at the most, we can only regard this cult as a late phenomenon, a local eccentricity, and a morbid development of a certain vague idea that was working sporadically in the old Semitic religion. We have no right to assert, as some have occasionally ventured, that the Semitic peoples generally accepted the dogma of a bisexual divinity. Turning now to the other great area of culture that lay between Mesopotamia and the coast, that of the Hittite kingdoms, we find that the Hittite deity is usually presented in human form. On the great relief of Boghaz-Keui, the distinctions of the human family appear in the divine forms, in whom we may recognise the father god, the mother goddess with her young son, or it may be, as Dr. Frazer suggests, with her young lover. And the other Hittite representations of divinity to which I have referred above are of purely human form, and so also are the small Hittite bronze idols in the Ashmolean Museum. Nevertheless here, as in Mesopotamia, the theriomorphic fancy was active at the same time. On the relief at Boghaz-Keui, nearest to the innermost shrine, the Holy of HoHes, is an idol ' For references, vide my Cults of the Greek States, vol. ii., " Aphrodite," R. 113a. » Vide Head, Hist. Num., p. 586. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 6i of human visage with a body composed of a bizarre arrangement of hon-forms ; and in the procession near to the main deities we note a strange representation of two bulls in mitred caps of Hittite fashion, and to these mystic beasts we may apply the name theanthropic, which Robertson Smith suggested for the sacrificial animal that was half-divine, half-human. And clearer evidence stiU is afforded by another relief found not far from this site at the palace of Euiuk, where a bull is represented on a pedestal with worshippers approaching.! He is not here the sacrificial animal, for he and the altar before him are on a higher plane, while the priest and priestess below are raising their hands to him as if in adoration, and are leading rams evidently as victims to the bull-god. We may be sure, then, that there was some close association of the Hittite divinity with the bull, as there was with the lions upon which both god and goddess are standing ; and this is further illustrated by the horns that adorn the conical cap of the god at Ibriz,^ to whom the grapes and corn were consecrated. Again, the relief on the gate at Sinjerli ^ affords us another clear example of a divinity only partly anthro- pomorphic : a god with the body of a man and the head of a lion ; as he bears a hunting weapon in one hand and a hare in the other, and on each shoulder a bird is sitting, we may regard him as a deity of the chase. Finally, from certain cuneiform texts found at Boghaz- Keui, and recently published and interpreted by Professor Sayce,* we gather that the eagle, probably the double- 1 Perrot et Chipiez, Histoire de I'art, iv. fig. 329 ; cf. Garstang, op. cit., p. 256. ' Supra, p 43. ' Messerschmidt, op. cit., p. 23. « Journ. Roy. Asiat. Soc, igoQt p. 97i« 62 GREECE AND BABYLON headed eagle which appears as an ensign on Hittite monuments, was deified ; for we appear to have a reference to "the house" or temple "of the eagle" (Bit Id Khu), and this fact may help to explain the figure of a man's body with a bird's head on a relief of Sinjerli.i As regards the test, then, that we are at present applying, it seems that the Hittite and the Mesopo- tamian religions were more or less on the same plane, though we may suspect that theriolatry was stronger in the former. It is also important for our purpose to register in passing the clear proof of certain religious approximations, probably in the second millennium B.C., between the Hittites and the Assyrian Babylonian king- dom. The Hittite god Teshup, with the double-headed hammer or axe and the forked lightning in his hand, is of close kin and similar in type to the Canaanite, Syrian, and Babylonian Ranaman-Adad, the god of storms.* But the evidence does not yet seem to me to make it clear which people or group of peoples was in this case the borrower, which the lender. And the same doubt arises in respect of the striking art-type of the divinity standing on the lion; we find it in the early Hittite monuments, such as the Boghaz-Keui sculptured slabs ; and again on the relief of Gargamich, on which is a winged male deity standing on a Hon and a priest behind him, also on a lion;* and later among the Tarsos representations of the Hittite Sandon : it was in vogue at the Syrian Bambyke and at Babylon. The assumption of Perrot * is that it was ^ Luschan, Ausgrabungen in Sendschirli, Heft iii. Taf. 42, 43; cf. Garstang, op. cit., p. 274. ^ Vide Roscher, op. cit., iii., s.v. "Ramman." ^ Perrot et Chipiez, op. cit., iv. p. 549, fig. 276 ; cf. fig. 278. * Op. cit., ii. pp. 642-644. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 63 of Babylonian origin, but the art-chronology does not seem to speak decisively in this matter.* It is not necessary here to prejudge this difficult problem : it does not directly affect our present question, as the type of the goddess with lions comes into Hellas only at a later period. As regards the other Anatolian peoples who came into close contact with the Hellenes, we may find abiding influences of certain Hittite religious ideas and motives of religious art. We may admit that the lion-borne goddess of Boghaz-Keui is the prototype of Kybele, even the crenelated headdress that she wears suggesting the turreted diadem of the later goddess : it is likely that the ancient type of Teshup, the weather-god with hammer or axe and the lightning, survived in Commagene in the cult-figure that was afterwards interpreted as Jupiter Dolichenus : and it may have influenced the ideas about the thunder-god in Pontus, as a primitive relief of a god brandishing a thunderbolt and holding a shield has been found near Amasia.i Speaking generally, we must pronounce the native pre-Hellenic rehgious art of the Asia Minor littoral, of Phrygia, Lydia, Caria, anthropomorphic, so far as it tried at aU to embody the imagined form of the divinity. The record is generally blurred by the later Hellenic influences. But we have at least in Phrygia rude images of the pre-HeUenic Cybele ; the intention of these is anthropomorphic, and in the rough outhne of the goddess's form as hewn out of the rock of Sipylos above Sm3nma, the Hellenes could discern their sorrowing Niobe. Where the anthropomorphism fails, as in the Phrygian monument, which shows Cybele seated with a phiale and human-shaped in other respects, but with a head fashioned like " the round capital of a 1 Cumont, Voyage d' exploration dans le Pont, p. 139. 64 GREECE AND BABYLON pillar," 1 the influence of the aniconic fetich may be the cause. At any rate, we have no clear trace of therio- mophism either in the legend nor in the monuments of the great mother, the Kybele of Phrygia, or the Ma of Cappadocia. The power of the mountain-goddess was incarnate in the lions, but we have no ground for saying that she herself was ever worshipped as a lion. We turn at last to the Minoan-Mycenaean and proto- Hellenic periods ; for our present purpose the two cannot well be kept apart, as much of the evidence con- cerning the former is derived from records of myths and religious customs that were in vogue in the later period. Our first glimpse of the Minoan religion, which Sir Arthur Evans more than any one else has revealed to us,* gave us the impression of an aniconic worship that had for its sacred " agalmata " such fetich objects as the sacred piUar or double-headed axe, but which did not express its actual imagination of its divinities in any art-type. If this were so, we should not be able to answer the question how far the Minaon religion was purely anthropomorphic until we have found the inter- pretation of Minoan writing. But our store of monu- ments has been much enriched by later discoveries in the Palace of Knossos, and in one of its private chapels in which the Cross was the central sacred emblem, Sir Arthur Evans found the interesting figure of the snake- goddess — purely human, but holding snakes in her hands and girdled with snakes, while before her stands a votary ' Vide Perrot et Chipiez, op. cit., vol. iv. fig. 107 ; cf. the relief- figure of Cybele on a Phrygian rock-tomb, wearing on her head a polos, with two lions rampant raising their paws to her head, published by Ramsay, Hell. Journ., 1884, vol. v. p. 245 ; cf. Perrot et Chipiez, iv. fig. no (" little more than the earlier columnar form of the goddess slightly hewn," Evans, Hell. Journ., 1901, p. i66). 2 Vide " Mycenaean Stone and Pillar-cult," Hell. Journ., 1901. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 65 brandishing a snake : 1 again, a Minoan signet-ring published by him ^ revealed the great mountain-goddess herself on the summit of a peak flanked by Uons and holding a spear. These may be actual reproductions of cult-images ; and many other gems and other works have now been published by him and others proving that the people who belonged to this great Aegean culture of the second millennium habitually conceived of their gods in human form, even if they did not as a rule erect their idols in their temples. Thus on a gem which shows us an act of worship performed by a female votary before a sacred pillar, a human-shaped god with rays round his head and holding a spear is hovering in the air above it; 3 and on the great sarcophagus of Praisos we have on the one side a complex scene of ritual, conspicuous for the absence of any idol or eikon of the divinity, and at the other end a human form of god, or it may be hero, standing as if he had just come forth from his shrine or hereon.* In fact, the Minoan-Mycenaean religious monuments have revealed to us at least three personages, anthropomorphically conceived, of the popular religion of the period that we may call pre-Hellenic : a great goddess, often represented as throned, with fruits and emblems of vegetation around her, or as standing on a mountain and associated with lions ; a god who is some- times conversing with her or is descending from the sky armed with spear and shield,^ and sometimes rayed ; thirdly, the goddess with the snake as her familiar. 1 Evans, " Report of Excavations,'' Ann. Brit. School, 1902-1903, p. 92, fig- 63. 2 Ann. Brit. School, 1900-1901, p. 29, fig. g. ' Published by Evans in Hell. Journ., 1901, p. 170, fig. 48. * Vide Paribeni's publication in the Monumenti Antichi della Accademia dei Lincei, 1908 (xix.), pp. 6-86, pis. i.-iii. ' Cf. Ann. Brit. School, 1900-1901, p. 59, fig. 38 ; young god with shield and spear and lioness or mastiff by his side.on clay seal impression. 5 66 GREECE AND BABYLON To this extent, then, the Minoan-Mycenaean peoples were on the same plane of religion as those of Mesopotamia : and the record of the anthropomorphic divinity can be traced in the Aegean area back to the fourth millennium B.C. by the nude figures in stone of a goddess of fecundity with arms pressed across her breasts, a type belonging to the Neolithic period. In passing, let us observe that neither the earliest prehistoric art of the Mediterranean nor the great re- ligious types of the Minoan divinities recall the art style of Mesopotamia. But this developed anthropomorphism of the early Aegean civilisation is not the whole story. Modem research has accumulated evidence that seems to point to a theriomorphic religion in Crete and in Mycenaean Greece which has been supposed by some to have pre- ceded the former in order of time and in the logical process of evolution, and which at any rate survived by the side of it. Traces of the same phenomenon have been noted in the Hittite area, and more faintly in the valley of the Euphrates. The first modern writer who proclaimed with emphasis the theriomorphic ele- ments in the prehistoric reUgions of Greece was Mr. A. Lang in his Custom and Myth, connecting it with a theory of totemism that does not concern us here. After- wards, a systematic treatment of the problem in the light of the monuments of the Cretan and Mycenaean periods was presented by Mr. Cook in a paper published in the Hellenic Journal of 1894 on "Animal Worship in the Mycenaean Age " ; and again in 1895 by an essay on "The Bee in Greek Mythology" : a very fuU collection of the materials, with some exposition of important religious theory, wiU be found in De Visser's treatise, De Graecorum Diis nan referentibus speciem humanam ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 67 (1900). Miss J. Harrison has worked further along the same hnes, and has pubHshed some special'results in her paper read before the Congress of the History of ReUgions, 1908, and pubhshed in its Transactions, on "Bird and Pillar Worship in relation to Ouranian Divinities." Now the material that forms the fabric of these researches is so intricate, the relevant facts so manifold and minute, that it is impossible to consider them in detail within the limits of this present inquiry, of which the leading object is an important question of history concerning the religious influence of the East on the West ; and, again, the writers above mentioned are deeply con- cerned with theories about the origins, or at least the earlier stages in the evolution of religion. And as I am only comparing East and West in a limited and somewhat advanced period of their history, I am not necessarily bound to deal with problems of origin. Nevertheless, a summary survey of this group of facts may provide us with important clues towards the solution of our main question. But a few general criticisms of the assump- tions which, whether latent or explicit, are commonly made in the writings just quoted, may be useful at the outset. First, one finds that the word " worship ' ' is used very loosely by the ancients as well as by con- temporary writers : and by its vague and indiscriminate employment an effort is made to convince us that the pre-Hellenic and proto-Hellenic world worshipped the lion, the ox, the horse, the ass, the stag, the wolf, the pig, the bird, especially the dove, the eagle, and lastly even the cock. We should have to deal with a savage re- ligion rioting in theriolatry, and we should not need to trouble any longer about the theory of its Mesopotamian origin, for as we have seen theriomorphism played a very small part in the Sumerian-Babylonian cult. But one 68 GREECE AND BABYLON must ask more precisely, What is worship; and what does lion-worship, for instance, imply ? Are we to believe that every one of these animals was worshipped, the whole species being divine ? And does their " wor- ship " mean that the superstitious people prayed to them, built altars or sacred columns, or even shrines to them, and offered them sacrifice ? It has become urgent to reserve some such strict sense for the word as this, in order to preserve a sense of the distinction be- tween our ritual-service of a real personal divinity and the various, often trifling, acts that may be prompted by the uneasy feeling or reverential awe evoked by the presence of a curious or dangerous animal. Thus, to abstain from eating or injuring mice or weasels is not to worship mice or weasels : to lament over a dead sea- urchin is not to worship sea-urchins : to give a wolf a decorous funeral is not to worship wolves : to throw a piece of sacrificial meat to flies before a great sacrifice to some high divinity is not to worship flies. All these things the civilised Greeks could do, but they ought not for that to be charged with worshipping whole species of animals directly as gods. Next let us bear weU in mind that secular animals, like secular things, can become temporarily sacred through contact with the altar : thus the ox who voluntarily approached the altar and ate of the grain or cakes upon it; might be believed by the Hellenes to become instantly divine, full of the life of the divinity, and most ceremonious respect resembling worship might be meted out to him ; but we should not hastily believe that the Greeks who might feel like this towards that particular ox worshipped all oxen ; or that the society of King Minos worshipped all axes wherever found, because in peculiar circum- stances and ritual an axe might become charged with ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 69 divinity. Finally, I may again protest against the fallacy of supposing that theriomorphism always precedes anthropomorphism : for an ever-increasing mass of evidence forces one to the conviction that they are often co-existent and always compatible one with the other ; if this is so, it is rash and unscientific to say, as is so easy to say and is so often said, when one meets in the Mediterranean or elsewhere a human god or goddess accompanied by a lion or a cock, that the anthropo- morphic divinity has been evolved from the animal. Looking now directly to the Minoan-Mycenaean monu- ments, before we consider the early Hellenic records, we must distinguish between those that are obviously cult- scenes and those that are not obviously but only hypo- thetically so, and this second class are those with which Mr. Cook's papers mainly deal. The former have been treated masterfully by Sir Arthur Evans in his paper on " Tree and Pillar Cult " ; from these we gather that the worshipper did not usually pray before an idol, but before a pillar or a sacred tree combined often with horns of consecration or an axe ; also that he imagined his deity generally in human form, the pillar serving as a spiritual conductor to draw down the divinity from heaven. Therefore I may remark that the phrase " piUar-cult " here, and in Miss Harrison's paper quoted above, does not express the inwardness of the facts. But the latter writer endeavours to prove the prevalence of a direct cult of birds in this period ; and further maintains the dogma that " in the days of pillar and bird anthropo- morphism was not yet." The Minoan monuments on which she relies are the great Phaistos sarcophagus, the trinity of terra-cotta pillars surmounted by doves found in an early shrine of the Palace of Knossos,^ with • Ann. Brit. School, 1901-1902, p. 29. 70 GREECE AND BABYLON which are to be compared the dove-shrine of Mycenae and the gold-leafed goddesses of Mycenae -with a dove perched on their heads ; and finally, the semi-aniconic idol of a dove goddess, with the dove on her head and her arms outspread like wings, found in another shrine of the palace of Knossos, and descending from a pre-Mycenaean traditional type.^ Whatever we may think of these monuments, they cannot be quoted as the memorials of a time " when anthropomorphism was not yet " ; for the earliest of them, probably that mentioned last, is of later date than the type of the naked human- formed goddess of the Neolithic Aegean period. The question depends wholly on the true interpreta- tion of the monuments ; as regards the Phaistos sarco- phagus, the exact significance of the ritual is stiU a matter of controversy, to which I may return later, when I compare the ritual of east and west ; this much is clear, that a holy service of blood-oblation is being performed before two sacred trees, into the top of which two axes are inserted and on the axes are two birds painted black. Is it immediately clear that " the birds are objects of a definite cult," as Miss Harrison maintains ? ^ This may be strongly disputed ; other- wise we must say that the axe and the tree are equally direct objects of cult. But the illuminative scene on the signet-ring described above * suggests that the function of the pillar was to serve as a powerful magnet to attract a personal divinity. And Sir Arthur Evans has well shown that the tree and the pillar were of equal value as sacred objects in Minoan-Mycenaean religion. A sacrifice doubtless of mystic and magical power is ' op. cit., p. 98, fig. 56. '^ Trans. Cong. Hist. Relig., ii. p. 155. ' P. 65. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 71 being performed before them here : the worshippers may well beHeve that the combined influence of blood- offering, sacred tree, and sacred axe will draw down the divinity of the skies. In what form visible to the eye would he descend? The carver of that signet -ring dared to show him above the pillar in human form, as the mind's eye though not the sense-organ of the wor- shipper discerned him. But the artist of the Phaistos sarcophagus is more reserved. As the Holy Ghost descended in the form of a dove, so the unseen celestial divinity of Crete might use any bird of the air as his messenger, perhaps by preference the woodpecker or dove. And this natural idea would be supported by the fact that occasionally birds did alight on the top of sacred columns, and they would then instantly be charged with the sanctity of that object and would be regarded as a sign of the deity's presence and as an auspicious answer to prayer and sacrifice. Thus many birds in Greece became sacred by haunting temples ; and Dr. Frazer has suggested that the swallows and sparrows that nested on the temple or on the altar at Jerusalem acquired sanctity by the same simple religious logic. 1 But it is futile to argue that therefore the Hellenes and Hebrews once worshipped either the whole species of swallows and sparrows or any single one. And Sir Arthur Evans' own interpretation of the doves on the triple group of columns, as being merely " the image of the divine descent, and of the consequent possession of the bactylic column by a spiritual being," is sane and convincing.^ This does not prove or necessarily lead to " bird-worship." Further, he suggests ^ that as the dove was originally posed on the top of the column ' op. cit., i. p. 254. 2 Ann. Brit. School, igoo-igoi, p. 29, n. 3. ' lb., p. 98. 72 GREECE AND BABYLON as a gracious sign of the divine presence, so when the human form was beginning to take the place of the column the dove would then be seen on the human head, as in the case of the statuettes of goddesses men- tioned above, and as it appeared on the head of the golden image at Bambyke, which some called Semiramis.^ The close association of the Mediterranean goddess and of the goddess of Askalon, Phoenicia, and Bambyke with doves may have been caused by several independent reasons ; one may well have been the habitual frequenting of her temple by the birds. This would easily grow into a belief that the goddess when she wished to reveal some- thing of her presence and power to the external eye would manifest herself in the bird. This we may call theriomorphic imagination that goes pari passu easily with the anthropomorphic. But none of these monu- ments come near to proving that this Mediterranean race directly worshipped birds, nor do they suggest any such theory as that the human divinity emerged from the bird. We shall, in fact, find that evidence of this kind that I have been examining, used recklessly in similar cases, leads to absurd results. ^ Here it is well to remark in passing that the cult of 1 Lucian, De Dea Syr., 34 ; cf. Diod. Sic. 2, 5. Dove with " Astarte " on coins of Askalon, autonomous and imperial, Head, Hist.. Num., p. 679. ^ According to Aelian, certain sparrows were sacred to Asklepios, and the Athenians put a man to death for slaying one ( Var. Hist., v. 17) . Did Asklepios as an anthropomorphic divinity emerge from the sparrow ? What, then, should we say of the sacred snake who might better claim to be his parent ? Was Hermes as a god evolved from a sacred cock ? Miss Harrison believes it (op. cit., ii. p. 161), because he is represented on a late Greek patera standing before a cock on a pillar. But the cock came into Europe perhaps one thousand years after Hermes had won to divine manhood in Arcadia. On the same evidence we might be forced to say that the goddess Leto came from the cock [vide Roscher's Lexikon, ii. p. 1968, cock on gem. in Vienna, with inscription At/tu Mux'o). ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 73 the Dove-goddess is a test case for trying the question of Oriental influence on the west. It cannot be* traced back to Babylon, and no one would now maintain the old theory that the dove-shrines of Mycenae were an import from the Phoenician Astarte cult. Sir Arthur Evans' discoveries enable us to carry back this particular worship in the Aegean to pre-Mycenaean times. We could with better right maintain that the Syrians bor- rowed it from the Aegean or possibly from Askalon, where, as Dr. Evans has pointed out, Minoan influences were strong. But the most reasonable view is that which he expresses that " the divine associations of the dove were a primitive heritage of primitive Greece and Anatolia." ^ As regards Mr. Cook's theory of Mycenaean animal- worship, it is not now necessary to examine it at any length. It was based mainly on a comparison of a fairly large number of " Mycenaean " seals and gems from Crete and elsewhere showing monsters bearing animals on their shoulders or standing by them. He interpreted the " monsters " as men engaged in a religi- ous mummery, wearing the skins of lions, asses, horses, bulls, stags, swine, that is, as ministers of a divine lion, ass, etc., bringing sacrificial animals to these animal- deities, and he raised the large questions of totemism and totemistic cult-practices. His theory presents a picture of zoolatric ritual that cannot be paralleled elsewhere in the world either among primitive or advanced societies. And we begin to distrust it when it asks us to interpret the figures in a gem-representation as an ass-man bearing two lions to sacrifice ; for neither in Greece, Egypt; or ' Ann. Brit. School, 1900-1901, p. 30; cf. the paper by M. Salomon Reinach, " Anthropologie," vi., " La sculpture en Europe avant les influences Greco-Romaines," p. 561. 74 GREECE AND BABYLON Asia is there any record of a lion-sacrifice, a ceremony which would be difficult to carry out with due solemnity. The more recent discovery of a set of clay-sealings at ZaKro in Crete by Dr. Hogarth; who published them in the Hellenic Journal of 1902, has rendered Mr. Cook's view of the cult-value of these " monsters " now un- tenable. They are found in combinations too widely fantastic to be of any value for totemistic or a zoolatric theory, and the opinion of archaeologists like Sir Arthur Evans and Winter ^ that these bizarre forms arose from modifications of foreign types, such as the Egyptian hippopotamus goddess, crossed at times with the hippo- kamp and the lion, has received interesting confirmation from the discovery of a sheU relief at Phaistos showing a series of monsters with hippopotamus heads, and in a pose derived undoubtedly from a Nilotic type.^ We may venture to say that the exuberant fancy of the Minoan-Mycenaean artist ran riot and amused itself with wild combinations of monsters, men and animals, to which no serious meaning was attached. Only rarely, when the monsters are ritualistically engaged in watering a sacred palm tree or column,* does the religious question arise. And here we may find a parallelism in Assyrian religious art, in the representa- tion of " winged genii fertilising the adult palms with the male cones " ; but according to Sir Arthur Evans this motive is later in the Eastern art than in the My- cenaean. Perhaps only one type of monster found on these gems and seals is derived from a real theriomorphic figure of the contemporary rehgion, namely, the Minotaur 'Evans in Hell. Journ., igoi, p. 169; Winter, Arch. Am., 1890, p. 108. ^ Hogarth, Hell. Journ., 1902, p. 92. " Vide gem from Vapheio, published by Evans, Hell. Journ., 1901, p. loi, fig. I ; cf. p. 117, figs. 13, 14. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 75 type. A few of the Zakro sealings show the sealed figure of a human body with bovine head, ears, and taiU; and a clay seal-impression found at Knossos presents a bovine human figure with possibly a bovine head sealed in a hieratic attitude before a warrior in armour.2 Such archaeological evidence is precarious, but when we compare it with the indigenous Cretan legends of the bull-Zeus and the union of Pasiphae with the bull, we are tempted to beheve that a bull-headed god or a wholly bovine deity had once a place in Minoan cult. To conclude, this brief survey of the Minoan-My- cenaean monuments points to a contemporary religion that preferred the aniconic agalma to the human idol, but imagined the divinity mainly as anthropomorphic, though this imagination was probably not so fixed as to discard the theriomorphic type entirely. Therefore this reUgion is on the same plane with that of Mesopo- tamia rather than with that of Egypt. Turning now to the proto-Hellenic period, which, without prejudging any ethnic question, I have kept distinct from the Mycenaean, we have here the advantage of literary records to assist the archaeological evidence. I have stated my conviction that the earliest Hellenes had aheady reached the stage of personal polytheism before conquering the southern Peninsula ; and the combined evidence of the facts of myths and cults justifies the behel that their imagination of the deity was mainly anthropomorphic. By the period of the Homeric poems, composed perhaps some five centuries after the earliest entrance of the Hellenes, we must conclude that the anthropomorphism as a religious 1 Hogarth, op. cii., pp. 79, 91. 2 Evans, Palace of Cnossus, p. 18, fig. 7a. 76 GREECE AND BABYLON principle was predominant in the more progressive minds that shaped the culture of the race : a minute but speaking example of this is the change that ensued in accordance with Homeric taste in the meaning of the old hieratic epithet (iocSxig ; in all probability it originally designated a cow-faced goddess, but it is clear that he intends it for ox-eyed, an epithet signifying the beauty of the large and lustrous human eye. The bias that is felt in the religious poetry of Homer comes to determine the course of the later religious art, so that the religion, art, and literature of historic Greece may be called the most anthropomorphic or anthro- pocentric in the world. Yet we have sufficient proof that in the pre-Homeric age the popular mind was by no means bound by any such law, and that the religious imagination was unfixed and wavering in its perception of divinity : and the belief must have been general that the god, usually imagined as a man, might manifest himself at times in the form of some animal. Apollo Lykeios, the wild god of the woods, was evidently in the habit of incarnating himself in the wolf, so that wolves might be sacramentally offered to him or sacrifice offered to certain wolves.^ In the Artemis legend of Brauron and Aulis we detect the same close communion of the goddess with the bear. Now, upon the fairly numerous indications in cult-legend and ritual that the deity was occasionally incarnate in the animal, much fallacious anthropological theory has been built. It is not now my cue to pursue this matter au fond. But it is necessary for my purpose to emphasise the fact that there is fair evidence for some direct zoolatry in the proto-Hellenic period, though there is less than is often supposed, and it needs always careful criticism. ^ Vide my Cults, iv. p. 115. ANTHROPOMORPHISM IN ASIA MINOR 77 As I have already said, the ancients of the later learned period were often vague and unprecise when they spoke of "the worship" of animals. Thus Clemens informs us ^ that the Thessalians " worshipped " ants, and on the authority of Euphorion that the Samians " worshipped " a sheep : the word used in each case being i7s(iuv. But accurate statements concerning religious psychology demand the nicest discrimination : " a little more, and how much it is." We may suspect that the word (rs|3s Mutter Erde, 1905. ^ Vide my Cults, v. pp. 345-365. THE PREDOMINANCE OF THE GODDESS 95 dare not call her in the earliest, and scarcely at any period, a true personal goddess. Now, there is a "further important induction that we may confidently make : at the period when the Aryan conquerors were pushing their way into Aegean lands and the Indo-Iranians into the Punjaub and Mesopotamia, they had a religious bias making for the supremacy of the Father-God and against the supremacy of the goddess. We can detect the same instinct also in the old Germanic pantheon.^ Its operation is most visible when the Thrako-Phrygian stock, and their cousins the Bithynian, broke into the north of Asia Minor, and the regions on the south of the Black Sea. The god-cult they bring with them clashes with the aboriginal and — as it proved — invincible supremacy of the goddess linked to her divine boy: we hear of such strange cult-products as Attis- UaTTiziog, Father Attis, and one of the old Aryan titles of the High God appears in the Phrygian Zeus Bccyoiiog, Bagha in old Persian and Bog in Slavonic meaning deity. The Aryan hero-ancestor of the Phrygian stock, Manes, whom Sir William Ramsay believes to be identical with the god Men, becomes the father of Atys ; ^ also we have later proof of the powerful cult of Zeus the Thunderer, Zeus the Leader of Hosts, in this region of the southern shore of the Black Sea . Another induction that I venture, perhaps incautiously, to make, is that in no Aryan polytheism is there to be found the worship of an isolated or virgin-goddess, keeping apart from relations with the male ' The Celtic question is more di£&cult : Prof. Rhys in his excellent paper on Celtic religion, read as a Presidential address at the Congress of the History of Religions, 1908 (Transactions, ii. pp. 201-225), gives the impression that the goddess was more in evidence than the god in old Irish mythology, and doubts whether to attribute this to the non-Indogermanic strain in the population ; he notices also certain " matriarchal " phenomena in the religion ; cf. ib., p. 242. " Herod., i, 94 ; 4, 45 (note here the Thracian associations of Manes). 96 GREECE AND BABYLON deity : the goddesses in India, Germany, Ireland, Gaul,^ Thrace, and Phrygia are usually associated temporarily or permanently with the male divinity, and are popularly regarded as maternal, if not as wedded. Trusting to the guidance of these two inductions, and always conscious of the lacunae in our records, we may draw this impor- tant conclusion concerning the earliest religious history of Hellas : namely, that where we find the powerful cult of an isolated goddess, she belongs to the pre-Hellenic population. The axiom applies at once and most forcibly to Artemis and Athena ; the one dominant in certain parts of Arcadia and Attica, the other the exclusive deity of the Attic Acropolis^ Their virginal character was probably a later idea arising from their isolation, their aversion to cult-partnership with the male deity.^ The Aryan Hellenes were able to plant their Zeus and Poseidon on the high hill of Athens, but not to overthrow the supremacy of Athena in the central shrine and in the aboriginal soul of the Athenian people. As regards Hera, the question is more difficult : the excavations at the Heraeum have been supposed by Dr. Waldstein to prove the worship of a great goddess on that site, going back in time to the third millennium B.C.,' a period anterior to the advent of the god-worship- ping Aryan Hellenes. And this goddess remained 1 The Romanised-Celtic cult of a vague group of " Sanctae Virgines," attested by an inscription found near Lyons (Rhys, Hibbert Lectures, p. I02), counts very little against this induction. " The warlike character of these Virgin Goddesses, Athena, Ishtar, might be explained on a sociologic hypothesis that would also account for Amazonism ; in modern Albania the girl who refuses marriage is allowed to wear man's dress and to bear arms, vide Journ. Anthrop. Inst., 1910, p. 460. 'But in a recent paper (Athenische MiUheilwngen, 1911, p. 27) Frickenhaus and Miiller give reasons for dating the earliest Heraeum to the eighth century. At any rate, the goddess-cult in this locality was vastly older. THE PREDOMINANCE OF THE GODDESS 97 dominant through all history at Argos and Samos. But we have no reason for supposing that her name was Hera in that earliest period. Phonetically, the word is best explained as " Aryan " : if it was originally the name brought by the Hellenes and designating the wife- goddess of the sky-god — and in spite of recent theories that contradict it I still incline to this view — the Hellenes could apply it to the great goddess of the Argolid, unless her aversion to matrimony was a dogma, or her religious isolation a privilege, too strong to infringe. This does not seem to have been the case. The goddess of Samian cult, a twin-institution with the Argive, was no virgin, but united with the sky-god in an old hpdg ya/jbog. Never- theless, throughout all history the goddess in Argos, and probably in Samos, is a more powerful cult-figure than the god. As regards Aphrodite, few students of Greek religion would now assign her to the original Aryan- Hellenic polytheism. Most still regard her as coming to the Greek people from the Semitic area of the Astarte cult. And this was the view that I formerly developed in the second volume of my cults. But at that time we were all ignorant of the facts of Minoan-Mycenaean religion, and some of us were deceived concerning the antiquity of the Phoenician settlements in Cyprus and Hellas. The recently discovered evidence points, I think, inevitably to the theory that Sir Arthur Evans supports ; that the goddess of Cyprus, the island where the old Minoan culture lived longest, is one form of the great goddess of that gifted Aegean people, who had developed her into various manifestations through long centuries of undisturbed religious hfe. Let us finally observe that it is just these names, Artemis, Athena, Aphrodite, that have hitherto defied Unguistic 7 98 GREECE AND BABYLON explanation on either Aryan or Semitic phonetic principles. We do not yet know the language of King Minos. A cursory and dogmatic answer may now be given to the two questions posed above. The Aryan Hellenes did not bring with them the supremacy of the goddess, for the idea was not natural to them : they did not borrow it from any Semitic people in the second mil- lennium, for at that time it was not natural to the Semites : they found it on the soil of the Aegean lands, as a native growth of an old Mediterranean religion, a strong plant that may be buried under the deposits of alien creeds, but is always forcing its head up to the light again. Therefore in tracing goddess-cult from the Euphrates valley to the western Aegean shores, as a test of the influence of the East on the West, we are brought up sharply at this point. The Western world is divided from the Eastern by this very phenomenon that the older scholars used to regard as proving a connection. And it may well have been the Western cult that influenced the western Semites. CHAPTER VI. The Deities as Nature-Powers. So far as we have gone our main question must be still regarded as an open one. We may now compare the particular conceptions concerning divinity that pre- vailed at the period to which our search is limited, in the valley of the Euphrates, and in the other communities that are in our route of comparison. Many striking points of general similarity will present themselves, upon which we must not lay too much weight for our argument, since all polytheisms possess a certain family likeness : of more importance will be certain strikingly dissimilar features, if we find any. First, in regard to the general concepts or characters of the divinities, the same formula seems mainly applic- able to the Mesopotamian as to the Hellenic facts : the leading divinities have usually some distinct associ- ation with the world of nature ; but the natural phen- omenon or elemental fact that may be there in the background of their personality, becomes overlaid and obscured by the complex ethical and mental traits that are evolved. Therefore the mere nature-fact rarely explains the fully-developed god, either of Babylon or of Hellas. A few salient examples will make this clear. It is only perhaps Shamash the sun-god of Sippar, and Sin the moon-god of Ur, that retain their nature-signific- ance rarely obscured. The hymn to Sin in Dr. Langdon's 99 100 GREECE AND BABYLON collection reveals an intelligible lunar imagery through- out ; but in another published by Zimmern,i his person- ality becomes more spiritual and mystical ; he is at once " the mother-body who bears all life, and the pitiful gracious father," the divinity who has created the land and founded temples ; under the Assyrian r6gime he seems to have become a god of w^ar.^ Shamash even surpasses him in grandeur and religious value, so far as we can judge from the documents ; but his whole ethical and spiritual character, clearly articulated as it is, can be logically evolved from his solar. But in studying the characters of Marduk and Nergal, for instance, we feel that the physical theories of their origin help us but little, and are at times self-contradictory ; and it might be well for Assyriologists to take note of the confusion and darkness that similar theories have spread in this domain of Hellenic study. Thus we are told that the Sun in the old Sumerian-Babylonian system gave birth to various special personalities, representing various aspects of him : Marduk is the spring-sun, rejoicing in his strength, although his connection with Shamash does not seem specially close ; yet Jeremias, who expresses this opinion,^ believes also that Marduk is a storm-god, because " his word can shake the sea." Shall we say, then, that Jahwe is a storm-god " because the voice of the Lord shaketh the cedar-trees " ? The phrase is quite innocent if we only mean by it that any and every personal God could send a storm ; it becomes of doubtful value if it signifies here that Marduk is an impersonation of the storm. The texts seem some- times to contradict each other ; Ninib, for instance, * Bab. Hym. u. Gebet., p. ii. ' Jastrow, op. cit., p. 230. ' In Roscher's Lexikon, ii. 2371 ; cf. ib., 2367. THE DEITIES AS NATURE-POWERS loi is regarded by Jeremias ^ as the rising sun, on the ground of certain phrases in his hymn of praise ; but tlie con- cept of him as a storm-god is more sahent in the oldest texts, and thus he is pre-eminently a deity of destruc- tion and death, and becomes specially an Assyrian war- god. Does it help us if we imagine him originally as the Storm-Sun, as Jensen would have us ? or is it not allow- able to suspect that solar terms of religious description became a later Babylonian convention, and that any deity might attract them ? Nergal, again, the god of Kutha, has been supposed to have had a solar origin, as the god of the midday and destructive sun ; ^ yet his special realm is Hades, where he ruled by the side of the goddess AUatu, and his name is doubtfully inter- preted as the Lord of the Great Habitation, and thus he is regarded as a god of disease and death. This did not hinder him from becoming with Ninib the great war-god of the Assyrians and their god of the chase, nor a pious Babylonian poet from exalting him as " God of the little ones, he of the benevolent visage." ^ In one of the Tel-El-Amarna texts he is designated by an ideogram, that almost certainly means "the god of iron." * This last fact, if correct, is an illus- tration of that which a general survey of the Babylonian texts at last impresses upon us : the physical origin of the deity, if he had one, does not often shape and control his whole career ; the high god grows into manifold forms, dilates into a varied spiritual personality, pro- gresses with the life of his people, reflects new aspects of life, altogether independently of any physical idea of him that may have originally prevailed. Adad, the 1 Roscher, Lexikon, iii. p. 364. 2 Jeremias, op. cU., iii. p. 250. ' Langdon, Sum. Babyl. Psalms, p. 83. * Roscher, Lexikon, p. 252. 102 GREECE AND BABYLON god of storms, becomes a god of prophecy, and is ad- dressed as a god of mercy in the fragment of a hymn.^ Ea the god of waters becomes far excellence the god of wisdom, not because waters are wise, but probably because Eridu, the seat of his cult, was an immemorial home of ancient wisdom, that is to say, magic. As for the great Nebo of Borsippa, Jeremias,^ who is other- wise devoted to solar theories, has some good remarks on the absence of any sign of his nature-origin : his ideogram designates "the prophet," in his earliest char- acter he is the writer, his symbol is the " stilus " of the scribe. Yet he does not confine himself to writing : he is interested in vegetation, and eulogised in one hymn as "he who openeth the springs and causeth the corn to sprout, he without whom the dykes and canals would run dry." Surely this interest comes to him, not from the planet Mercury,^ but from his wisdom and his concern with Babylonian civilisation, which depended upon dykes and canals. We are presented here with a progressive polytheism, that is, one of which the divinities show the power of self-development parallel with the self -development of the people. The question we have just been considering, the physical character of the Babylonian deities in relation to their whole personality, suggests two last reflections. Their gods have a certain relation to the planets, which is preserved even in our modern astronomy. That the early Sumerians worshipped stars is probable,* as the Sumerian sign for divinity is a star; but that the Sumerian-Babylonian high gods were personal forms of the planets, is denied by leading modern Assyri- ■ Jastrow, op. cit., p. 484. ' Roscher, Lexikon, iii., s.v. " Nebo." • As Jeremias supposes, Roscher, op. cit., iii. p. 60. ' Vide Tiele, Histoire des anc. relig., p. 242. THE DEITIES AS NATURE-POWERS 103 ologists,^ except in the case of the sun and the moon, Shamash and Sin. It was only the Chaldaean «.stron- omic theory that came to regard the various planets in their varying positions as special manifestations of the powers of the different personal gods ; and the same planet might be a manifestation, according to its different positions, of different gods : the " star Jupiter at one point is Marduk, at another point Nebo " ; this dogma is found on a seventh-century tablet, which declares at the same time that " Mercury " is Nebo.^ This planetary association of the deities is well illus- trated by the memorial relief of Asarhaddon found at Sinjerli, and the relief of Maltaija, showing stars crowning their heads ; * but both these are later than the period with which we are here immediately concerned. Lastly, we fail to observe in that domain of the old Babylonian religion which may be called nature- worship, any clear worship of the earth regarded as a personal and living being, as the Hellenes regarded Gaia. The great goddesses, Ishtar, the goddess at once warlike and luxurious, virgin and yet unchaste, terrible and merciful, the bright virgin of the sky, Bau, the wife of Ninib, the " amorous lady of heaven," are certainly not of this character. Still less is AUalu, the monstrous and grim Queen of Hell, at whose breast the hons are suckled. It seems that if the early Sumerians conceived the earth as a personal divinity at all, they imagined it as a male divinity. For in the inscriptions of Nippur, Enlil or Bel appears as a Lord of the under- • Vide Winckler, Himmels und Weltenbild der Babylonier, pp. lo-ii. Jeremias, Roscher, Lexikon, iii. p. 58. But Jastrow, op. cit., p. 84, seems to believe in the planetary origin of Ishtar, and would explain her character as the planet Venus. 2 Winckler, ib., p. ii. ' Roscher, Lexikon, iii. pp. 66-67. 104 GREECE AND BABYLON world, meaning our earth as distinct from the heavens : he is hymned as the "lord of the harvest-lands, lord of the grain-fields " ^ — he is the " husbandman who tends the fields " ; when Enlil is angry, " he sends hunger everywhere." In another hymn he is thus described : " The great Earth-Mountain is Enlil, the mountain- storm is he, whose shoulders rival the heavens, whose foundation is the bright abyss " ; - and again, " Lord, who makest to abound pure oil and nourishing milk; . . . in the earth Lord of life art thou " ; "to give life to the ground thou dost exist." * It is evident that Enlil is more than the personal earth regarded as a solid substance ; he is rather the god of all the forces and life that move on and in the earth, hence he is " the lord of winds." * He is more, then, than the mere equivalent of Gaia. One might have expected to find a Sumerian counterpart for this goddess in Ninlil or Belit, the wife and female double of Enlil or Bel : but in an inscription that is dated as early as 4000 B.C. she is styled " The Queen of Heaven and Earth," ^ and though in a hymn of lamentation addressed to her ^ she is described as the goddess " who causeth plants to come forth," yet the ecstatic and mysticising Babylonian imagination has veiled and clouded her nature-aspect. This strange religious poetry which had been fer- menting for thousands of years, was likely enough to transform past recognition the simple aboriginal fact. It is only the lesser deities, the " Sondergotter " of the Sumerian pantheon, whose nature-functions might remain clear and unchanged : for instance, such a corn-deity as we see on a cylinder, with corn-ears in 1 Langdon, Hymn xiii. p. 199. ' lb., p. 221. ' lb., p. 277. « lb., p. 223. ' Jastrow, op. cit., p. 55. ' Langdon, op. cit., p. 257. THE DEITIES AS NATURE-POWERS 105 his hand and corn-stalks springing from his shoulders.^ Even the simple form of Tammuz, the darling* of the Sumerian people, has been somewhat blurred by the poetry of passion that for long ages was woven about him. As Zimmern has shown in a recent treatise,^ he was never the chief deity of any Babylonian or Assyrian state, but nevertheless one of great antiquity and power with the Sumerian people, and his cult and story were doubtless spreading westward in the second millennium. In spite of all accretions and the obscurity of his name, which is interpreted to mean " real son of the water-deep," ^ we can still recognise the form of the young god of vegetation who dies in the heat of the summer solstice and descends to the world below, leaving the earth barren till he returns. This idea is expressed by some of his names, " the Lord of the land's fruitfulness, the Lord of the shepherd's dwelling, the Lord of the cattle-stall, the God of grain," * and by many an allusion to his legend in the hymns, which are the most beautiful and pathetic in the old Sumerian psalmody : " in his manhood in the submerged grain he lay " ; " how long still shall the verdure be imprisoned, how long shall the green things be held in bondage ? " ^ An interesting title found in some of the incantation liturgies is that of " the shepherd," and hke some other vegetation-powers he is at times regarded as the Healer. Though he was not admitted 1 Pinches, Babylonian and Assyrian Re-Ugions, p. 104 ; c£. "Nidaba," Jastrow, op. cit., p. 95, a goddess of agriculture. ^ " Der Babylonische Gott Tamuz," inAbh. Konig. Sachs. Gesell. Wiss., xxvii. {1909). ' Zimmern regards Dumuzi or Damuzi as shortened from Dumuzi- Abzu, but Jastrow (op. cit., p. go) would keep the two names distinct, and interprets Dumuzi simply as " Son of Life." * Vide Zimmern in Sitzungsb. Konig. Sachs. Gesell. Wiss., 1907. ' Zimmern, ib., p. 208 ; cf. Langdon, op. cit., p. 307. io6 GREECE AND BABYLON as the compeer of the high gods into the Babylonian or Assyrian pantheon, he may be said to have survived them all, and his name and myth became the inspiration of a great popular religion. No other of that vast fraternity of corn-spirits or vegetation-spirits into which Dr. Frazer has initiated us, has ever had such a career as Tammuz. In one of his hymns he is invoked as " Lord of the world of Death," because for a time he descended into Hell.^ If this idea had been allowed to germinate and to develop its fuU potentiality, it might have changed the aspect of Babylonian eschatology. But, as we shaU see, the ideas naturally attaching to vegetation, to the kindly and fair life of seeds and plants, were never in Babylonia properly harmonised with those that dominated belief concerning ' the lower world of the dead. The study of the Tammuz- rites I shall reserve for a later occasion. We have now to consider the other Anatolian cults from the point of view of nature-worship. The survey need not detain us long as our evidence is less copious. As regards the western Semites, our trustworthy records are in no way so ancient as those that enlighten us concerning Mesopotamia. Philo of Byblos, the inter- preter of the Phoenician Sanchuniathon, presents us only with a late picture of the Canaanite religion, that may be marred by their own symbolic interpretations. Because we are told ^ that " the Phoenicians and Egyptians were the first to worship the sun and the moon and the stars," ^ or " the first to deify the growths of the earth," ^ we cannot conclude that in the second millennium the religion of the Phoenicians was purely solar or astral, or merely the cult of vegetation-gods. ' Zimmern, Sitzungsb. Konig. Sdchs. Gesell. Wiss., p. 220. ^ Eus., Praep. Ev., i, 9, 29. ' lb., 1, 10, 6. THE DEITIES AS NATURE-POWERS 107 " Baalshamin " means the lord of the heavens, an Aramaic and Phoenician god, and Sanchuniathon explained him as the sun ; ^ but Robertson Smith gives good reason for the view that the earUest conception of the local Baal was of a deity of the fertilising spring, a local divine owner of a well-watered plot, hence the giver of all life to fruits and cattle. ^ Nor are we sure what was the leading " nature-aspect " of the cult of Astarte. The title " Meleket Ashamaim," " the Queen of the Heavens," which Ezekiel attaches to her, does not inform us precisely concerning her earliest and original character. From her close association with the Minoan goddess of Cyprus, she was no doubt wor- shipped as the source of the life of plants and animals and men. Also, it is of some value to bear in mind the later records concerning the worship of Helios at Tyre in the Roman Imperial period, and of Helios and the thunder-god at Palmyra, where Adad-Rimmon, the storm-god who was in power among the western Semites in the earliest period, may have survived till the beginning of Christianity. We may conclude from all this that in the oldest period of the western Semite societies the cult of special nature-deities was a pro- minent feature of the religion. But even these may already in the second millennium have acquired a com- plex of personal attributes ethical and spiritual. In the later Carthaginian religion, the personal deities are clearly distinguished from the mere nature-powers, such as the sun, earth, and moon ; and this important distinction may have arisen long before the date of the document that proves it.* ' Eus., Praep. Ev., i, lo, 7. ^ Rel. of Sem., pp. 96-100. ' Polyb., 7, 9 (the Carthaginian oath of alliance with Philip of Macedon). io8 GREECE AND BABYLON Of the Hittite gods we may say this much at least, that the monuments enable us to recognise the thunder- god with the hammer or axe, and in the striking relief at Ibreez we discern the form of the god of vegetation and crops, holding com and grapes. The winged disk, carved with other doubtful fetich-emblems above the head of the god who is clasping the priest or king on the Boghaz-Keui relief, is a solar emblem, borrowed probably from Egyptian religious art. And the Hittite sun-god was invoked in the Hittite treaty with Rameses ii.^ Whether the mother-goddess was conceived as the personal form of Gaia is doubtful ; her clear affinity with Kybele would suggest this, and in the Hittite treaty with Rameses ii. mentioned above, the goddess Tesker is called the Mistress of the Mountains, the express title of the Phrygian Mother, and another " the Mistress of the Soil." 2 Yet evidently the Hittite religion is too complex to be regarded as mere nature-worship : the great relief of Boghaz - Keui shows a solemn and elaborate ritual to which doubtless some spiritual concepts were attached. As regards the original ideas underlying the cults of those other Anatolian peoples who were nearer in geographical position and perhaps in race to the Aegean peoples, we have no explicit ancient records that help us to decide for the second millennium. For some of these various communities the goddess was, as we have seen, the supreme power. The great Phrygian goddess Kybele is the cult-figure of most importance for our purpose, and it is possible to divine her original character with fair certainty.^ In her attributes, functions, and form, we can discern nothing celestial, ' Garstang, op. cit.; p. 348. ^ Vide supra, p. 88. " Vide my Cults, vol. iii. pp. 295-300. THE DEITIES AS NATURE-POWERS 109 solar or lunar ; she was, and remained to the end, a mother-goddess of the earth, a personal source* of and life of fruits, beasts, and man : her favourite haunt was the mountains, and her earhest image that we know, that which the Greeks called Niobe on Mount Sipylos, seems like a human shape emerging from the mountain-side : she loved also the mountain caverns, which were called after her xyjSsXa ; and according to one legend she emerged from the rock Agdos, and hence took the name Agdestis. The myth of her beloved Attis is clear ritual-legend associated with vegetation ; and Greek poetry and Greek cult definitely linked her with the Greek Gaia. We gather also from the legend of Attis and other facts that her power descended to the underworld, and the spirits of the dead were gathered to her ; ^ hence the snake appears as her symbol, carved as an akroterion above her sepulchral shrine, where she is sculptured with her two lions at Arslan Kaya — " the Lion Rock in Phrygia " ; ^ and her counterpart, the Lydian Mother Hipta, is addressed as •/^doviri? In all her aspect and functions she is the double of the great Minoan mother-gbddess described already, whose familiar animals are the lion and the serpent, who claims worship from the mountain-top, and whose character is wholly that of a great earth goddess with power doubtless reaching down to the lower world of the dead. Only from Crete we have evidence which is lacking in pre-Aryan Phrygia of the presence of a thunder or sky-god by her side.* ' Vide Ramsay, Hell. Journ., v. p. 261 ; ray Cults, iii. p. 299. * Ramsay, ih., p. 242. ' Cults, vol. V. p. 296 (Dionysos, R. 63d). * The axe, the thunder-fetish, is attached to her at times, either because it was the prevalent religious symbol in Crete or because of her union with the Thunder-God. no GREECE AND BABYLON Turning our attention now to the early Hellenic world, and to that part of its religion which we may call Nature-worship, we discern certain general traits that place it on the same plane in some respects with the Mesopotamian. Certain of the higher deities show their power in certain elemental spheres, Poseidon mainly in the water, Demeter in the land, Zeus in the air. But of none of these is the power wholly limited to that element : and each has acquired, like the high gods of Assyria and Babylon and Jahwe of Israel, a complex anthropomorphic character that cannot be derived, though the old generation of scholars wearily attempted to derive it, from the elemental nature-phenomenon. Again, other leading divinities, such as ApoUo, Artemis, Athena, are already in the pre-Homeric period, as far as we can discern, pure real personalities like Nebo and Asshur, having no discoverable nature-significance at all. Besides these higher cults, we discern a vast number of popular local cults of winds, springs, rivers, at first animistically and then anthropomorphically imagined. So in Mesopotamia we find direct worship of canals and the river. Finally, we discern in early Hellas a multitude of special " functional " divinities or heroes, " Sondergotter," like Eunostos, the hero of the harvest : and it may be possible to find their counter- parts in the valley of the Euphrates.^ We have also the nameless groups of divine potencies in Hellas, such as the Ylpa^ihixcii, M.iiXtx,ioi, these being more frequent in the Hellenic than in the Mesopotamian religion, which presents such parallels as the Annunaki and the Igigi, nameless daimones of the lower and upper world : and ' E.g.[the " Tile-God," the lord of foundations and tiles, mentioned inithe inscription of Nabonid in Keilinschr. Bibl., iii. p. loi ; but cf. Jastrow, op. cit., p. 176, who regards him as a special form of Ea. THE DEITIES AS NATURE-POWERS iii these in both regions may be regarded as products of animism not yet developed into theism. But such general traits of resemblance in two developed polytheisms deceive no trained inquirer ; and it would be childish to base a theory of borrowing on them. What is far more important are the marked differences in the nature-side of the Greek polytheism, as compared with the Sumerian-Babylonian. In the latter, the solar-element was very strong, though per- haps not so omnipresent as some Assjnriologists assure us. On the contrary, in the proto-Hellenic system it was strikingly weak, so far as we can interpret the evidence. The earliest Hellenes certainly regarded the Sun as a personal animate being, though the word Helios did not necessarily connote for them an anthro- pomorphic god. But the insignificance of his figure in the Homeric poems agrees well with the facts of actual cult. As I have pointed out in the last volume of my Cults, ^ it was only at Rhodes that Helios was a great personal god, appealing to the faith and affections of the people, revered as their ancestor and the author of their civilisation, and descending, we may believe, from the period of the Minoan culture ^ with which Rhodes was closely associated in legend. And it appears from the evidence of legend and Minoan art that sun-worship was of some power in the pre-Hellenic Aegean civilisation. In the Mycenaean epoch he may have had power in Corinth, but his cult faded there in the historic age before that of Athena and Poseidon. The developed Hellene preferred the more personal ' Vol. V. 417-420. ' For Sun-worship indicated by Minoan monuments vide Evans, Hell. Journ., 1901, pp. 172-173 ; on a stone at Tenos we find a curious inscription, 'HX(oira/jin)Sovos (Cults, v. p. 451, R. 37), and Sarpedon is a Minoan-Rhodian figure. 112 GREECE AND BABYLON deity, whose name did not so obviously suggest a special phenomenon of nature. And if he inherited or adopted certain solar personages, as some think he adopted a sun-god Ares from Thrace, he seems to have transformed them by some mental process so as to obliterate the traces of the original nature-perception. Even more significant for our purpose is the com- parison of the two regions from the point of view of lunar-cult. We have sufficiently noted already the prominence of the moon-god Sin in the Babylonian pantheon, an august figure of a great religion : and among all the Semitic peoples the moon was a male personality, as it appears to have been for the Vedic Indians and other Aryan peoples. The Hellenic im- agination here presents to us this salient difference, that the personal moon is feminine, and she seems to have enjoyed the scantiest cult of all the great powers of Nature. Not that anywhere in Greece she was wholly without worship.^ She is mentioned in a vague record as one of the divinities to whom vr\(pa,'kia, " wineless offerings," were consecrated in Athens : she had an ancient place in the aboriginal religion of Arcadia ; of her worship in other places the records are usually late and insignificant. The great Minoan goddess may have attracted to herself some lunar significance, but this aspect of her was not pronounced. Here, then, is another point at which the theory of early Babylonian influence in nascent Hellenic religion seriously breaks down. And in this comparison of Nature-cults it breaks down markedly at two others. The pantheon of Mesopotamia had early taken on an astral - character. The primitive Hellenes doubtless had, like other peoples, their star-myths ; and their ^ Vide Cults, v. pp. 450-453, for references. THE DEITIES AS NATURE-POWERS 113 superstitions were aroused and superstitious p];actices evoked by celestial " teratology," by striking phen- omena, such as eclipses, comets, falling stars.^ But there is no record suggesting that they paid direct wor- ship to the stars, or that their deities were astral person- ations, or were in the early period associated with the stars : such association, where it arose, is merely a sign of that wave of Oriental influence that moved west- ward in the later centuries. The only clear evidences of star-cult in Hellenic communities that I have been able to find do not disturb this induction : Lykophron and a late Byzantine author indicate a cult of Zeus 'Affrsp/o? in Crete, which cannot, even if real, be interpreted as direct star-worship : ^ at Sinope, a city of Assyrian origin, named after the Babylonian moon-god, a stone with a late inscription suggests a cult of Seirios and the con- stellations ; ^ and an Attic inscription of the Roman Imperial epoch, mentions a priest of the op. cit., pp. 57-58- 2 Strab., p. 535- » Vide Ramsay, Hell. Journ.) x. p. 158 ; cf. Hyginus, 191 (Midas Rex Mydonius filius matris Deae). ♦ Chil., I, 473 ; vide Cook in Class. Rev., 1903, p. 408. 126 GREECE AND BABYLON There is value, then, in Homer's picture of Minos as the friend of God who holds converse with him. The political significance of Greek religion impresses itself upon us at a thousand points and under endless aspects. The deity belongs not to the individual but to the tribe ; and as in the earliest Hellenic period the tribes were conscious of a certain community of blood, their earliest religion appears at many points to have transcended the tribal limits, and certain deities have developed a national character. Now evidence — vague and legendary, it is true, but valuable when compared with the facts of other communities — compels us to conceive of the early Hellenic kings having the same character as those that we have observed in Mesopotamia, Anatolia, and Crete ; Homer regards them as the god-born, who can exercise religious func- tions, whose decrees have the force of dkfjuig. The fire that burnt on their hearth was sacred and embodied the life of the community ; and in the later period the perpetual fire that was maintained in the Prytaneum of the TToKig represented the ancient sacred hearth-fire of the king.^ Also, when the monarchy was generally abolished, many of the cities felt compelled to retain the title of (iuffiKiv? for the priest who carried on the religious functions as the shadow of the ancient priest- king. But these similar phenomena are of little ethno- graphic value. Primitive Hellenism was in these respects only maintaining its own inherited traditions, and following the same lines of early social evolution as those of other communities. On the other hand, the distinctness of developed Hellenism is the secular independence of its intellect ; and even in its earliest 1 Vide my Cults, v. pp. 350-354; Frazer, Journ, Philol.;xiv. " The Prytaneum, Temple of Vesta." THE DEITIES AS SOCIAL-POWERS 127 mythic period we can believe that the divine character of the Basileus was less impressively felt, his associa- tion with the divinity less intimate, than was the case in Mesopotamia. Neither Agamemnon nor his predecessors would speak, we may be sure, with the same astonishing self-consciousness of their divine in- spiration as the earliest and later kings of Babylon and Assyria. Returning to the Mesopotamian societies, we find much other evidence of the dependence of State- institutions upon cult and religious ideas. Justice and the integrity of the Law were virtues consecrated by old Babylonian religion. One of the most striking of the Shamash hymns exhibits the sun-god as the guardian of right judgment — " the wicked judge thou raakest to behold bondage — him who receives not a bribe, who has regard to the weak, shall be well- pleasing to Shamash, he shall prolong his life " : " Shamash hates those who falsify boundaries and weights." ^ The respect for the rights of property to which the latter phrase alludes, was maintained by the force of religious sanctions. The King Asurbanipal declares that he has restored to the Babylonians their fields that had been wrongfully taken away, " for fear of Bel and Nebo." ^ A number of inscribed Babylonian boundary-stones have been found with symbols of the various high gods carved upon them, with invocations in their name to deter trespassers, or those who would remove their neighbour's landmark.* One of these is marked with a curse as follows : * " May Ninib, the Lord of Boundaries, deprive him of 1 C. D. Gray, The Samas Religious Texts (Brit. Mus.), Hymn i. 2 Keilinschr. Bibh; ii. p. 131. ' Cook, Religions of Ancient Palestine, p. 109. * Jeremias, Holle «. Paradies, p. 17. 128 GREECE AND BABYLON his son the water-pourer " — meaning that the man who violates the boundaries shall leave no son behind him to perform the funeral rites. Probably other examples of this practice are to be found in non-Hellenic Asia Minor ; at present I can only quote one, a late Phrygian inscription, which, however, may testify to an early Phrygian religious function, on a slab with the divine name 'OpoipuXal, " Boundary-guardian," inscribed beneath a carved relief-figure of the god Men bearing a club.^ In Greece, as is well known, religion contributed the same aid to the evolution of the law of private property in land ; the boundary is put under the protection of Zeus "Opios, a power similar to the Latin Jupiter Terminus, or of Hermes 'Y-TiTipi/toiiog.^ In this function they are regarded as nether-deities, whose divinity is latent in the soil. But though Hellas may have borrowed from Babylon its system of land- measurement, it did not need to borrow this religious idea and practice. For these are widespread over the world : in the Teutonic north the rights of the owner were sanctified by carrying holy fire from the hearth round the boundary ; and in savage modern societies by the use of the terrible weapon of the tabu and by the erection of fetiches on the boundary mark which serve as ccTorpoTuiu.^ We have here a salient example of religion as a constructive force in framing a great social institution, while the motive desire is secular and purely human. But we must not, I think, hope to be able to trace with any exactness the part played by religion in con- structing the various departments of the social fabric • Sterrett, Epigraphical Journey, No. 65. 2 Vide Cults, vol. v. p. 19. ' Vide Frazer, Psyche's Task, pp. 18-30. THE DEITIES AS SOCIAL-POWERS 129 of Babylonia ; for when we get our first glimpse pf that society it is already so far advanced, so complex in its civilisation, in a sense so modern, that its embryology is likely to escape us. Nevertheless, it is interesting for our purpose to study the earliest material, the code of Hammurabi, to watch what light it throws on the correlation of religious and secular life. Some parts of it are missing, but we may be allowed to pass a temporary judgment on that which is preserved, and which appears to be the greater part of the whole corpus.^ The code, as I have mentioned, is inspired by the god, safeguarded by the god, and the legislation is in that sense theocratic ; but as compared, for in- stance, with the Jewish books of the Law, it impresses us as the work of a cool-headed lawyer, of secular utilitarian principles, bringing legal acumen to bear on the problems of a complex society. At certain points it is stiU on the barbaric plane : the principle of " an eye for an eye " is enacted ; the sense of individual responsibility for wrong-doing is not yet so far developed but that vicarious punishment is still allowed ; a man's son or daughter might be put to death for his own offence. But in many respects it reveals an advanced moral and intellectual view, and the religious atmo- sphere is absent where we should most expect to find an infusion of it. In the enactments dealing with the fees due to a physician, we seem to discern that medicine has become a free and secular science. Still more important for our purpose are the clauses concerning homicide, for it is particularly in regard to homicide that religious feeling has been most operative in the ^ Vide Winckler's "Die Gesetze Hammurabi " in Der Alte Orient, igo6 ; an English version of the code in Johns' Babylonian and Assyrian Laws and Contracts. 9 130 GREECE AND BABYLON early legislation of society, and the evolution of our modern morality concerning this offence has been at times retarded by religion. Only one clause in the code happens to deal with deliberate murder, and only murder in special circumstances, those in which Clytemnestra murdered Agamemnon : Hammurabi would have im- paled Clytemnestra : a few other clauses are concerned with culpable homicide and unintentional. Hammurabi being himself a master-builder, is severe with bad archi- tects who build houses so weakly that they fall in and kill the owners : in such a case he kills the architect. But he is singularly equitable and mild with a man who is drawn into a quarrel in which blows are passed, and who unthinkingly wounds or kills his opponent ; if he can take an oath that he acted " without knowledge or without will," he has only to pay the physician if the man is wounded, and half a mina of silver if the man is killed and was of free birth. Here there is no mention of the blood-feud, and Babylonian society seems wholly to have escaped from that dangerous principle of tribal barbarism.^ Neither is there any hint of the inherent impurity of all bloodshed, whatever is the manner of the shedding ; and it seems that this society was no longer in bondage to that rehgious feeling, to which our modern moral sense concerning murder is in many ways indebted, but which is often obstructive of legal and ethical progress, and which coloured so deeply the early Judaic and Hellenic law of homicide. Further, we note that Hammurabi's code has come to allow the consideration of motives ' The son of the slain man could claim compensation for man- slaughter. In an Assyrian document a slave-girl is handed over to the son at the grave of the slain man. This is interesting, for it seems to point to some consideration for the feelings of the ghost [vide Johns, op. cit-, p. ii6). THE DEITIES AS SOCIAL-POWERS 131 and extenuating circumstances ; and in this, vital respect it ranks with modern civilised legislation. Between such a society and the proto-Hellenic com- munity, at least in regard to the view of homicide, there was a great gulf fixed. But for the present let us pursue the code further. Another crime that early society regards with religious horror, and of which religion always takes cognisance, is incest. The enactments of the code deal only with three cases : incest with daughter, mother, and stepmother ; in the first, the sinner is driven from the land, probably into perpetual exile ; in the second, both parties are burned aHve ; in the third, he is merely driven from the paternal house. The first two punishments reveal, I think, religious feeling, stronger in the second case than in the first : the sinner pollutes the land, therefore the pollution must be purged by his flight, or when most deadly must be purged away by fire ; for execution by burning had often the religious significance of a holo- caust. Still it is only by surmise that we detect religious colour in the code at this point : in fact, it emerges clearly only in a few clauses. We note that the code allows of expurgation by oath-taking ; so did the early Greeks and our own forefathers, and the practice is not distinctive of any particular people or group. The code allows the ordeal in certain cases, as did the Greek, and as probably every community has done at a certain stage of religious feeling ; also civilised Babylon counten- anced trials for witchcraft, and enacted a similar water- ordeal to that which prevailed In England till fairly recent times. One clause is of interest as showing that Hammurabi was not afraid of any opposition from the priesthood if he wished to tax Church property ; for he enacts that 132 GREECE AND BABYLON the ransom of his captured feudal followers (about whom he is particulurly thoughtful) " shall be paid out of the property of the temple nearest to the place where they were taken prisoners. "^ But the most interesting part of the code from the religious point of view, are the enact- ments concerning a class of women who are devoted to the service of religion, sisters or wives, as they are here called, of Marduk : but it wiU be more convenient to consider these later on when the question of ritual is dealt with. Apart from this great document, I do not know if further evidence is forthcoming of the precise influence of religion on the social system of Babylonia. The two spheres may once have been closely interdependent ; but we can see from the earliest legal contracts that law had already freed itself from religion in the main ; the judge is a secular authority ; ^ the scribe who draws up the contracts is a professional notary, and it is not clear that he had any necessary connection with the temples ; ^ we only hear of certain elders who assisted the judge, many of whom were temple officials or members of the guild of Shamash votaries ; * also, we find trials taking place in the temples, especially the temple of Shamash at Sippara, where the legal judgment was caUed " the judgment of Shamash in the house of Shamash." ^ Much light has yet to come, no doubt, from Babylon, and new light perhaps from Anatolia, to illuminate the part played by religion in the evolution of society. We would wish to know more concerning the rehgious side of family institutions, whether, for instance, there was any direct cult of the family hearth to which the Hellenes owed so much. Robertson Smith definitely denies that ' Vide Johns, op. cit., p. 77. ' Op. cit., p. 83. 3 Op. cit.; p. 85. * Op. cit., p. 86. ^ ' Op. cit., p. 90. THE DEITIES AS SOCIAL-POWERS 133 any of the Semitic races knew of such an institution ; and he is very probably right, for it belongs* more naturally to the colder climates, where the fixed and carefully placed hearth is a necessary centre of the dweUing-room, than to the hotter, where the inhabitants could be content in winter with a movable brazier. Yet one text at least may be cited to prove, if rightly inter- preted, that the hearth could be occasionally deified in a Babylonian liturgy ; for in a hymn to Nusku the fire-god, which contains a litany of absolution from sins, we find the phrase, " May the hearth of the house deliver you and absolve you," ^ but the same litany speaks also of the canals as deified. And we may value these two examples of that polydaimonism to which we could find parallels in early Hellas. But this evidence does not point to any established and regulated hearth- worship which might serve as the religious bond of family morality. More than one inscription, however, attests the worship of a family house-god (ilu-biti), to whom it seems a small domestic chapel was consecrated.^ Similarly, we have in HeUas Zeus ''E.pxeTo? and ZsO? Kr^aiog. And the Baby- lonian ilu-biti is mentioned, in association with a divinity of the street, ila-stlki, — a name which reminds us of Apollo 'Ayvisv?. Only, these household and street- divinities in Babylon may have been mere " daimones " rather than hoi; nor is it clear whether these family cults were ancestral, the heritage of a particular clan, or whether they were merely consecrated to the personal protective deity of the householder, or what part they played in the family organisation, for instance, in the ' Translated by Scheil in Rev. de I'hist. des Religions, 1897, p. 205. 2 Zimmern in K.A.T?, p. 455 ; cf. his Beitrdge zur Kenntniss der Babyl. Religion, ii. p. 147, "for the House-God, the House-Goddess, for the House-daimon thou shalt erect three altars." 134 GREECE AND BABYLON marriage-ceremonies, births, and adoptions. So far as I have been able to study them, the Babylonian litanies and hymns seem rarely to reflect the religious side of the family Ufe ^ ; they are prompted by the needs of the city and the empire, or by the emotional crises of the indi- vidual soul. The legal contracts preserved on the brick tablets throw some light on the forms of the marriage ceremony, which appears to have been performed usually in a registration-office rather than a church. There must surely have been also some religious side to it ; but the only evidence, so far as I am aware, is a very curious and doubtful document that has been published by Dr. Pinches, containing details of a religious ceremony which appears to be part of a bridal. ^ I will not quote the quaint and bizarre formulae, as the renderings are said to be highly conjectural : if they prove correct, one may judge that the service belongs to a highly advanced religion; but I cannot adduce any parallel to it from other peoples. As for the ritual or religious feeling connected with adoption or birth, I am not aware that the documents have so far disclosed anything : it is stated vaguely by Peiser, in his sketch of Babylonian society, that adoption at Babylon might be prompted by a religious motive, namely, by the desire of the child- less parents to have an heir who might continue the ancestor-worship of the family. But no document is quoted in proof of this ; and it is very doubtful if we ought to speak of Babylonian ancestor-worship.^ We may suspect that the writer has been misled by the ' For exceptions, vide infra, pp. 213, 217. ' Vide Johns, op. cit., p. 133 ; quoting from paper by Dr. Pinches in Proceedings of the Victoria Institute, 1892-93, " Notes on some recent Discoveries in the Realm of Assyriology." " Johns, op. cit., p. 154, etc., treats Babylonian adoption wholly as a secular business based on secular feelings. THE DEITIES AS SOCIAL-POWERS 135 well-known facts of Vedic, Hellenic, and Roman family cult. • In this, as in other respects, we may feel how advanced, modern and secular, was Babylonian society. No trace has appeared as yet of the tribal or phratric system ; the family is the unit of the State, but individualism is much developed. On the other hand, the function of religion as a constructive force in early Greek society, in the evolution of tribal and intertribal law, is more obvious and trans- parent, for in this land we are fortunate enough to catch glimpses of civihsed society in its making, which are denied to us in Mesopotamia. Hellenic religion penetrated every domain and department of Hellenic life to an even greater degree than did Babylonian religion the society of Babylon. And yet the Greek mind as it develops becomes pronouncedly secular, at least in comparison with the Oriental. The con- tradiction is only apparent. The Hellene used religion as an instrument for constructing his social order, for utilitarian ends, as a serviceable minister that could rarely, and never for long, establish a tyranny. He even used it to assist and glorify his sports, yet he varied and arranged these according to his pleasure. The detrimental tendency of religion to petrify custom was less marked in his midst than elsewhere ; as usual, it often lagged behind in the progress of the race, yet it followed the progress on the whole, and often assisted it. I cannot here give a detailed account of the social functions of Greek religion ; and some of its more interesting phenomena I have tried to analyse in detail in my Hibbert Lectures and in various chapters of my Cults : one of the most important of the special questions, the social or political influence of the cults of ancestors. 136 GREECE AND BABYLON entered into the course that I dehvered last year. I will only attempt here a brief indication of the salient facts that will repay special study, confining myself as far as possible to those that belong to the proto- Hellenic period. Our knowledge, of course, of the relation of religion to the social order of life, law, and morality in the second millennium in Greece, is only dim and hypothetical : here and there Homer affords us glimpses ; for the rest, we have legends and cult evidence which must be carefully and tactfully used. I have already touched on the religious character of the ancient kingship, and the evidence of the religious origin of some of the Hellenic 'xo'kug. It is probable that some of the deities had already in the proto-HeUenic period a political character, as deities of the assembly or the " agora." Thus Apollo 'Ayvnvg, at first a divine leader of the invasion, becomes, when the conquerors settle on the land, at once a divinity of the city ; and some scholars would derive his very name from the amlXx, the political assembly. In order to ensure the settlement and development of law, the debates and judgments in the market-place must be secured from armed disturbance such as frequently threatened the peace of the Icelandic Thing : therefore, in pre- Homeric days the market-place was consecrated as a holy place, and the elders who give judgment " hold in their hands the sceptres of clear- voiced heralds."^ These words probably refer to the artpixnov, the badge of Hermes, the god of the market-place, which as a religious amulet confers inviolability on the bearer. The same fetich-badge, giving security to the herald and ambassador, assisted the development of inter- national law ; and the only spiritual sanction of treaties 1 II.. i8, 505. THE DEITIES AS SOCIAL-POWERS 137 and covenants with other communities was a reUgious one, the force of the oath sworn and the ordeal-ritual which accompanied the conclusion of a treaty or contract. The temple on the borderland of different tribes served as a secure place for intertribal intercourse, commercial and festive, and might become the centre of an Am- phictyony, or federal union of tribes. The constitution of the Delphic Amphictyony points back to the proto- Hellenic period. The oracles were beginning in the second millennium to play a political part, as they did with greater effect in the first. For Zeus was already at Dodona, and ApoUo, the political god par excellence, at Pytho. Our indications are slight and dim ; but the poet of the Odyssey seems to be aware that an o/Aip^ or oracular deliverance might be used to dethrone a royal dynasty.! The dedication of a tithe of the captives taken in war to ApoUo was a custom connected with the earliest settlements and migration, for Apollo disposed of his captives by colonising them on some vacant land. The practice appears to have been a very early one, for this is the legend of the pre-Dorian settlement of the Dryopes in the Peloponnese ; ^ also there is evidence for the institution in pre-historic Greece of that religious system of colonisation which the Latins called the Ver Sacrum.^ In fact, the religion of Apollo, especially the common worship of ApoUo UuSasOc, served more than any other cult as a bond of connection between the independent communities already — I believe — in pre-Homeric days ; and to this earhest epoch may belong that interesting ritual of the Hyperborean offerings brought by sacrosanct Hellenic pilgrims down from the north along the primeval routes of the Aryanimmigration.* 1 Od., 3, 215. ^ Vide Cults, iv. pp. 201-202. » lb., p. 202. * lb., pp. 104-106. 138 GREECE AND BABYLON The narrower systems of family and phratry tell the same story of the constructive power of religion. The primitive grouping into septs and phratries and tribal subdivisions, of which the traces are not yet discovered in the civilisation of Babylon, has left its deep imprint on historic Greek society ; and religion is intimately interwoven with the domestic and phratric cults, not only in that these are much concerned with worship of heroes and ancestors, but that the high divinities also, Zeus ^pdrpiog, Athena Oparp/a and ' ATKToupia, take these institutions under their charge. Hence all adoptions and admissions of new members into the phratry had to be performed at the altar. The marriage ceremony was a religious ritual — in Attica, at least, a religious communion like the Roman Con- farreatio,^ and the mutual duties of parents and children, kinsmen and tribesmen, were consecrated by the early ideas concerning the divine nature.^ A festival such as the ' ATocrovpicc, instituted to cement a social organisation, and to all appearances of great antiquity, has nothing like it in the Babylonian festival calendar, so far as I am aware ; and again, to the many political and social titles of the Hellenic divinities such as UoXisO;, 'Ayopalog, Tlcii>iri(juog, Bou- Ka7o{, it would be hard to find parallels in the cult- terminology of Babylon. In considering a religion under its social or legal aspects, the laws concerning homicide will often yield telling evidence. There is a whole aeon of develop- ment dividing the code of Hammurabi and the Homeric and pre-Homeric theory in this matter. The Baby- lonian had arrived, as we have seen,^ in some indefinitely ^ Vide my Cults, iii. pp. 80-81. ^ lb., pp. 53-55. " Vide supra, pp. 129-131. THE DEITIES AS SOCIAL-POWERS 139 early period at the conception of murder as a crime against the whole State, at what we may call i?he ad- vanced secular point of view. In Greece that conception is post-Homeric : the Homeric and pre-Homeric societies were still in the stage of law in which homicide is treated as a private affair of the kinsmen, a matter to be settled by the blood-feud or weregild. Only in certain cases it was a sin, namely, when the slain person was a sup- pliant or a kinsman. The religious feeling in respect of the first partly arises from the old Aryan Hearth-worship ; ^ in respect of the second, it is associated with a primitive tribal horror of shedding kindred blood : and, though the feeling of the religious sanctity of the guest, the suppliant, and the kinsman was strong in Semitic com- munities, I cannot find any special Babylonian cult that is analogous to that of Zeus MuXiy^iog, or 'Ixsaios, or asviog. I have traced elsewhere the development in the ninth and eighth centuries of the more civilised legislation concerning homicide in Greece, and I have tried to indicate the precise part played by religion in aiding the evolution : ^ to get to the facts one must specially study the worship of Athena and Apollo. I have connected it with a growing sense of the impurity of bloodshed, which might express itself in a definite religious way, as fear of the ghost or of the offended deity. It is open to us to explain this increased sen- sitiveness concerning purity as a mark of Oriental influence, which was reaching Greece in the first millen- nium B.C. But at least we ought not to derive it from Mesopotamia until we find evidence of purifications from bloodshed as a common ritual in Babylonian religion, and the impurity of bloodshed an underlying ' Vide my Cults, v. p. 345. * Evolution of Religion, pp. 139-152. 140 GREECE AND BABYLON principle of the Babylonian law of murder. But, as we have seen, we discern here only the secular result : the religious force that may have worked towards it is too far removed in the background of the past. Sum- marily, we must conclude that the political application of Hellenic religion seems wholly a native and in- dependent product of the Hellenic spirit, and reflected the characteristically Hellenic forms of civic life. CHAPTER VIII. Religion and Morality. The comparison must also consider the relation in these various societies between religion and morality, both social and individual. From this point of view, as we are dealing with the second millennium only, it must be a comparison mainly between the Mesopotamian and the Hellenic ; for except for a few Hittite letters that reveal little, there is no evidence concerning our races of the west of Asia Minor, since monuments can scarcely be direct witnesses concerning ethics ; at least, the Asia Minor monuments are not, and we must await the further discovery and interpretation of Hittite literature. For the proto-Hellenic period also, it may be said, we have no explicit and direct evidence. But we have Homer, whose poems belong to the end of that period and the beginning of the second ; and we cannot suppose that the average morality that they represent had all grown up in the century before them, still less that Homer had discovered it as an original teacher. There- fore, cautiously and critically handled, his poems throw some light on the moral facts of the centuries behind them. There is also some evidence to be gleaned from the rich field of Greek mythology and cult ; only we must realise that we rarely can determine the date of the rise of an old Hellenic legend or the institution of an old Hellenic cult. The Mesopotamian evidence, 142 GREECE AND BABYLON then, is direct and explicit, depending solely on the right interpretation of documents ; the Hellenic evi- dence concerning the earliest period is indirect and often hypothetical. A careful study of all the sources will allow this induction, that the deities of this period in both societies are on the side of whatever morality is current, inspiring it, protecting it, and avenging the breach of it ; we are dealing, in fact, with a religion of personal moral powers. Concerning the Mesopotamian, this is a trite observation to make ; the most superficial glance of a few hymns confirms it. Shamash is the great god of justice, the protector of the weak ; Enlil " destroyeth the evil-minded " ; ^ Ishtar judges the cause according to right — she maintains the right of the oppressed and the downcast ; Righteousness and Judgment are the sons of Shamash. Ga-tum-duga, "she who produces good," is an appellative of Bau.^ And yet this is not the whole account. The destructive and evil character of some of the deities in Mesopotamia occasionally appears in the hymns, and is expressed apparently in certain titles. This might be the case at times when those deities are addressed that were powers of death and the lower world; for instance, Nergal, the lord of destruction ; Isum, a little-known deity to whom a phrase is attached that is said to mean " the exalted murderer." ^ And this might be explained by the fact that these powers personified, as it were, the baneful forces of nature, or, as perhaps in the case of Martu, whom Jeremias cites as one of the evil gods, were aliens.* 1 Zimmern, Babylonische Hymnen und Gebeie, p. 20. 2 Pinches, op. cit., p. 77. ' Vide Jeremias, Bab. Assyr. Vorstellungen vom Leben nach dent Tode, p. 68. * Zimmern, K.A.T.', pp. 433-434- RELIGION AND MORALITY 143 We find also the name of an obscure deity, " Ira," who was a god of pestilence, and at times identified with Nergal ; ^ but that a direct cult was attached to him in this baneful character is not shown. And it is unlikely that any Babylonian deity was worshipped definitely as an evil power : moral speculation could always explain the evil that he appeared to work as a punishment for sin or as righteous vengeance on the enemy ; that is to say, the evil element becomes moralised, and the worshipper is always convinced that the god can become good to him. Thus in the same context Nergal is called the " Lord of Destruction," and yet he is " the god of the little ones, he of the beneficent visage." ^ The dark storm-god Adad, before whose wrath the high gods rise up in terror, the pitiless one, can yet be implored as " the merciful among the great gods." ^ This transformation, by which a destructive nature-power could become a benevolent being, follows a law of religious psychology, which expresses itself in the quasi-magical phraseology of prayer. The worshipper wishes to get some good from his deity or some mercy : therefore he calls him good and merciful, feeling that such spell-words con- strain the god to be so ; and belief will arise from the continual repetition of formulae. Therefore, by the time our record begins, all the deities that the Baby- lonian and Assyrian worshipped are beneficent on the whole : the Epic of Creation supposes the existence of primeval bad powers, but these had been conquered, and some pardoned, by Marduk. The evil personal agencies that remained active were demons, and these > Zimmern, op. cit., pp. 412, 587. 2 Langdon, op. cit., p. 83. * Roscher, Lexikon, vi. p. 47, s.v. " Ramman." 144 GREECE AND BABYLON were not worshipped, but exorcised or averted by the good gods.i And this may serve as a fairly accurate description of the moral character of Greek religion at that stage of development where Homer presents it to us. The high deities are worshipped on the whole as moral beings and as beneficent : that is, as the guardians of the social morality of the period, whatever that was. The usual popular writer does not perceive this, because he is always liable to the error of confusing mythology with worship, and supposing that if the mythology is licentious or immoral, the deity is worshipped in that character. All students of mythology and religion are aware that this is false. We might be able to show that the religious imagination and statement of Homer at times fall below the level of contemporary cult, at times rise above it. At any rate, he is evidently addressing a world of re- ligious-minded people, who impute their own moral ideals to their highest divinities, especially to their high god Zeus. Ns/ASff/j, the social feeling of indigna- tion which is at the psychic basis of social morality, is the common emotion excited both in gods and men by the same acts ; and though much of Greek religion was still not yet penetrated with morality, the higher personal gods were generally regarded as on the side of righteousness. One or two Greek myths, such as that of Prometheus, as Hesiod narrates it, might suggest that the deity was not necessarily conceived as the friend, but sometimes even as the enemy, of man. But Hesiod's narrative does not strike us as primitive or 1 Certain other minor powers or daimones, such as the corn-deity, the Lord of Watercourses (Shuqamunu), may have remained purely " functional," and have acquired no moral attributes beyond the beneficent exercises of their special function. But the habitual Babylonian tendency is to moralise all the gods and goddesses. RELIGION AND MORALITY 145 popular ; and, at any rate, such a view is inconsistent with the earliest stage of worship that we can discover or surmise. The poets and philosophers might dislike Ares ; but the Hellenes, who worshipped him, did not worship him as an evil god, with apotropaeic rites : nor is it proved or likely that any deity to whom actual service was paid, was regarded as in his nature male- ficent by his worshippers. The dread powers of the lower world were also givers of vegetation. The Erinyes had scarcely a recorded cult, and their wrath was moralised as righteous indignation ; nor was ghost-cult, when it arose, merely a service of terror and aversion. It is a striking confirmation of the view here expressed, that among the very long list of cult-appellatives attached to the Greek divinities, some of which have a moral value, there are only two doubtful examples of an evil connotation attaching to the word.^ We may affirm generally, then, that the Meso- potamian and Hellenic religions are more or less on the same level of thought in respect of the moral and benefi- cent character of the deities. But careful study of the Hellenic will give us the impression that the terrible and destructive power of divinity is far less emphasised by cult than it was in the Eastern Semitic world. Every deity might be dangerous if neglected, and cer- tainly would be if insulted. The idea of the " jealous god " is non-moral, and can easily become immoral : that is, it tends to divorce the conception of the divine character from the purely human moral ideal. And this idea is palpable not only in the Hellenic and Meso- potamian, but still more in the Judaic religion, and our own religion is not yet delivered from it. But apart ''A0floSiVi7 &vSpop does not indicate a virgin-goddess. M. Reinach is, in my opinion, right in explaining it as " the apartment of the maidens " where the maiden priestesses assembled (Bull. Corr. Hell., 1908, p. 499). PURITY A DIVINE ATTRIBUTE 171 bined the two concepts in one personality we do not know. When we examine legends and ritual, "usually dateless, of early Hellas, we are aware that a goddess who was worshipped as a Maid in one locality might be worshipped as a Mother in another; or the same goddess at different times of the year might be wor- shipped now under one aspect, now under another. Hera of Argos yearly renews her divinity by bathing in a certain stream. Kore, the young earth-goddess, was probably an early emanation from Demeter. How powerful in pre-Hellenic days was the appeal of the virginal aspect of certain goddesses, is shown by the antiquity and the tenacity of the dogma concerning the virginity of Artemis and Athena. Yet the latter was called M^rt^p at Elis^. But it would be very rash to declare that here at last the Virgin-Mother is found in old Greece. Athena has no offspring ; there is neither loss nor miraculous preservation of her virginity. Only the Elean women, wishing themselves to be mothers, pray to the Virgin-goddess for offspring, and strengthen their prayer by applying a word to Athena of such powerful spell-efficacy as "Mother." It would be a misinterpretation of the method of ancient hieratic speech to suppose that Athena M^r;jp was mystically imagined as herself both Virgin and Mother.^ The ritualistic value of purity was probably a postu- late of the religious feeling of early Hellas, though Homer gives us only faint glimpses of the idea. Vide Langdon, Transactions of Congress of Rel., 1908, i. p. 254. * Zimmern, Babylon. Hymn. u. Gebete, p. 27. ' Langdon, Sumerian and Babylonian Psalms, p. 269. * Keilinschr. Bibl. (Schrader), vol. ii. pt. ii. p. 69. '* iv. R. 3, 5 ; quoted by Jeremias in Bab. Assyr. Vorstell. vom Leben nach dem Tode. * Keilinschr. Bibl., iii. 2, p. 11. THE RELIGIOUS TEMPERAMENT 193 and sighs, the countenance bowed to the ground, the body cleaving to the pavement, these are not part of his ritual ; the wrath of God was felt as a communal more often than as an individual misfortune, and in any case was averted, not by emotional outpourings of the individual heart, but by ritual acts, solemn choruses, soothing sacrifice and §ongs, or by special piacular lustrations that wiped off the taint of sin. Tears are never mentioned,^ except indirectly in the fictitious lamentations for some buried hero, annually and ceremoniously lamented, such as Achilles. Nor can we find in earlier Hellenic ethic the clear recogni- tion of fear and humility among the religious virtues, * while both are paraded in the inscriptions of the later Babylonian kings, even in those that reveal a monstrous excess of pride.' The Hellenic god might punish the haughty and high-minded, he did not love the grovelling, but rather the man of moderate life, tone, and act. Such is God for the civic religion of the free man ; while the Babylonian liturgy reflects the despotic society. The Hellene, for instance, does not try to win for himself the favour of the divinity by calling himself his slave. And the common phrase found on the Greek Christian tombs, iovkog rov Qsov, has passed into Christianity from Semitic sources.* This single fact illustrates, perhaps better than any^ other, ' In Aesch. Agam., 1. 70, the words aSre SaKpiur are spurious, as I have argued in Class. Review, 1897, p. 293. * We might perhaps infer their recognition from the occasional use of the word SeunSai/iuiv in a partly good sense, e.g. Aristot. Pol., 5, II, 25; Xen. Ages., 11, 8; but its bad sense is more emphasised by Theophrastos in his " Characters." ' Nebukadnezar (of all people) calls himself more than once " the humble, the submissive," e.g. Keilinschr. Bibl., iii. p. 63. * We find the phrase SoffXos iiUrepoi also in the Greek magic papyri, but these are charged with the Oriental spirit ; Kenyon, Greek Pap., i. p. 108, 11. 745-6. 13 194 GREECE AND BABYLON the different temper of the old Oriental and old European religions ; and there is a curious example of it in the bilingual Graeco-Phoenician inscription found in Malta, commemorating a dedication to Melkarth or to Herakles ' ApXifiyirris : the Phoenicians recommend themselves to the god as " thy slaves," the Greeks use neither this nor any other title of subservient flattery. In this connection it is well to note the significance of marking the body of the worshipper by branding, cutting, or tattooing with some sign that consecrated him as slave or familiar follower to the divinity. The practice, which may have been of great antiquity, though the evidence is not earlier than the sixth century B.C., was in vogue in Syria, Phrygia, and in early Israel, and was adopted by some Christian enthusiasts, but no proof of it has yet been adduced from Mesopotamia. It was essentially un-Hellenic, but was apparently followed by some of the Dionysiac thiasoi as a Thracian tradition. 2 In fact, it is only in the latest periods that we find in Hellas an individual personal religion approaching the Babylonian in intensity. The older cult was com- munal and tribal rather than personal ; even the household gods, such as Zeus Kr^ffiog and 'Epxtlog, the gods of the closet and storehouse, the hearth-goddess, were shared by the householder in common with the nearest circle of kindred. These cults were partly utilitarian, and the moral emotion that they quickened was the emotion of kinship : they do not appear to have inspired a high personal and emotional faith and trust. Nor usually had the average Hellene of the ' C. /. Sem., I, No. 122. " These facts are collected and exposed in a valuable article by Perdrizet In Archiv. fur Relig. Wissensch., 191 1, pp. 54-129; cf. Revue des Etudes anciennes, 1910, pp. 236-237 ; Hell. Journ., 1888, pi. vi. THE RELIGIOUS TEMPERAMENT 195 earlier period the conception of a personal tutelary divinity who brought him to life, and watched over his course, preserving, rebuking, and interceding for him. The Babylonian fancy of the great king sitting in infancy on the lap of the goddess and drinking milk from her breasts would not commend itself to the religious sense in Greece. In Mesopotamia and in the other Semitic communities the fashion of naming a child after the high god or goddess was very common — commoner I am inclined to think than in Hellas, though in the latter country such names as Demetrios, ApoUodoros, Zenon, Diogenes, point to the same religious impulse ; but they appear to have arisen only in the later period. The Hellenic language did not admit, and Hellenic thought would not have approved of, those mystic divine names, which express as in a sacred text some quality or action of the divinity, such as we find in the Bible (" the Lord will provide "), and in pre-Islamitic inscriptions of Arabia, Ili-kariba, "My God hath blessed"; Ili-azza, "My God is mighty " ; Ili-padaja, " My God hath redeemed."* Such names served as spells for the protection of the child, and are speaking illustrations of the close per- sonal dependence of the individual upon the god. This is also illustrated by another fashion, possibly ancient, of Semitic religious nomenclature : not only was the individual frequently named after the deity, but the deity might sometimes receive as a cult-title the name of the individual. Of this practice among the polytheistic Semites the only examples of which I am aware come from a late period and from the region of Palmyra : Greek inscriptions of the late Imperial era give such curious forms as 0soV 'AwjO-ov, Qsog 1 Vide O. Weber, Arabien vor dem Islam, p. 21. 195 GREECE AND BABYLON Ovuffsoidov, 0£oV 'Afjtjipov:^ and these descriptive names in the genitive must designate the principal worshipper or founder of the cult ; they are mostly un-Greek, as the religious custom certainly is, which is illustrated by such ancient Biblical expressions as "the God of Abraham," "the God of Jacob." We may find an example of the same point of view in the Phrygian title of M^c Oapva^oo in Pontus, if we take the most probable explanation, namely, that it is derived from the Persian Pharnakes, the founder of the cult ; ^ and again in a Carian dedication to Zeus Panamaros 'Apyvpov, as "Apyupo? is found in the same neighbourhood as the name of a living man.^ The only parallel that Hellenic religion offers is the doubtful one, Athena Aiai/ri?, whose temple is recorded at Megara : * it may be that the goddess took her title from the hero because his grave was once associated with the temple. In any case, it is not so striking that the mythic hero should stand in this intimate relation with the deity as that the living individual should. The ecstatic and self - prostrating adoration of divinity which is characteristic of the Babylonian temper might manifest itself at times in that excess of sentiment that we call sentimentality : we catch this tone now and again in the childlike entreaties with which the supplicator appeals to the deity as his father or mother; in the poetic pathos of the hymns to Tam- muz, which sometimes remind us of the sentimentality * Dittenberg, Orient. Graec. Inscr., 619 (=Lebas-Waddington, Inscr., iii. 2393) ; the reading here is Qeiw kiinbv, probably a mistake for AiiMoC; cf. Lebas-Wadd., 2395 and 2455. " Vide B.oschei' s Lexikon, ii. p. 2752. ' Vide ib., iii. p. 1496. * Cults, vol. i., "Athena," R. 966 (Paus., 1,42,4); as regards " Apollo Sarpedonios " we are uncertain whether the title was not merely local-geographical. THE RELIGIOUS TEMPERAMENT 197 of some of our modern hymns : he is called " Lord of the tender voice and shining eyes " ; " he of the dove- like voice." 1 Such language may be called " hypo- koristic," to use a Greek phrase ; it belongs to the feminine sentiment in religion, and we are familiar with it in our own service. No echo of it is heard in the older Greek religious literature nor in any record of Greek liturgy. We can, indeed, scarcely pronounce on the question as to the tone to which primitive Greek wailing-services were attuned. We hav,e only a few hints of some simple ancient ritual of sorrow : the pre-Homeric Greek may have bewailed Linos and Hyakinthos, as we hear that the Elean women in a later period bewailed Achilles ; but if, indeed, the frag- ment of a Linos-threnody that the Scholiast on Homer has preserved for us is really primitive,^ it has some pathos, but much brightness and nothing of the Baby- lonian sentimentality. The spirit of the Greek religious lyric strikes us as always virile, and as likely to be unsympathetic with the violent and romantic expression of sorrow or with endearing ecstasy of appeal. The other trait that should be considered here in the religious spirit of the Mesopotamian Semites is fanaticism, an emotional quality which often affords a useful basis of comparison between various religions. This religious phenomenon is best known by its deadly results ; but in itself it is most difficult to define, as are other special moral terms that imply blame and are highly controversial. It is only found among those who feel their religion so deeply as to be relatively in- different to other functions of life. We impute fanati- ' Langdon, op. cit., pp. 309, 321 ; cf. the lines in the hymn, p. 335 : " I am the child who upon the flood was cast out — Damu, who on the flood was cast out, the anointed one who on the flood was cast out." * Bergk's Lyr. Graec, iii. p. 654. 198 GREECE AND BABYLON cism when the tension of religious feeling destroys the moral equilibrium or stunts development of other parts of our nature, or prompts to acts which, but for this morbid influence, would excite moral indignation. It may display itself in the artistic and intellectual sphere, as by iconoclasm or the suppression of arts and sciences ; or in the discipline of individual life, as by over-ascetic self-mortification. Its coarsest and most usual mani- festation is in war and the destruction of peoples of alien creed. A war or a slaughter is called fanatical, if its leading motive is the extermination of a rival religion, not for the sake of morality or civilisation, but as an act in itself acceptable to one's own jealous god. The ascetic type of fanaticism is specially a product of the Far East : the murderous type is peculiar to the Semitic spirit, when unchastened by a high ethical sympathy or a sensitive humanism ; for the chief record of it is in the pages of the history of Israel, Islam, and Christianity, so far as this last religion has been in bondage to certain Semitic influence. It is a question of interest whether we find fanaticism of this type in the Mesopotamian area and in the ancient polytheistic communities of the Western Semites. We might expect to find it because of the intensity of the religious spirit that seems to have been a common inheritance of all these stocks. The more fervent the worship, the more is the likelihood that the dangerous idea of a " jealous " god will emerge, especially when races are living under the illusion of the " fallacy of names." By a fatal logic of devotion, the jealous god may be thought to favour or ordain the destruction of those who worship the deity under other names, which meant, for the old world, other gods. Only this must be carefully distinguished from the other more innocent THE RELIGIOUS TEMPERAMENT 199 idea, proper to all tribal religions, that the deity of the tribe, like a good citizen, will desire victory for his people's arms. As regards Mesopotamia, in his History of Ancient Religions Tiele finds in Assyrian history the same traces of murderous fanaticism as in Israelitish.^ So far as I have been able as yet to collect the evidence, this statement- appears to contain some exaggeration. For I have not found any record of a war that an Assyrian or Babylonian ruler undertakes at the command of a " jealous god " against a people whose only offence is an alien worship. The motives for a war appear to be of the ordinary human and secular kind ; Palestine, for instance, is attacked, not because Marduk or Asshur personally hates Jahw6, but because the country holds the key of the route to Egypt. Such Biblical narratives as the destruction of Jericho, Ai, and the Amalekites find no real parallel in Mesopotamian chronicles. Yet in these also the temper of homicidal religion is strong enough to be dangerous. Neither in the Babylonian nor in the Assyrian divinities is there any spirit of mercy to the conquered. On that early relief of Annabanini of the third millennium B.C., the goddess leads to the king the captives by a hook in their noses to work his will upon them.^ And in the later records of the great Assyrian Empire, the deities appear pro- minently as motive forces, and the most cruel treatment of captives is regarded as acceptable to them. The worst example that Tiele quotes is the great inscription of Assurbanipal, who, after speaking of himself as " the Compassionate, the King who cherishes no grudge," ^ naively proceeds to narrate how he tore out the tongues '■ Pp. 222-223. ' Vide supra, p. 42. ^ Keilinschr. Bibl., ii. p. 191. 200 GREECE AND BABYLON of the rebels of Babylon, hewed their flesh into small pieces, and flung it to the dogs, swine, and vultures ; and " after I had performed these acts, I softened the hearts of the Great Gods, my Lords." But the lines that follow suggest that what " softened their hearts " was not so much the tortures and massacres, which they might approve of without directly commanding, but the religious measures that Assurbanipal immediately under- took for the purification of Babylon, whose temples had been polluted with corpses. Again, Tiglath-Pileser iii. speaks of himself as the Mighty One " who in the service of Asshur broke in pieces like a potter's vessel all those who were not submissive to the will of his god" ;^ and a little later, Sargon recounts how " Merodach-Baladin, King of the Chaldaeans, . . . who did not fear the name of the Lord of Lords . . . broke the statues of the great gods and refused his present to me." ^ Yet it would be a misunderstanding to speak of these, as Tiele does, as if they were wars of religion, like the Crusades or the war against the Albigenses. Asshur sends the king to the war invariably, but rather for the sake of the king's profit and glory than for the propagation of Asshur's religion ; for his enemies are very frequently of the same religion as himself. The above phrases must be understood probably in a political sense rather than a religious ; the god and the king are so intimately associated that whoever insults or injures one, insults or injures the other. We may suspect that Merodach- Baladin's breach of the divine statutes consisted in his omitting to send his usual tribute to Sargon. When two men had spoken scornfully of the gods of Assurbani- pal, both the king and the gods would wish to avenge the insult : * it was natural, therefore, for Assurbanipal ^ Keil Bibl. , a. p. II. ' lb., p. 6g. ^ 76., p. 257. THE RELIGIOUS TEMPERAMENT 201 to torture and flay them. In warring against an alien people, the king is warring against alien gods ; there- fore if he sacks the alien city he may capture and take away, or — more rarely — destroy, the city's gods. Thus Asarhaddon had taken away the idols of Hazailu, King of Arabia, and of Laili, King of ladi ; but when these kings had made submission and won his favour he returned to them the holy images, having first inscribed them with his own ideogram and a mark of the might of Asshur : ^ thus the gods, having the brandmark of the great king and the imperial deity, become tributary divinities. Or if he wished to wipe a people out, the Assyrian conqueror might break their idols to dust. Thus Assurbanipal broke in pieces the gods of the Elamites — the most deadly foes of Babylon — and thereby " eased the heart of the Lord of Lords." ^ But many of the Elamite deities he led away ; and of one of them he speaks in terms of reverence, SaSinak, the god of destiny, " who dwells in hidden places, whose working no one sees." ^ It is more difficult to under- stand why Sanherib should boast to have destroyed the deities of Babylon after his capture of the city ; for the leading Babylonian divinities certainly belonged to the Assyrian Pantheon. The evidence here quoted justifies us in attributing fanaticism to the religious temper of Babylonia and Assyria ; not because the wars were evangelising, under- taken in the service of religion, but because the savage cruelty that accompanied them is deemed, as it is in the early Hebraic view, acceptable to the national gods. The idea of divine mercy is potent in the liturgies ; but neither morality nor religion would appear to have inculcated any mercy towards the alien foe ; and this lack 1 ifej7. BJ6Z., ii. pp. 133-134. ^ J6., pp. 203, 207. ' 76., p. 205. 202 GREECE AND BABYLON of moral sympathy may be termed a passive fanaticism. The same fanatic temper might be traced in the savagery of the punishments for offences against the State- religion, and was reflected also at times in the legal code.^ From other polytheistic Semitic communities we have no record, so far as I am aware, that bears on the phenomenon that we are considering, except the famous Moabite Stone, of which the style is in this respect strikingly Biblical. Mesha regards himself as sent by his god Chemosh to take Nebo from Israel, and he ex- plains why he slaughtered all within the walls, man, woman, and child, "for I had devoted it to Chemosh." Fanaticism does not so naturally belong to polytheism as to monotheism ; yet it seems that at times the poly- theistic Semites could be as prone to this vice of the religious temper as the monotheistic Israelites. Speaking generally, and in comparison with the ancient Semitic and the mediaeval and even later spirit of Europe, we must pronounce the Hellenic tempera- ment of the earlier and classical period as wholly innocent of fanaticism. The history of Hellas is not stained by any " war of religion " ; and no religious hierarchy in Hellas ever possessed the power or displayed the will to suppress art or persecute science and thought. It might occasionally happen that individuals were in danger of punishment if they insulted or openly flouted the civic worship or introduced new deities ; but that the State should protect itself thus is not fanaticism. The least tolerant of cities was the enlightened Athens. But her record in this matter is a spotless page com- ^ We note the indication of a cruel human sacrifice — consecration of a child to a god or goddess by fire — as a legal punishment for reopening adjudicated causes (Johns, Babylonian and Assyrian Laws, etc., p. 95). THE RELIGIOUS TEMPERAMENT 203 pared with the history of any later European State. HeUas owed this happy immunity to her cooler religious temper, to the equilibrium of the other life-forces within her, and to her comparative freedom from dark and cruel superstitious fears. It is specially in regard to such salient features of the religious temperament as we have been considering that the early Hellene asserted his spiritual independence of the East. CHAPTER XII. ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST. Religions are often found to differ fundamentally in their conceptions of the fate of the departed spirit of man, and in the prominence and importance they assign to the posthumous life. There is, in fact, a group of religions which we might term " other-worldly," because certain dogmas concerning the world after death are made the basis on which their aspirations and ideals of conduct are constructed ; to this group belong Christi- anity, Buddhism, Islam, and the old Egyptian creed. There are other religions, also of a highly developed type, in which eschatologic doctrine plays no forcible or constructive part either in the theology or in the ethics. Such were the Mesopotamian, primitive Juda- ism, and the early Hellenic. Our question concerning the evidences in the second millennium of Mesopotamian influences on the Western Aegean demands, then, at least a brief comparison of the Sumerian-Babylonian, and Hellenic eschatology. Our knowledge of the former is derived from certain epic poems, the Epic of Gilgamesh, " The Descent of Ishtar," and the poem dealing with the marriage of Nergal and Erishkigal, the Queen of the dead ; secondly, from a few inscriptions of various periods, alluding to burial or the status of the dead ; thirdly, and this is the most important source, from the recent excavations 204 ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST 205 of certain " necropoleis." 1 The Hellenic facts have been sufficiently set forth for the present purpose in a former series of lectures. In the picture of the lower world presented by the two literatures, a certain general agreement is discover- able, but none closer than they reveal with the con- ceptions of other peoples. Both accept as an un- doubted fact the continued existence of the soul after death, and both imagine this existence as shadowy, profitless, and gloomy. Both also vaguely locate the abode of the soul under the earth, with a downward entrance somewhere in the west.^ In both we find the idea of a nether river to be crossed, or " the waters of death"; 3 of a porter at the gates of "hell," and of a god and goddess as rulers of the lower world ; while the mountain of the Babylonian underworld on which the gods were supposed to have been born was unknown to Hellenic m}rthology.* Such coincidences are no criterion of a common origin of belief ; for these traits recur in the death-lore of many and widely scattered races. As against them, we must take into account certain salient differences. The lot of the departed in the Babylonian epic account appears drearier even than ^ Vide Dr. Langdon's paper on " Babylonian Eschatology;" in Essays in Modern Theology (papers ofiered to Professor Briggs, igii), p. 139. ' Vide Jeremias, Holle und Paradies, p. 30; cf. King, Bab. Rel., p. 46 — formula for laying a troubled and dangerous ghost — " let him depart into the west ; to Nedu, the Chief Porter of the Underworld, I consign him." The west was suggested to the Hellene because of the natural associations of the setting sun ; to the Babylonian, perhaps, according to Jeremias, op. cit., p. 19, because the desert west of Babylon was associated with death and demons. * The " waters of death " figure in the Epic of Gilgamesh, e.g. King, op. cit., p. 169. * Vide insci. of Sargon 11. in Keil. Bibl., ii. 2, pp. 75-77, 79: " Ea, Sin, Shamash, Nabu, Ramman, Ninib, and their benign spouses, who were rightfully born on Iharsaggalkurkurra, the Mountain of the Underworld." 2o6 GREECE AND BABYLON in the Homeric, just as the Babylonian reHgious poetry inclines to the more sombre tones and the more violent pathos. The dead inhabit " the house wherein he who enters is excluded from the light, the place where dust is their bread, and mud their food. They behold not the light, they dwell in darkness, and are clothed, like birds, in a garment of feathers ; and over door and bolt the dust is scattered." ^ This is more hopeless than the Homeric meadow of Asphodel, where the souls still pursue the shadow of their former interests, and some tidings of the earth may penetrate to give them joy. Also, the demoniac terrors of the lower world are more vividly presented in Babylonian than in Hellenic literature and art. The demons of disease that perform the bidding of Allatu, the Queen of Hell, are closely connected with the ghost-world ; we learn from the formulae of exorcism that the haunting demon that destroyed a man's vital energies might be a wandering spectre. " O Shamash, a horrible spectre for many days hath fastened itself on my back, and will not loose its hold upon me. ... he sendeth forth pollu- tion, he maketh the hair of my head to stand up, he taketh the power from my body, he maketh my eyes to start out, he plagueth my back, he poisoneth my flesh, he plagueth my whole body . . . whether it be the spectre of my own family and kindred, or the spectre of one who was murdered, or whether it be the spectre of any other man that haunteth me." ^ Now it is possible that the curse of the demon was powerful both in the earlier and later periods of ancient, as it is powerful to-day in modern, Greece ; the demon might be a ghost or a revenant. And it has ' Passage in " The Descent of Ishtar," Jeremias, op. cit., p. 20. " King, op. cit., pp. 43-46. ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST 207 been the ambition of a small group of scholars in this country to prove that the higher literature anfl art of Greece, that reveals so fair and sane an imagination of the unseen world, is only a thin veU drawn over much that was grotesque and ghastly in the popular super- stition. Even Homer reveals forms of terror in Hades ; and we have ugly tales of demons sucking blood, and ravaging the land like the Uoiv^ of Megara. It is not necessary to labour this point. Probably every ancient race has been sorely tried at one time or other by the burden of demonology ; even our hardy ancient kinsmen of Iceland had their vampires and strangUng ghosts, that figure occasionally in their saga. But the great peoples of our Western civilisation are those who have struggled free from this obsession into the light of progressive secular life. Such also — we have the right to believe — was the early Greek. To draw the distinction too sharply between the cultured and the uncultured strata may be a source of fallacy, especially when it is ancient Hellas that we are dealing with, where the artist was usually a man of the people and the people certainly delighted in the work of their poets, and were strangely susceptible to the healing influences of music. If Greek poetry, then, and art strove to banish the ugliest forms of the demon-world, and thereby worked with purifying and tranquillising influence on the temperament, so much the better for the Greek peasant. It is probably wrong, therefore, to regard the average Hellene as a night- mare-ridden man. But we might dare to say this of the Babylonian ; and his imaginary terrors were fostered by his religious liturgical poetry, and to some extent by his art. For most of his hymns are formulae of exorcisms, incantations against demons and spectres. But such liturgy played relatively a very small part in 2o8 GREECE AND BABYLON Greek ritual ; and this is one of the strongest facts that can be brought to witness against the theory of early Babylonian influence. Yet both the Greek and the Babylonian feared the miasma of the dead. Ishtar's threats at the portal of Hell, a tremendous outburst of infernal poetry, is a strong witness to this feeling : " Thou warder, open thy door, open thy door that I may enter in. If thou openest not thy door that I may not enter, I will crash thy door into splinters, I will burst the bolt, I will splinter the threshold and tear up the wings of the door : I will lead forth the dead that they shall eat and drink : the dead shall keep company with the living." What lends part of its force to this great passage is the dreadful thought that the living should be ■haunted by the multitude of the ghosts that would pollute the living person and the light of day. Shamash the sun-god is the natural enemy of ghosts, and is therefore appealed to in the incantation quoted just above to drive away the demon-spectres. He seems to stand here in the same relation of antipathy to the ghost -world as the " pure " Apollo stood for the Greek. The mode and the place of burial will often throw light on the feelings of the living in regard to the de- parted. The peoples of the Minoan-Mycenaean culture interred their dead, Homeric society cremated them, while the recent excavations have revealed that both systems were in vogue side by side throughout an indefinite period in Mesopotamia ; * and such being the facts, we cannot safely deduce from them any marked difference in spiritual beliefs. More illuminating is the fact that the pre-Homeric society in Greek lands appears generally to have buried its dead in or near their habita- ' Vide Langdon, op. cit. ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST 209 tions, as if they desired the companionship of the spirits, agreeing in this respect with the people of Gezer in Palestine.^ In Mesopotamia, thongh in very ancient times the dead were sometimes buried in temples, the fashion generally prevailed of establishing a necropolis outside the city, as was the rule also in post-Homeric Greece. This difference alone suggests that the fear of the ghost was less powerful in pre-Homeric Greece than in Mesopotamia. It is clear, however, that the Babylonian, like the Hellene, desired at times to enter into communion with the departed family-ghost ; for in Mesopotamia, as in Hellas, we have clear trace of " parentalia," communion- meals to which the ancestral spirits were invited to feast with the family. In the Babylonian phrase this was called "breaking bread with" the dead:^ the parallel facts in Hellas are familiar to students. Moreover, a certain general resemblance in the funeral ceremonies can be detected between the Eastern and Western peoples whom we are comparing. When we examine these, we discover that neither the Homeric nor the Babylonian epic-picture of the desolateness and futility of the life in Hades corresponded altogether with the popular faith as expressed in tomb-ritual. It is true to say of all races that burial customs and eschatological theory are never wholly harmonised by any coherent logic, and generally reveal discord between the dogma and the ritual. We can note this in ancient Hellas and among ourselves ; and the discovery of Baby- lonian graves reveals it in Mesopotamia. The things found in these, toys for children, cosmetics for girls,^ ' Cook, Religion of Ancient Palestine, p. 36. ' Vide Langdon, op. cit. ' Vide Prof. Margoliouth's article on " Ancestor- worship " in Hast- ings' Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics. 14 210 GREECE AND BABYLON show that the ideas so powerfully expressed in "The Descent of Ishtar" about the barrenness and naked- ness of the land of the dead were either not universally admitted or not acted upon. Those who equip the dead with some of the things that were of use and delight to the living must believe that the departed soul preserves a certain energy and power of enjoyment, though a gloomy poet among them may enlarge impressively on the emptiness of death. The unknown Assyrian king who describes in an inscrip- tion the sumptuous burial that he gave his father may not have been of the same mind as the poet of the Ishtar-epic concerning the laws of the Queen of Hell : " Within the grave The secret place In kingly oil I gently laid him. The grave-stone Marketh his resting-place. With mighty bronze I sealed its [entrance], I protected it with an incantation. Vessels of gold and silver, Such as my father loved. All the furniture that befitteth the grave, The due right of his sovereignty, I displayed before the Sun-God, And beside the father who begat me, I set them in the grave. Gifts unto the princes. Unto the spirits of the earth And unto the gods who inhabit the grave, I then presented." '■ What is the meaning of the act of exposing the gold and silver vessels to the sun-god Shamash before placing them on the grave ? Was it done to purify them by the aspect of the pure god and thus to fit them for the use '■ King's translation in Babyl. Relig., pp. 48-49. Cf. Jeremias, HoUe u. Paradies, p. 12. ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST 211 of the glorified dead ? The evidence of the deification of kings has been collected above. But the ceremony in question is unique, as far as I am aware. No doubt in ordinary Semitic burials there was great variety in the grave-offerings : in the graves of Gezer in Palestine, weapons, jewels, ostrich-eggs, seals, scarabs, amulets, small figures in human or animal form have been found. ^ In these practices the primitive Hellene and Semite were on the same level, nor is it likely that either was the pupil of the other. One important difference, important at least for our purpose, we can mark, which is connected with the difference between Hellenic and Oriental climate. The Hellenic ghost might take water among his offerings, and the neglected soul might be pitied for being acuSpo? ^ ; he might also eat his porridge in the Anthesteria ; but he preferred wine, and the offerings of blood — the a/^a«oop/a — and especially the sacrifice of animals. And we may gather from the painting on the Phaistos sarcophagus that the blood- oblation to the dead was part of the pre-Hellenic ritual in Crete. The triple-libation, also, that Homer mentions, of wine, honey-mead, and water, and which the later Greeks retained, may be regarded as a Minoan tradition, for its great antiquity among the Aegean people is attested by the libation-table found by Sir Arthur Evans in the cave of Zeus on Mount Dickte. Here there is no trace of the teaching of the Babylonian priest : nor in the blood-offerings to the dead. For the Babylonian ghost, parched with thirst in the intolerable heat of Mesopotamia, craved not blood — which, as far as I know, is never mentioned in the description of his funeral- ^ Cook, The Religion of Ancient Palestine, p. 35. * E.g. Eur. Troad., 1085, aii /liv (pBifUvos dXoixeis Mairros, &PvSpos, 212 GREECE AND BABYLON rites — but beer in the earliest period/ and in the later specially water. It is water that was supposed to make the deceased comparatively happy : " On a couch he Ueth And drinketh pure water. The man who was slain in battle. His father and his mother [support] his head, And his wife [kneeleth] at his side." * This is the lore that in the Epic of Gilgamesh is imparted to the hero by the ghost of his beloved Ea- bani, concerning the advantages of the man who gets due burial over him whose corpse is thrown out into the field, and whose soul wanders restlessly eating " the dregs of the vessel, the leavings of the feast, and that which is cast out upon the street." The spirit's need of water has been an ancient tra- dition of Semitic grave-tendance. It is expressed on one of the cylinders of Gudea;* and in the Curse of Hammurabi, which is a postscript to his code of laws, he swears that if a man breaks them " his spirit in the world below shall lack water."* Clay-cylinders in the museums of Paris and Berlin, that doubtless come from Mesopotamian graves, contain inscriptions expressing a blessing on the man who respects the dead, " may his departed spirit in the world below drink clear water." * The old idea survives in the belief of modern Islam that the soul of the dead yearns for nothing so much as that the rains or dews of heaven should fall refresh- ingly on the grave. * These simple differences in the oblations incline ' Langdon, op. cii. ^ King, op. cii., p. 176. ' Thureau-Dangin, Les cylindres de Goudia, p. 57 : Les heros morts . . . leur bouche aupr^s d'une fontaine il plaga. * Winckler, op. cit., p. 41. ° Jeremias, op. cit., p. 15. ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST 213 us to suppose that the primitive grave-ritual of Greece was developed independently of Babylon. Again, in Greece this tendance of the spirits, in the case of the great ones of the community — the king, the hero, or the priest — was undoubtedly linked at an early period with apotheosis of the dead ; and actual hero-cults and actual cults of ancestors became, as we have seen, a salient phenomenon of Greek religion. But if this phenomenon is to be noted at all in the Babylonian, it certainly was not salient. We know that under certain circumstances the king might be worshipped in his lifetime and after, but we do not yet know that the departed head or ancestor of the family received actual cult ; where this is asserted by modern scholars,^ it may be that they have not paid sufficient attention to the important difference that has been defined between the tendance and the worship of the dead.2 This at all events, on the evidence already placed before us, maybe said: in respect of the frequency and force of hero-worship, Mesopotamia stands at the opposite pole to Greece, and in testing the question of primitive religious influences of East on West this fact must be weighed in the scale. Evidence has been adduced pointing to an early Greek belief that the spirit of the departed ancestor might reincarnate itself in a descendant : a belief fairly common among savage peoples. I have not been able to find any indication of it in Baby- lonian records, nor am I aware of any trace of it among other Semitic peoples except, possibly, a late ' E.g. Peiser, Sketch of Babylonian Society, in the Smithsonian Institute, i8g8, p. 586, speaks as if it was ancestor-worship that held the Babylonian family together. ' ' Vide my article on " Hero-worship '' in Hibbert Journal, 1909, P- 417- 214 GREECE AND BABYLON Phoenician inscription from the tomb of Eshmunazar, King of Sidon about B.C. 300 : in the curse which he invokes against the violator of his tomb he prays that such a man's posterity may be rooted out : " May they have no root in the world below, nor fruit above, nor any bloom in the life under the sun." ^ These strange words contain the idea of a family-tree ; the fruit and the bloom are the living members who are in the light of the sun : the root are the ancestral spirits. If the figure is to be interpreted literally, we must regard these latter as the source of the life that is on the earth, and the curse would mean " may the de- parted ancestors no longer have the power to reappear in the living." But we cannot feel sure how much sense we can press into the words. So far, it appears that there was little or no com- munion according to Babylonian belief between the dead and the living, except at the family sacramental meal held after the funeral. Only the vexed and neglected soul of the unburied or the unhallowed dead returned to disturb the living. And perhaps at times the Babylonians, as the Israelites, resorted to " necro- mancy," the evocation of the dead by spells, so as to question them concerning the future. One evidence of this is the passage in the Epic of Gilgamesh, where the hero is able to evoke the spectre of his friend Eabani and question it. This was probably suggested by an actual practice, which is attested by such priestly titles, as " he who leads up the dead," " he who questions the dead." ^ In ancient Greece we have the further evidence, which is lacking in the Babylonian record, of actual vsxvofjbavrsici or shrines where the dead were ' V. Landau, Phonizische Inschr., p. 15. " Jeremias, HSUe u. Paradies, p. 37. ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST 215 consulted, and some of these may have descended from the pre-Homeric period; for the evocation of 'ghosts seems to have been specially practised in Arcadia, where so much primitive lore survived. As regards the higher eschatology, it would seem that the Babylonian of the earlier period had not advanced even as far as the Homeric, possibly the pre-Homeric, Greek. For even in Homer's picture of Hades and the after-life ^ there already is found this important trait — certain notorious sinners are punished, certain privileged persons like Menelaos may be wafted to blessedness ; while in Hesiod the idea is outspoken that many of the righteous and distinguished men of the past enjoy a blessed lot hereafter.^ Moreover, this important dogma of posthumous punishments and rewards is not confined to the world of mythic fancy in the Homeric epic, to personages such as Tantalos, Tityos, Menelaos : the average man in the Homeric period might not hope for happiness after death ; but if Homer is his spokesman he could fear special punishment, and the threat of it was already a moral force. There are two striking passages in the Iliad, of which the importance for our present question is often ignored : in iii. 278 there is reference to the two divinities whom, with Aristarchus, we must interpret as Hades and Persephone, who punish oath-breakers after death : in xix. 259 the same function of executing judgment in the nether world upon the souls of the perjured is as- cribed to the Erinyes : the context in both passages ' It would be idle for my purpose to distinguish between the so- called " Achaean " and " Pelasgian " elements in the Homeric N^Kuia ; even if the latter ethnic term was of any present value for Greek religion. ' Hesiod, 'TEp7. 1 10-170 (the men of the golden and the silver ages and the heroes). 2i6 GREECE AND BABYLON suggests that the poet is giving voice to a common popular beUef . And in regard to posthumous happiness, early Greece may have believed more than Homer reports. For who can determine how early this eschatologic hope came into the Eleusinian mysteries ? The " threats of hell and hopes of Paradise " were never wholly moralised even by later Greek thought ; but here are the germs discernible in the earliest stage of the religion from which a higher moral teaching and a new moral force might emanate. But those who have tried to discover similar ideas in the records of Babylonian eschatology have hitherto entirely failed. Certain phrases and certain mythic data may be, and have been, pressed to support the theory that Babylonian religion and ethics were not without some belief in judgment and resurrection ; ^ but it is overpressure, and the phrases may easily be misunderstood. No clear evidence points to Babylonian belief in posthumous judgment ; the title " god of judgment " attached to Nergal might have merely a political significance. Again, " awakener of the dead " is a fairly frequent epithet of many divinities ; but no context where it occurs suggests for it an eschatologic intention.^ In the story of Adapa, much of which is recovered from the Tel-El-Amarna tablets, we find reference to the " Food of Life " and the " Water of Life," ^ that the God of Heaven might have given to Adapa and thereby made him immortal ; and in the story of Ishtar's descent, it is said that Allatu kept the waters of life in '■Vide Zimmern in K.A.T.^, pp. 636-639; Jeremias, HoUe u. Paradies, p. 25 ; cf. his Die Babyl. Assyr. Vorsiellungen rom. Leben nach dem Tode. ^ Vide supra, p. 160. ' Zimmern, op. cit., p. 520 ; King, op. cit., p. 188. ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST 217 hell wherewith Ishtar was restored. But nowhere as yet has any hint been found that these waters *of life were available for any mortal man, and even Adapa, the son of a god, missed getting them. In the myth- ology of Babylon only one mortal, Utnapishtim, the Babylonian Noah, passes without death to some happy land and becomes immortal ; after the deluge Bel spake thus : " Hitherto hath Utnapishtim been of mankind, but now let Utnapishtim be like unto the gods, even us, and let Utnapishtim dwell afar off at the mouth of the river." ^ Again, as the kings might be considered divine in life, there was no difficulty in supposing that they joined the company of the gods after death, as was supposed in Egypt. The prayers offered to deities of the lower world by the Assyrian king on behalf of his father, in the tablet quoted above, may be thus explained ; the nether powers are entreated to offer no obstacles to his apotheosis. Other Semitic nations may have had the same belief concerning the future blessedness of the king ; at least an inscription of King Panammu of North Syria, vassal of Tiglath-Pileser iii., points to this, for his successor is urged to pray that " the soul of Panammu shall eat and drink with the good Adad." 2 But no evidence has as yet been gathered that the ordinary Babylonian expected any such distinguished lot. Nor does it appear that prayers were ever offered for his soul, as they might be for the king's, and as they habitually were for the ordinary Athenian's in the Anthesteria. For the Babylonian, on the whole, the only distinction of lot between one person and another after death was between him whose ghost was well 1 King, op. cit., p. 138. " Lagrange, Etudes sur les religions simitiques, p. 493. 2i8 GREECE AND BABYLON cared for by surviving relatives and him who died an outcast and was neglected. And this was no moral distinction, nor one that was likely to engender the belief in a righteous judgment. The duty to the dead was a family duty merely ; nor can I find in the Meso- potamian records' any indication of that tender regard of the alien dead which leads in Greece to a certain higher morality, and which informs Homer's pregnant phrase — " it is not righteous to vaunt oneself over the slain." We find Assyrian kings revenging themselves by mutilation and exposure of their enemies' corpses ; ^ and Semitic ferocity and Hellenic aihtug are nowhere more vividly contrasted than in this matter. Finally, there appears a difference in character be- tween the Mesopotamian and the Hellenic deities who were concerned with the surveillance of the world below. In the religion of the Western people, the latter are as essentially concerned with life as with death; and Demeter, Kore-Persephone, Plouton, Zeus Xdoviog, are benign divinities whose sombre character is only the reverse of the picture ; there is a chance of development for a more hopeful creed when the dead are committed to the care of the gentle earth-goddess : and it was through this double aspect of Demeter-Kore that the eschato- logic promise of the Greek mysteries was confirmed. But the Babylonian Queen of Hell, Allatu, is whoUy repellent in character and aspect, nor do we find that she was worshipped at all ; the only indication of a softer vein in her is the passage in "The Descent of Ishtar," which describes the sorrow of Allatu for the sufferings brought upon men through the departure of the goddess of life and love. Nergal, who is probably an usurper of the older supremacy of Allatu, has indeed a celestial character ' Cf. Keil. Bibl., ii. 109; Jeremias, HoUe u. Paradies, pp. 13-14. ESCHATOLOGIC IDEAS OF EAST AND WEST 219 as the upper god of Kutha, but even in the upper world his nature was regarded as terrible and destructive. Only once or twice is the gentler Greek conception concerning the rulers of the lower world found in Babylonian literature.^ Enmesharra — a name that may be a synonym for Nergal ^ — is hailed as " Lord of Earth, of the land from which none returns (Aralu), great Lord, without whom Ningirsu allows nothing to sprout in field and canal, no growth to bloom." * Tammuz himself also is once at least styled " the Lord of the lower world." * And if Ningirsu is another name of the underworld-god, which is possible, it is significant that in an old Babylonian document the cultivator of the soil is called " the servant of Ningirsu." ^ These isolated utterances, if they had penetrated the popular religious thought, might have engendered a softer and brighter sentiment concerning the world of death. But it is doubtful if they were potent enough to effect this.* If the gentle Tammuz had displaced Allatu and Nergal as the Lord of death, Babylonian eschatology might have had a different career. But it does not appear that he ever did. Deeply beloved as he was, he never reached the position of a high god either in heaven or the lower world.' Nor did his resurrection from the ' Jastrow, op. cit., pp. 472-473. ' lb; p. 473- 3 lb., p. 472. * Zimmern in Sitzungsber. d. Kon. Sachs. Gesell. Wiss. 1907, " Sumerisch-Babylonische Tanzlieder," p. 220. * Vide Jeremias in his article on " Nergal " in Roscher's Lexikor, iii. p. 251. ' It is doubtful if any argument can be based on the name Ningzu, occasionally found as the name of the consort of Ereshkigal (Zimmern, K.A.T.", p. 637) and said to mean " Lord of Healing," in reference, probably, to the waters of life. ' Only in the story of Adapa he appears as one of the warders of the gates of heaven (Zimmern, K.A.T.^, p. 521). 220 GREECE AND BABYLON dead evoke any faith, as far as we see at present, that might comfort the individual concerning his own lot. The personality and the rites of Attis, "the Phrygian shepherd," are closely akin to those of Tammuz, and may be partly of Babylonian origin : and from these were evolved a higher eschatologic theory that became a powerful religious force in later Paganism. On the other hand, in Babylonia the germs of higher religion in the Tammuz-ritual seem to have remained unquick- ened ; possibly because they were not fostered and developed by any mystic society. For it is perhaps the most salient and significant difference between Hellenic and Mesopotamian religions that in the latter we have no trace of mysteries at all, while in the former not only were they a most potent force in the popular religion, but were the chifef agents for developing the eschatologic faith. This exposition of the Eastern and Western ideas concerning death and the ritual of the dead is merely a slight sketch of a great subject ; biit may serve the present purpose, the testing the question of early religious contact. We have noted much general re- semblance, but only such as is found among various races of the world : on the other hand, certain striking differ- ences, both in detail and general conception, that argue strongly against the theory of contact or borrowing in the second millennium. Nor can we discover in the earliest Greek mythology a single Mesopotamian name or myth associated with the lower world.^ ' The story of Aphrodite descending into Hades to seek Adonis is much later than the period with which we are dealing. Nergal's descent to satisfy the wrath of AUatu and his subsequent marriage with her (Jeremias, Hdlle und Paradies, p. 22) is a story of entirely different motive to the Rape of Kore. CHAPTER XIII. Babylonian, Anatolian, and Aegean Ritual. A comparison of the forms observed in these regions, both in regard to the minute details and to the general underlying ideas, ought to contribute independent evidence to the solution of our question. The trans- mission of precise rules of ritual from one people to another, imphes an intercourse of some duration, and more or less regulated ; for while the name of a god or a single myth is volatile, and can be wafted down remote routes by an itinerant trader, or nomad, or hunter, the introduction of any organised ritual implies, as a rule, the presence of the missionary or the foreign priest. If, then, there is any evidence suggesting that Greece in its earliest period learnt its ritual from Babylon, the importance of this for the ethnic history of religion wiU be great indeed. Therefore it may seem that a detailed comparison of the Eastern and Western ritual is forced upon us at this point : but it would be pre- mature to expect at present any finality in the result, because the Mesopotamian documents have only been very incompletely examined and pubhshed by the lin- guistic experts. However, the material that they have presented to us reveals certain salient facts of immediate value for our present purpose that cannot be wholly illusory, however much we may have to modify our interpretation of them, in the light of future discovery. 223 GREECE AND BABYLON As regards the Greek evidence, we are not without fairly ample testimony concerning the earliest period. The Homeric poems present us with the contemporary religious practices of at least a portion of the population whom we may conveniently call the Achaeans ; though we have no right to suppose that they give us a complete account even of those. Again, as ritual does not spring up in a day, and has a singular longevity, we may be sure that much of Homeric ritual is a tradition of the second millennium. Furthermore, we can supplement Homer by later testimony, of which the lateness of date is no argument against the primitiveness of the fashions that it may attest. The first superficial comparison of Mesopotamian and Aegean ceremonies exhibits a general similarity in the mechanism of religion ; an established priesthood, temples, images, altars, prayers, sacrifice, religious music, holy days, consultation of the gods by methods of divination, a certain ceremonious tendance of the dead, these are common features of East and West. But if we were comparing Hellenic with Egyptian or Vedic, or even Mexican and Peruvian religion, we should be able to point to the same general agreement in externals, and many of these institutions are found broadcast over the modern world of savage society. It will be more important for the present question, if when we examine the Babylonian, Anatolian, and Hellenic ritual more minutely we discern salient differences, especially if these are found in certain organic centres of the religious life such as was the sacrifice. And we must first try to determine whether the Hellas of the pre-Homeric days already possessed all those religious institutions roughly enumerated above. We can deal to some extent with both these problems together. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 223 The erection of temples is an important stage in the higher development of anthropomorphic religion. By the beginning of the second millennium B.C. this had become an immemorial tradition of Mesopotamia. But we are not sure at what period the other polytheistic Semites first evolved the architectural shrine, or how long they were content to use the natural cave as the house of a divinity, or a high place or " temenos " with altar or sacred pillar. The recent excavations at Gezer have revealed a ghmpse into the religion of the prehistoric Semites of Canaan ; and one shrine that seems nothing more than a row of sacred monoliths, but also another that has more the appearance of an elaborate building of a sacred character.^ Of still greater antiquity was the shrine that Professor Petrie has discovered at Serabit in the Sinaitic peninsula, an original cave-temple com- phcated with the addition of porticoes and chambers, which he believes to have been devoted to a double cult, the Egyptian and Semitic. ^ At all events, we may conclude that before 1000 B.C. most of the more cultured Semitic communities in Asia Minor had come to house their divinities in more or less elaborated shrines. As regards the other race that dominated the early period of Anatolian history, the Hittite, we have the priceless evidence of the Boghaz-Keui monuments : these reveal a complex temple hewn out of and into the rocky ravine with a " Holy of Holies " and what appears to be a sleeping-chamber for the god.^ In Phrygia, the artificial shrine may have been late in supplanting the natural cavern or hole in the rock that was once the sufiicient home of the cult of the great goddess.* From 1 Cook, The Religion of Ancient Palestine, p. 17. ^Researches in Sinai, p. 72, etc., 186: he would carry back the foundation to the fourth millennium b.c. » Vide Arch. Anzeig., 1909, p. 498. * Vide Cults, iii. p. 299. 224 GREECE AND BABYLON the coast of Asia Minor we have no evidence concern- ing the site of any ancient temple that carries us back to the early period with which we are dealing.^ But the Homeric poems alone are sufficient proof that the Greeks, for whom they were composed, were beginning to be familiar with some architectural type of the deity's habitation. Apollo Smintheus already has his shrine and professional priest. ^ We hear of the temple and priestess of Athena in Troy,^ of her shrine at Athens, which she shared with Erechtheus,* and the stone- threshold of Apollo at Delphi, that guarded already many treasures within it.^ And we also know from the excavations of the last few years that the Aryan invaders from the North, the proto-Hellenes, would find temples on some at least of the sites of the Minoan culture. Crete has preserved certain shrines of the second millennium; but except the temple- cave on Dikte all of them so far are found to be merely domestic chapels in the king's palace, as though the king were personally responsible for the religion of the community : and so at Mycenae, Tiryns, and Athens, the oldest temples have been found on the foundations of " Mycenaean " palaces.* But the temples of Hera on the public hill of Argos and at Olympia are now dated near to 800 B.C.' We have, then, proof sufficient of temple-construc- tion in Greece and the Aegean islands before the period of Homer ; and if we must have recourse to the theory that the peoples of the Minoan-Mycenaean culture took 1 Vide Hogarth's evidence for the date of the earliest Artemision, Excavations at Ephesus, p. 244. 2 II., i. 38. » Ib.,vi. 269, 299-300. * lb., ii. 550. '/6.,ix. 405. • Vide Stengel, Griechische Sacral-AltertUmer, p. 17. ' Vide Athen. Mitiheil., 191 1, pp. 27, 192. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 225 their cue in this important evolution from some foreign civilisation, we should look to Egypt rather than to Assyria, as nearer and more closely in touch with early Crete. We may mark here a difference between Eastern and Western thought in the religious conception of the temple. It was naturally regarded everywhere as sacrosanct, because permeated with the virtue of the divine presence; but Babylonia developed this idea with greater intensity of conviction than the Hellene, and actually deified the temple itself : the King Nabo- polassar (circ. 625 B.C.) prays to it in such words as these, " Oh, temple, be gracious to the king thy restorer, and if Marduk enters thee in triumph, report my piety to him . " ^ Such exaggeration is not found in Greek religion . ^ As regards the emblem of divinity, the cult-object set up in the shrine to attract and to mark the presence of the deity, the Mesopotamian religion had, as we have seen, already evolved the eikon or image at some period considerably earlier than the second millennium, and the statue of the god or goddess had become an important factor of early ritual : only the emblem of Asshur remained aniconic.^ Of equally early vogue was the image, whether human or theriomorphic, in Egyptian cult. Again, the early Hittite monuments reveal it clearly, though aniconic fetiches appear also on the reliefs of Boghaz-Keui. But it is probable that the Western Semites, and the tribes of Arabia before 1200 B.C., ' Vide Jeremias in Roscher, Lexikon, ii. p. 2347, s.v. " Marduk." ^ Something near to it would be found in the cult-phrase Zei>! Naos of Dodona, which is a form commoner in the inscriptions than Zei>s Ndlbs, if, with M. Reinach (Rev. ArchM., 1905, p. 97), we regarded this as the original title and interpreted it as " Zeus-Temple." But the interpretation is hazardous. ' A disk on the top of a pole, vide Jastrow, Rel. Bab. Assyr., vol. i. p. 203. 15 226 GREECE AND BABYLON and many of them for centuries after, preferred the aniconic emblem, the " Ashera " or post, or heap of stones or pillar, to the iconic statue ; in fact, that temple idolatry in its developed forms as it presents itself in later Mediterranean history was alien to the old and genuine tradition of Semitic public worship. Iconic representations of divinities may indeed be found in Western Semitic regions, and some of these may be of great antiquity ; such as the silver statue that Thutmose III. (of the fifteenth century B.C.) carried off from Megiddo and the Lebanon,^ or the " Astarte "-plaques found on the site of Gezer. But in Semitic communities of the earlier period such objects belonged rather to the private religion, and the public service centred round the sacred pillar or stone, as was the case at Mecca both before and after Islam arose : the evidence for this has been carefully given and estimated by Robertson Smith and Sir Arthur Evans.^ The same statement holds of many of the non- Semitic peoples of Western Anatolia ; in Phrygia, for instance, the earliest emblem of Kybele was the rude pillar or cone-shaped stone, and this survived down to late times in the worship of the Anatolian goddess in some of the Greek cities on the Asiatic coast. The recent discoveries in the regions of the Minoan and Mycenaean culture reveal the same phenomenon : the cults in this area of the Aegean in the second millennium were in the main aniconic, the favourite emblem being ^ Cook, op. cit., p. 28. ^ Religion of the Semites, pp. 185-195 ; " Mycenaean Tree and Pillar Cult," Hell. Journ., 1901. It is interesting to note that Baitylos, a name derived from the Semitic description of the sacred stone as the " House of God," is given as the name of a divine king in the cosmogony of Philo Byblius, Miiller, Frag. Hist. Graec, iii. p. 567 ; cf. the baitylos with human head found at Tegea inscribed Aiis ^Topriui (fifth century B.C.), " Zeus of the lightning " {Eph. Arch., 1906, p. 64). COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 227 the pillar or tree-trunk, while in ancient Crete ,the axe and even the cross has been found.^ Where the divinity appears in full human shape, as the snake-goddess in the chapel of the cross, the lion-guarded goddess or the god descending in the air above the pillar on the Minoan seals, these figures cannot, or need not, be interpreted as actual temple-idols. And students of the religion of classical Greece are familiar with the ample evidence of the aniconic tradition in the 1.(6 ot apyoi, and the cone-shaped pillars and stocks that served as divine emblems in the later temples of Greece.^ Now the ethnic question concerning pillar-cult has been critically discussed by Sir Arthur Evans in his treatise mentioned above ; and the conclusion at which he arrives, that the striking parallelisms in Semitic Anatolian and Aegean ritual monuments are not to be explained as the result of direct borrowing from one or the other group of peoples, but as the abiding influence of a very early Mediterranean tradition, commends itself as the most reasonable. It is legitimate to maintain that the earliest Hellenes took over much of this aniconic cult from the earlier Minoan and Mycenaean civilisation ; but we must not overlook the fact that they also possessed their own, as a tradition derived from Central Europe.^ The most futile hypothesis would be to assume that the early Greeks derived it from Babylon, where it is less in evidence than in any other Semitic community.* ' Vide Evans, op. cit., and Annual of British School, 1908, 1909. 2 Vide my Cults, i. pp. 13-18, 102 ; ii. pp. 520, 670 ; iv. pp. 4, 149, 307 ; V. pp. 7, 240, 444. » For the evidence of a pillar-cult of Apollo Agyieus and Karneios coming from the north, vide Cults, vol. iv. pp. 307-308. * The pillars known as " Kudurru," with emblems of the various divinities upon them, served merely as boundary-stones (vide Jastrow, op. cit., i. p. 191 ; Hilprecht in Babylonian Expedition bf University of Pennsylvania, vol. iv.). 228 GREECE AND BABYLON The iconic impulse whereby the tree-trunk and pillar were gradually supplanted by the fuUy human statue was beginning to work by the time that the Homeric poems received their present form ; for we have in the Iliad''- an undoubted reference to a seated statue of Athena in her temple on the Akropohs of Troy. We see here the working of an instinct that was partly religious, partly, perhaps, aesthetic in its origin. If we are to connect it with foreign influences, Egypt is at least a more " proximate cause " than Babylon. This comparison of the cult-objects set up in shrines or holy places must take into account the phallic emblem also. This was much in vogue in the worship of Hermes and Dionysos, and was not unknown even in the ritual of Artemis. 2 Herodotus maintains that it was adopted by the Hellenes from " the Pelasgians," but, as I have tried to show elsewhere,^ we cannot attach real value to his induction. It may have descended from an old tradition of European cult, and it was indigenous among other Aryan nations. As regards the Mediterran- ean races, we find traces of its use in the Samothracian mysteries and in the grave-cult of Phrygia ; while some of the records of the Sabazian mysteries suggest that a phallic character attached to them. The Minoan- Mycenaean culture has been regarded as innocent of this, since the phallic emblem does not appear among the monuments yet found ; and this opinion is somewhat corroborated by its absence in the ritual of Aphrodite, who may be regarded as a direct descendant of the great Cretan goddess ; for only a late and somewhat doubtful text attests the dedication of phaUoi to the • 6, 269. " Cults, ii. 445. • O-p. cit., vol. V. p. 8. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 229 Cyprian Aphrodite. ^ But the evidence ffom the Phrygian rehgion, that has many ethnic affinities with Crete, and from such ritual-stories as that of Pasiphae, ought to make us hesitate. In Semitic ritual the emblem was certainly not com- monly in public use, even if it occurred at all ; the evi- dence for it, at present forthcoming, is at least very doubtful ; two of the pillars found at Gezer have been supposed to possess phallic attributes ; « but Robertson Smith has well protested against the foolish tendency to interpret sacred pillars generally as phalloi,^ and even regards Lucian's assertion of the phallic significance of the two sacred pillars, each three hundred feet in height, that flanked the propylaea of the temple at Hierapolis,* as a mistake suggested to him by the later Hellenic misinterpretation. Other statements of Lucian in that treatise may cause us to believe that a phaUic character attached to some part of the ritual of the Syrian goddess ; but, if it did, we could not safely regard it as originally Semitic, since so many ethnic strains are mingled in that complex religion. It is doubtful whether we can recognise the emblem anywhere in the religious monuments of the Hittites, though Perrot would give this interpretation to one of the cult-objects carved on the relief of Boghaz-Keui.* Finally, its vogue in Babylonia seems to have been confined to private superstition ; from the second millennium onwards it was employed as an amulet, ^ Arnob. Adv. Gent., 5, 19 (in the mysteries of the Cyprian Venus), " referunt phallos propitii numinis signa donates." ^ Cook, Religion of Ancient Palestine, p. 28 ; cf. Corp. Inscr. Sem., i. II. 6, inscription found in cave, dedicated perhaps by the hierodulai, " pudenda muliebria " carved on the wall. ' Rel. of Sem., pp. 437-438. * De Dea Syria, c. 16 and c. 28. ' Histoire de I' Art, iv. pi. viii, D. 230 GREECE AND BABYLON and one of the royal chronicles, about iiio B.C., is in- scribed on a tablet that represents a phaUos ; but we cannot argue from this or any other evidence yet adduced, so far as I am aware, that the emblem was used in public ritual. So far as we can discern at present, then, the Baby- lonian and Hellenic phenomena are divergent in respect of pillar-cult and phallic ritual.^ The most interesting part of our present inquiry is the comparison of the ceremonies and the concept of sacrifice in East and West. At the first glance we note, as usual, a certain general similarity. In the earhest period we find various animals, both wild and domestic, offered upon the altars, but in Babylonia no special rules concerning their sex, such as were pre- scribed by ancient Greek and Judaic ritual. In all these countries, again, bloodless offerings of cereals and fruits were in common vogue ; and in the earliest Babylonian period, these were of great variety, an inscription of Gudea mentioning butter, honey, wine, corn with milk, figs, dates, as the food of the gods, " untouched by fire." 2 We note here the distinction familiar in Greek ritual, between 'i/juTvpoc and aVypa kpa, ; only in Baby- lonia it does not seem to have been of reUgious importance, nor to have been developed, as it was in Hellas, into a ceremonial law that might engender an important variation in the moral ideas and religious concepts of the worshipper ; for instance, the altar of 1 Jeremias, in his articles on " Izdubar " and " Nebo " in Roscher's Lexikon, ii. p. 792 and iii. p. 65, concludes that a phallic emblem was employed in the ritual of Ishtar ; but he bases his view on the translation of the word Jbatiu in the Gilgamesh Epic, which is differently rendered by King, Babylonian Religion, p. 163, and Zimmern, K.A.T.', p. 572. 2 Thureau-Dangin, Les Cylindres de Goudia, p. 69. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 231 Apollo at Delos was called xudupog, " the pure altar," because no blood could be shed upon it, the s'acrifices of Athena Lindia at Rhodes, and of Zeus in certain mystic rites of Crete, were aVupa, or " fireless," which was the technical name for the oblations of fruits and cereals ; and this fact of ritual suggested to later Greek philosophy the ethical-religious view that the "pure," that is to say, bloodless, offering was the more acceptable oblation, and was a tradition of the age of man's inno- cence. This pregnant idea has not yet been discovered in Mesopotamian or in any other old Semitic religion ; the Babylonian deities received both kinds, and perhaps simultaneously, though in certain special ceremonies the sacred cake, or the liquid offerings of milk, honey, wine, and oil, might suf&ce ; ^ while, according to the ancient Hebraic view, as the legend of Cain and Abel indicates, the deity appears to prefer blood-sacrifice, though each species is recognised in the pre-exilic sacral literature.2 There is another distinction observed in Greek ritual, that becomes of some importance in the later history of ascetic purity, that between wineless offerings {iiri(pa,Kicc) and those accompanied with wine : the former being preferred by the powers of the lower world,* though not invariably, and certainly not by the departed hero. However this distinction arose — and no single hypothesis explains all the cases — it was not a Semitic tradition, taught in early days to Hellas. For the ^ This may explain the double phrase, used concerning the institu- tion and endowment of temple-rites in an inscription of the time of Tiglath-Pileser m., which Zimmern translates by " Opfer-Mahlzeiten," Keil. Bibl., iv. p. 103 ; cf. especially K.B., iii. p. 179 (inscr. of ninth century) ; Zimmern, Beitrdge zur Kenntniss der Babyl. Relig., ii. p. 99 (sacred loaves offered before consultation of divinity). ^ Vide Robertson Smith, op. cii., p. 200. ' Vide Cults, i. p. 88 ; v. p. igg. 232 GREECE AND BABYLON Semitic divinities, including Jahw4, have a genial liking for wine " which cheereth God and man " ; ^ nor have we any Semitic example of a taboo on it, except possibly a late Nabataean inscription from the neigh- bourhood of Palmyra, mentioning " the god who drinks no wine." ^ Such a phrase would certainly not apply to the deities of Babylon ; even the sun-god, who in Hellas appears to have been a total abstainer, is offered wine in the Babylonian service,* and, according to one verse in the Epic of Creation, the deities actually get drunk,* a grossness which, in the mythic imagina- tion of HeUas, is only imagined as possible for Dionysos. We have the right to say, then, that the avoidance of wine in certain rehgious services of Hellas helps to confirm the impression of its early independence of Semitic influences. The Hellenic rule may, in certain cases, have been derived from an older Aegean tradi- tion ; for two of the deities to whom it was applied, Helios and Aphrodite, may be believed to have been bequeathed to Greece by the Minoan-Mycenaean re- ligion ; and wine appears to have been prohibited in certain ceremonies of the Phrygian goddess,* and of a goddess of Caria.^ These are differences of some importance, and doubt- less of great antiquity between the ritual of East and West ; more insignificant, yet of considerable value for ' Judges ix. 13 ; cf. Robertson Smith, op. cit., p. 203. ^ Lagranges, Etudes sur les religions simiiiques, p. 506. This seems to agree with the statement in Diodorus (19, 94) that the Nabataeans tabooed wine ; yet Dusares, the Arabian counterpart of Dionysos, was a Nabataean god. ' Gray, Shamash Religious Texts, p. 21. ' Dhorme, Choix, etc., p. 41, 1. 136. ° Vide Cults, iii. p. 390, R. 57''. • lb., ii. p. 646. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 233 our present question, is the fact that incense was a regular accompaniment of the Babylonian sacrifice, but did not come into religious use in Greece till some time after the period of Homer. The fact itself we may consider as proved, both by Homer's silence about it, and by the Homeric use of the word dvog, which means " victim," and never " incense," as in later Greek it came to mean. Had the influence of the Mesopotamian culture been as strong on Greece in the second mil- lennium as it came to be from 800 B.C. onwards, we should certainly have expected that the religious use of incense, which is very attractive and spreads easily from one race to another, would have been adopted by Greek ritual before the time of Homer. A more essential point is the sharp contrast pre- served in the Greek rites between the Olympian and the Chthonian ritual ; a contrast that demanded a difference of terminology and dictated different sacral laws concerning time, manner, place of sacrifice, and choice of victim. So far, I have not been able to dis- cover any hint of this important bifurcation of ritual in any Mesopotamian record. The only nether- world power who was worshipped at all was Nergal, whether under this or other names ; and it does not appear that his worship differed in any essential respect from that of any other high god. In fact, the dualism between powers of the upper and powers of the lower world, which has been generally remarked, and sometimes ex- aggerated in Hellenic polytheism, only appears slightly in the Babylonian, and seems to have left no impress on the divine service at all. As regards the animals of sacrifice, the only striking divergence that Hellenic and Semitic custom presents is in respect of the swine. The sanctity or horror with 234 GREECE AND BABYLON which this animal was regarded by most Semitic societies ^ is not reflected in any record of early Greek feeling. Being the Hellene's common food, he offered it freely to the deity, though in local cults there might occasionally be a taboo on this as elsewhere on other victims, such as sheep or goat. But it is possible that some of the predecessors of the Hellene in Crete and Asia Minor, if not in Greece itself, shared the Semitic sentiment in regard to the pig ; and the reverence paid to it in Crete, and especially at Praisos in later times,^ may have been a legacy of Minoan religion; also the Carian worship of Hemithea in which swine were tabooed may have had ancient links with Crete.^ But the facts of swine-sacrifice or swine-reverence, though they serve to distinguish the Hellenic from the ordinary Semitic community, do not bear directly on our present problem, the proofs of early Mesopotamian influence on the proto-HeUenic race. For the usual Semitic taboo has not yet been found in Mesopotamia. The pig is men- tioned in a religious text as one of the animals that might be offered to the gods as a vicarious piacular sacrifice, nor is there any hint that the animal is being offered as an unclean animal.* Certainly, other animals are mentioned much more frequently as victims ; and I am not aware of any other text that mentions swine- sacrifice. It was associated in some way with the god Ninib, one of whose appellatives means " swine " ; ^ but no evidence is yet forthcoming that it was offered to him. ' Robertson Smith, op. cit., pp. 272-273. " Athenae. 376a (Cults, i. p. 141). ^ Cults, ii. pp. 646-647. * O. Weber, Ddinonenbeschworung, p. 29 ; his note on the passage " that the unclean beast is offered as a substitute for an unclean man " is not supported by any evidence. ^ Zimmern, K.A.T.^, pp. 409-410. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 235 A question now arises of greater moment both for our present purpose and for the wider interests of Com- parative Religion. Was the purport and significance of the sacrificial act the same in the Western society as that which is revealed in the sacred literature of Babylonia ? No part of the ancient rehgious system has been the theme of so much study and speculation in recent years as the ancient sacrifice. Robertson Smith in his epoch- making book, The Religion of the Semites, was the pioneer of a new theory ; which has since been developed or modified by certain English and a few Continental scholars following on his track. The result of these labours has been to formulate and define various forms of sacrifice that prevailed in the Mediterranean area. Three main types appear to emerge : (a) the gift sacrifice, where an oblation is given over entirely to the deity, whether generally to win his favour, or in special circum- stances — for instance, after sin has been committed — to appease his wrath, or as a thank-offering for favour re- ceived ; (6) the communion sacrifice, where the community or the individual eat with the deity, strengthening their feeling of fellowship by a common meal ; (c) the sacra- mental type, where the community or the individual may be said to " eat the god," that is, to partake of food or drink made sacred by the infusion of the divine spirit or personality, which is thus communicated to the partaker. It is best for the present to regard these three as separate and independent, without trying to determine which is prior and which posterior.^ The first type, which is almost ubiquitous in the human societies that have arrived at the belief in personal ' Robertson Smith's theory that the gift-sacrifice was a later degeneracy from the communion-type is unconvincing ; vide specially an article by Ada Thomsen, " Der Trug von Prometheus," Arch. Relig. Wissensch., 1909, p. 460. 236 GREECE AND BABYLON deities, is sufficiently attested by Homer of the early Greeks, who promise and perform the sacrifice partly as an offering to please or to appease the deity. What is more important is the evidence, which I have dealt with elsewhere,^ that Homeric society was familiar also with the more genial conception of the sacrifice as a communion-meal where the worshipper and the deity meet around the altar ; this emerges clearly in the accounts that Homer has given us of an Achaean sacri- ficial feast .^ Even the germs are already visible of the idea from which the third or more mystic type of sacri- fice, what I have called the sacramental type, might be evolved ; for special significance attaches to the acts de- scribed in the phrases ovkayjiraz TrpofidiXovro and airkoby/y iTocffuPTo, " they threw forward the barley-shreddings " and " they tasted the entrails " : the first phrase is not wholly clear, but it may signify that stalks of barley are first placed on the altar, and thereby consecrated or filled with the divine virtue that is inherent there, and then the beast is touched with these on the fore- head and thereby becomes himself filled with the spirit of godhead ; ^ the second is also a mystic act, for the a-jtXayYy^ specially contain the life, which is now infused with divinity, and by tasting them the worshippers partake of the divine life. All this arises solely from the extraordinary degree of supernatural force or " Mana " which the altar itself possesses, a force which may have ' "Sacrificial Communion in Greek Religion," in Hibbert Journal, 1904. " E.g. II., I, 457-474 ; Od., 3, 1-41 ; 14, 426. ' Cf. Schol. Od., 3, 441 (who defines oiXaxfirai. as barley and salt mixed with water or wine . . Ktd ISvov aiJri Trpb toO Icpelov . . . Kpi94s Si ivi^aXovTois BiiMffix^P^" (i4>oplas) ; Schol. Arist. Equ., 1167, rois di/iaaiv 4wipa\\6/j.evai [Kpitpai]. Vide Fritz. Hermes, 32, 235 ; for another theory, vide Stoll, "Alte Taufgebraiiche," in Arch. Relig. Wissensch., 1905, Beiheft, p. 33. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 237 been an inheritance from long ages of pillar-jvorship, if we believe the altar to have been evolved from the sacred pillar.^ It explains other details in the old Hellenic sacrificial act ; such as the casting the hairs of the victim into the altar-fiame,^ which estabhshed a communion between the animal and the deity, the practice of solenmly consecrating the lustral water by ceremoniously carrying it round the altar, ^ and charging it with a still more potent infusion of divinity by plunging into it a lighted brand from the altar-fire.* The communion sacrifice must then have been in vogue in pre-Homeric times ; and the idea that gave it its meaning never wholly faded from the State-ritual ; for the rule, expressed by such formulae as ovx aTo^opa, IccivvirSm avTov, bidding the worshipper conclude the feast round the altar and take none of the flesh home, seems to arise partly from the feeling that the ceremony was meaningless unless he feasted wholly with the deity .^ But it was most vividly realised in the religi- ous services of the dixaoi, the later religious orders or fraternities devoted each to the cult of its special divinity ; for these a common religious meal formed the chief binding-tie.* Apart from the Homeric evidence, we have the record of the Attic Bouphonia as attestation of the great antiquity of this type of sacrifice in Greece. To 1 Vide Evans, "Mycenaean Tree and Pillar Cult," Hell. Journ., 1901, pp. 114-115. ^ Od., 14, 426 ; cf. the custom reported from Arabia of mingling hair from the head of a worshipper with the paste from which an idol is made. ' Aristoph. Pax., 956. * Athenae, p. 419, B. ° Vide Arch. Rel. Wiss., 1909, p. 467 ; Thomsen there explains it wholly from the idea of tabu. * The common meal of the thiasotai is often represented on later rehefs, vide Perdriyet, " Reliefs Mysiens," Bull. Con. Hell., 1899, P- 592, 238 GREECE AND BABYLON the actual statement of the details given us by Theo- phrastos and Pausanias, much is added by the curious aetiological legends that grew up around it.^ We see the ox marking himself for sacrifice by voluntarily going up to the altar and eating the corn upon it, being thus called, as it were, by the god into communion with himself. As he is thus full of the spirit of the god, it is regarded a sacrilegious act to slay him ; but aU the citizens partake of his flesh, and even the stranger who eats becomes himself a citizen, as through this feast he enters into kinship with Zeus Polieus. All this can be explained by the belief that Zeus Polieus is in the altar ; and we need not resort to such theories as that the ox is a totem-animal or the spirit of vegetation. We must, however, beware of concluding that because the victim was thus temporarily possessed with godhead and in this holy state devoured, he was therefore literally regarded as the full incarnation of the god, or that the worshipper consciously believed he was eating his own deity who died in the sacrifice. For religious conscious- ness by no means always draws the fuU logical corollaries of a religious act. The more mystic idea, that has played a great part in the religion of Europe, can only be detected or suspected, apart from written direct ancient testimony, where the animal is treated with reverence apart from and before his association with the altar, or is regarded as the habitual incarnation of the deity. The immolation and devouring of such a victim would be of the true sacramental type, which Robertson Smith believed was the aboriginal form of all sacri- fice. But we have no clear example of it from the earliest period of genuine Hellenic religion, unless we » Vide Cults, i. pp. 56-58, 88-92. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 239 force the evidence or exaggerate its meaning.^ We have only certain myths that we may doubtfully venture to interpret by means of this hypothesis. And these are no myths about animals, but about human victims devoured in sacrifice : the most significant is the story of the cannibalistic feast held by King Lykaon, who cooked his own son and offered the flesh to Zeus, a ritual of which some survival, whether mimetic or half-real, was witnessed by Pausanias himself on Mount Lykaon.^ This would point to sacramental cannibalism, if we assume that King Lykaon was the human incarnation of Zeus Lykaios and that his son was therefore a divine infant. But it is possible that the story enshrines the remembrance of the more ordinary clan-sacrifice of the life of a clansman to procure them communion with the clan-god by the common partaking of his flesh : the kinsman is offered rather than the animal, not so much that the sacrificers may eat their god, but that the god by consuming their most valued life may be more closely incorporate with them. Again, in one of the darkest and most perplexing of Greek legends, the story of Klumenos of Argos and his incestuous love of his daughter Harpalyke, who revenges herself by slaying her own child and offering it to the father in a sacrificial meal, we may discern the glimmer of a remembrance of a cannibal sacrament. The associations of the story dimly indicate a Thracian origin.^ And it is in the range of the Greek Dionysiac 1 In my article on " Sacrificial Communion in Greek Religion," Hibbert Journal, 1904, p. 320, I have been myself guilty of this, in quoting the story told by Polynaenus (Strategem. 8, 43), about the devouring of the mad bull with golden horns by the Erythraean host, as containing an example of a true sacrament. ^ Vide Cults, vol. i. p. 145- ' See Crusius' article in Roscher's Lexikon, s.v. " Harpalyke." 240 GREECE AND BABYLON cult, which according to the most probable view was adopted from Thrace, that we find imprinted on legend and ritual the tradition of a savage type of sacrament, in which the human or animal incarnation of the god was devoured. Such is the significance that we may fairly attach to the Titan-story of the murder of the infant Dionysos, to the aTapayfJbog of the goat or bull or snake periodically practised by the Bacchoi or Bacchae, and to the death of Pentheus.^ And in later Greek ritual the consciousness here and there survived that the victim offered to Dionysos incarnated the very deity, even before it acquired the temporary mystic afflatus from contact with the altar. The record of the ritual of Tenedos, in which a sacred pregnant cow was tended reverently and the calf that she bore was dressed in the buskins and then sacrificed to Dionysos, " the render of men," is the most piquant example.^ This Dionysiac tradition reaches back undoubtedly to the second millennium in Greece ; the evidence of a similar sacramental ritual in purely Hellenic worship is shadowy and slight, for the critical examination of the Eleusinian mysteries does not clearly reveal it ; and the growth and diffusion of the idea in later Pagan- ism does not concern us now. But the consideration of the early Hellenic sacrifice, of which the salient features have been slightly sketched above, is of signal value for our present purpose. For it reveals at once a marked contrast to Babylonian ideas so far as these at present are revealed to us. The Babylonian-Assyrian liturgies, epics, and chronicles have failed to disclose any other theory of the sacrifice than that which is called the gift-theory. A general ' Vide Cults, v. pp. 161-172. * lb., V. p. 165. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 241 term for the Babylonian sacrifice is " kishtu " or " pre- sent." 1 The deities are supposed to eat what is given them ; in the Epic of the Deluge the naive phrase occurs, " The gods smell the savour, the delightful savour, the gods swarm hke flies around the sacrificer." No evidence is as yet forthcoming that the sacrificer was supposed or was allowed to eat with the deity, as in the Hellenic communion-sacrifice. On the contrary, certain texts can be quoted which seem expressly to forbid such a thing. ^ The document already cited that was found in Assurbanipal's library, containing the Job-like lament of the good man who had found no profit in goodness, contains a verse in which he com- pares himself with the sinner who neglects all religious ordinances, and who has even " eaten the food of God." And so we find that among the various evil or impure or unlucky deeds that could bring a man under the ban of the gods, the " devouring of sacrificial flesh " is expressly mentioned.^ Unless, then, documents yet to be revealed contradict this positive and negative evidence, we have here a fact of great weight to set against the theory that we are discussing. Whencesoever the Hellenes derived their genial conception of the sacrifice as a communion- meal, they did not derive it from Babylon. And all Robertson Smith's speculations concerning the inner significance of the Semitic sacrifice cannot yet be apphed to Mesopotamia, whence he was not able to glean any evidence. In Babylonia the sacrificer got no share of the victim. He might eat with the spirits of the dead in certain ritual, but he was not, it appears, privi- '^ K.A.T.',p. 595. ' Jeremias, Die Culius-Tafel von Sippar, p. 26. ' Zimmern, Beiirdge zur Kennt. Bab. Rel., p. 15. 16 242 GREECE AND BABYLON leged to eat with the god or goddess. The deity took the victim, or the sacrifice of cereals and fruits, as a present, and the priest got his share. But we are not told that the priest ate with the god, or where he ate ; nor can we say that the priest represented the worshipper. If a true sacrament is yet to be discovered in Baby- lonian religion, it will probably be found in some docu- ment of the Tammuz ritual. For it is probable that Tammuz was identified with the corn as with other parts of vegetation, and that the mourning for him was accompanied with abstinence from bread. His resurrec- tion ended the fast, and if in their joy the worshippers ceremoniously broke bread, they may have supposed they were eating the body of their risen lord. But such a reconstruction of the old Tammuz ritual rests at present only on the indirect evidence of the later records of Attis-Adonis cult and of the Tammuz-worship among the heathen Syrians of Harran in the tenth century of our era.i It belongs to the Babylonian conception of the sacrifice as a gift, that the animal was often regarded as a ransom for the man's own life ; that is to say, when sin had been committed, the deity might be placated by the gift of an agreeable victim, and be persuaded to accept it in place of the sinner whose life was properly forfeit. For instance, a sick man is always supposed to have sinned ; and the priest who is performing an animal sacrifice in his behalf uses the prayer, " Take his present, take his ransom " ; ^ and the formula of a sacrifice offered by way of exorcism is very exphcit : " A male sheep, a female sheep, a living sheep, a dead '■ Vide Frazer, Adonis-Attis-Osiris, p. 189 ; cf. " Communion in Greek Religion," Hibbert Jomn., 1904, p. 317. ' Jeremias, Die Cultus-Tafel von Sippar, p. 28. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 243 sheep shall die, but I shall live." 1 Another inscription ^ throws further light on the ritual of the vicarious sacrifice : "To the high-priest may one cry out : the kid of substitution for the man, the kid for his soul he hath brought : place the head of the kid to the head of the man, place the neck of the kid to the neck of the man, place the breast of the kid to the breast of the man." Whether this solemn manipulation was per- formed after or before the sacrifice, its object must have been to establish by contact a communion between the man and the victim, so that the kid might be his most efficacious representative. It thus became part of the higher ethical teaching of Babylon that " sacrifice brings life," just as " prayer takes away sin," a doctrine expressed in a fragmentary tablet that contains a text of striking spiritual import.* The type of sacrifice that may be called vicarious must have been an ancient as well as a later tradi- tion in Greece ; for the legends associated with many sacrifices clearly attest it, explaining certain animal victims as substitutes for a human life that was formerly demanded by the offended deity, the vicarious sacrifice usually carrying with it the ideas of sin and atonement.* The substitution might occasionally ' Weber, Ddmonenbeschworung, etc., p. 29. ' iv. R2, pi. 26, No. 6 ; this is the inscription quoted by Prof. Sayce (vide infra, p. 182, n.) as a document proving human sacrifice. I owe the above translation to the kindness of Dr. Langdon ; it differs very slightly from Zimmem's in K.A.T.', p. 597. ' Jeremias, op. cit., p. 29. * Kenan's thesis (C. /. Sem., i. p. 229) that the idea of sin, so dominant in the Hebrew and Phoenician sacrifice, was entirely lacking in the Hellenic, cannot be maintained ; he quotes Porph. De Abstin., I, 2, 24, a passage which contains an incomplete theory of Greek sacrifice. The sin-offering is indicated by Homer, and is recognised frequently in Greek literature and legend ; only no technical term was invented to distinguish it from the ordinary cheerful sacrifice. 244 GREECE AND BABYLON be apologised for by a legal fiction, as, for instance, when in the ritual of the Brauronian Artemis the angry goddess demanded the life of a maiden, and the Athenian parent sacrificed a goat, "calUng it his daughter." i But though this idea is common to the Mesopo- tamian and Hellenic communities, they differ widely in respect of the evidence they afford, of the prevalence of human sacrifice. As regards ancient Greece, the evidence is indubitable, though much that has been brought by modern, scholars is due to false interpretation of ritual, such as the scourging of the Spartan boys ; later, the human sacrifice became repugnant to the advancing ethical thought of the nation, but according to one authority did not wholly die out till the age of Hadrian. On the other hand, no hterary text nor any monument has yet been found that proves the exist- ence of such a ritual in Babylonia. In one of his biographical inscriptions Assurbanipal proclaims that he " sacrificed " prisoners of war to avenge his murdered father on the spot where his father was slain.^ He boasts of worse things than this ; and we can well believe that he murdered them in cold blood. But the • Cults, ii. p. 441. " Vide K.A.T.^, pp. 434, 599, where Zimmern refers to the monu- ments published by M6nant, Pierres gravies, i. figs. 94, 95, 97, as possibly showing a scene of human sacrifice. But Menant's interpreta- tion of them is wrong ; vide Langdon, Babyloniaca, Tome iii. p. 236, " two Babylonian seals " ; the kneeling figure is the owner of the seal; the personage behind him is no executioner, but Ramman or Teschub holding, not a knife, but his usual club. The inscriptions published by Prof. Sayce (Trans. Soc. Bibl. Arch., iv. pp. 25-29) are translated differently by Dr. Langdon, so that the first one (iv. R ', pi. 26, No. 6) refers to the sacrifice of a kid, not of an infant. The mis- interpretation of the inscription has misled Trumbull {Blood Covenant, p. 166). The statement in 2 Kings xvii. 31 about the Sepharvites in Samaria does not necessarily point to a genuine Babylonian ritual, even if we are sure that the Sepharvites were Babylonians. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 245 words by no means suggest a ceremonious toajb-ritual with human sacrifice. Slightly more important is a passage in a legal document, to which Mr. Johns ^ calls attention ; whence it appears that a forfeit for reopening an already adjudi- cated cause was the consecration of one's eldest child by fire to a god or goddess ; and, as incense and cedar- wood are mentioned in the same context as concomitants of the threatened ceremony, the conclusion seems natural that this was once at least a real threat of human sacrifice inflicted as a legal punishment. This legal clause gives us the right to conclude that in the earliest period the Semites and Sumerians of Mesopotamia occasionally resorted to this rite. They would be indeed a peculiar people and a favoured nation if they had always been innocent of it. It is sufficiently attested by direct evidence, either of record or excavation, or by the suggestion of legend, of the Arabs, Syrians, the early Canaanites,^ the Israelites, the Phoenicians ; also of the Phrygians and other non-Semitic peoples of Anatolia. Yet it must be put to the credit of the Babylonian culture of the second millennium, that the Mesopotamians had either completely or almost aban- doned it. At this time it was doubtless in full vogue in Greece ; and certainly Babylon could not have been their evil teacher in this matter. But they needed no teachers in what was an ancient tradition of their northern ancestors, and of the people with whom they mingled. Yet only twenty years ago a distinguished writer on Greek ritual could say, " It is certain that the ^ Babylonian and Assyrian Laws, p. 95. " The excavations at Gezer have revealed almost certain evidence of the early practice of human sacrifice ; a number of skeletons, one of a girl sawn in half, were found buried under the foundation of houses (vide Cook, op. cit., pp. 38-39). 246 GREECE AND BABYLON Hellenes borrowed the practice of human sacrifice from the Orientals." ^ As we discover no trace of the idea of communion in the ordinary Babylonian sacrifice, we are the less surprised that scarcely any hint is given by the sacred literature or monuments of any mystic application of the blood of the victim, which was used for so many purposes of communion-ritual by the early Hellenes and Hebrews. I can find no other evidence for this in Mesopotamia except one passage quoted by Zimmern,^ in which the sacrificer is ordered to sprinkle some part of the door with the blood of the lamb. It is not probable that the Babylonians were incapable of the notion that by physical contact with certain sacred objects a temporary communion could be established between the mortal and the divinity : it appears, for instance, in one of the formulae of the purification- ritual — " May the torch of the Fire-god cleanse me " * — in the yearly practice of the king grasping the hands of the idol of the god, perhaps in the custom of attaching the worshipper to the deity with a cord,* and in the diviner's habit of grasping the cedar-staff, which is called " the beloved of the gods." ^ But it may be that they never applied this notion to the sacrifice, so as to evolve the institution of the communion-meal ; or they may have evolved it in early times, and through long ages • Stengel, Die griechischen Kultusalterthumer, p. 89. 'K.A.T.^ p. 599. " Jastrow, op. cit., i. p. 500. * Might this be the meaning of a line in a. hymn translated by Jastrow, op. cit., p. 549, " I turn myself to thee (O Goddess Gula), I have grasped thy cord as the cord of my god and goddess " {vide King, Babyl. Magic,No. 6, No. 71-94) ; or of thephrase in the Apocrypha {Epist. Jerem., 43), " The women also with cords about them sit in the ways " ? ' Zimmern's Beitrcige, etc., p. 99. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 247 of power the priests may have become strong enough to suppress it and to substitute for it the gift-ritual, which would be more profitable for themselves. It accords with this absence of any mystic significance in the sacrifice that we do not find in the Babylonian service any mystic use of the sacrificial skins, of which some evidence can be gathered from various details of Greek ritual.^ Again, the Babylonian records have so far failed to reveal any evidence for any such public ceremony as the sending forth of the scapegoat, whether human or animal, charged with the sins of the community. This ritual was common to the Hellenes, Egyptians, and Hebrews, and probably to other Semitic com- munities. ^ The idea of sin-transference on which it rests was familiar enough to the ancient Babylonian ; but he seems only to have built upon this a private system of exorcism and purgation of sin and disease for the individual. As far as we know, it did not occur to him to effect by this method a solemn annual expulsion of aU the sins of the nation. On the other hand, there is another type of sacrifice common to Babylonia and Greece, by which an oath or an engagement might be cemented : the animal is slaughtered with an imprecation that the same fate may befall him who breaks his oath or violates the com- pact. Zimmern quotes a good example of this, relating to the compact made between the Ass3n-ian king Assur- 1 On the famous bronze plaque of the Louvre ( J eremias, Hllle und Paradies, p. 28, Abb. 6) we see two representatives of Ea in the fish- skin of the god ; and on a frieze of Assur-nasir-pal in the British Museum {Hell. Journ., 1894, p. 115, fig. 10 ; Layard, Monuments of Nineveh, I, pi. 30), two men in lions' skins ; but these are not skins of animals of sacrifice. 2 Vide my Evolution of Religion, pp. 11 8-1 20. 248 GREECE AND BABYLON nirari and Mati'ilu, prince of Arpad : ^ a sheep is sacrificed and the formula pronounced : " This head is not the head of a sheep, it is the head of Mati'ilu, of his sons, of his great ones, of the people of his land. If Mati'ilu breaks this oath, the head of Mati'ilu will be cut off, like the head of this sheep." The sarfle idea underlies the oath-sacrifice in the Iliad,^ though it is not expressed with such naive make-believe or such logic in the detail ; but as the beast is slaughtered or wine poured, a curse is uttered invoking on the per- jured a similar fate, or with a prayer that " his brains may be poured out like this wine." The original idea is magical : the symbolic explanation is later. Another parallel is the Latin oath over the stone.^ Such resemblance in special forms by no means weakens the impression that we receive from the striking differences discernible in the Babylonian and Hellenic significance of sacrifice. To those already noted we may add yet another, which concerns the association of sacrifice with divination. It is Professor Jastrow's opinion * that the chief motive of the Babylonian sacrifice was the inspection of the liver of the victim, from the markings of which the skilled expert could interpret the future by a conventional system revealed to us in certain ancient Babylonian documents. This super- stition is so elaborate and artificial that if we find it in adjacent countries, it is more reasonable to suppose that one borrowed it from the other, than that it was developed independently in each. We find it in later Greece, Etruria, and Rome ; but the evidence of the Homeric poems suggests that it was unknown to the > K.A.T.^.-p. 49. 2 3, 300 ; 19, 265-267. " Polybius, 3, 25, {yui fi6vos (Kiriaoim oifrw! ws iSe XWos vvv. ^ Op. cit., ii. p. 217. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 249 Hellenes of the earlier period. They are very likely to have borrowed it from Babylonian sources in post- Homeric times ; and we note here, as in other cases where the influence of Babylon upon Greece can be reason- ably posited, it reaches the western shores of the Aegean at a post-Homeric rather than a pre-Homeric epoch. The comparative study of Mesopotamian and Hellenic sacrifice confronts us finally with another problem belonging to the history of religions, and one of the greatest, the dogma of the death of the divinity and the origin and significance of that belief. For where the mystic type of communion-sacrifice is found, where the animal that is slain for the sacrament is regarded as the incarnation of the deity, the divinity may be supposed himself to die temporarily, doubtless to rise again to life, either immediately or at some subsequent festival. This momentous conclusion need not always have been drawn, for religious logic is not often per- sistently thorough, nor does the evolution of the idea belong necessarily to the sphere of totemism, as Robert- son Smith supposed, and M. Reinach is still inclined to maintain. It is not my concern here to discuss the totemistic hypothesis, but I may point out that in the rare examples where the totem-animal is slain, it is not clear that it is slain as a divinity. Again, the belief in the periodic death of a deity might arise independently of the sacrifice, namely, from the essential idea of the godhead itself, when the divine life is identified with the annual life of vegetation : the phenomena of nature in autumn and spring may suggest to the worshipper the annual death and resurrec- tion of the god or goddess. It is important to note that in this, as in the other source of the belief, the conclusion need not always have been drawn, for the vegetation- 250 GREECE AND BABYLON deity might be supposed not to die in autumn or winter, but merely to disappear, and the story of his or her dis- appearance need not carry the same religious conse- quences as the story of the divine death. The immolation of the divine victim in a communion- service, wherein the worshippers partake symbolically or realistically of the divine flesh and blood, though suggested by a thought that we must call savage, may be pregnant with consequences momentous for higher religion, as the history of Christian dogma attests. And even the annuar death of the nature-god may be raised to a higher significance than its mere nature-meaning, and may be linked with the promise of human immortality. We may note, finally, that a religion which expresses in its ritual the idea of the deity's death and resurrection is likely to be charged with a stronger emotional force than one that lacks it ; for the two events will excite an ecstasy of sorrow and of joy in the believer. As the phenomenon, then, is of such importance, it is necessary to be critical and unbiased in the collection of statistics. Our present field of inquiry is the Eastern and Western Mediterranean area ; and here our con- spicuous example is the ancient Sumerian-Babylonian ritual of Tammuz,i a folk -service of lamentation and rapture, psychologically akin in many respects to Christianity, and of most powerful appeal. The Tammuz hymns preserved to us are of the highest Babylonian poetry, and though they are chiefly litanies of lamentation, sorrowing over the death of the young god, yet one or two echoes are heard at their close of the rapturous rejoicing over his resurrec- 1 According to Dr. Langdon (op. cit., p. xvi.), the wailing for Tammuz was developed in the early Sumerian period of the fourth millennium. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 251 tion.i With them is associated the story of the descent of his consort Ishtar, or of his goddess-sister ; another great motive of the religious imagination which neigh- bouring peoples and faiths were quick to capture and adapt to their own religious use. We have seen ^ that the evidence is clear that the life of Tammuz is the life of the crops and fruits ; and we discern a pure nature- religion unmoralised and without dogma, but evoking a mood and a sentiment that might supply the motive force to more complex and more spiritual creeds. It was not suited to the religious atmosphere of the Assyrian and Babylonian courts ; but its influence spread far through Asia Minor. It captivated the other poly- theistic Semites, and at times, as Ezekiel shows us, the women of Israel, revealing to these latter, no doubt, a vein of religious sentiment unknown in the austere Mosaic monotheism. The ritual of Adonis is mainly borrowed from the Tammuz service. For instance, the rite of planting the short-lived " garden of Adonis," of which possibly the earliest record is in Isaiah xvii. 10, appears to be alluded to in a verse of a Tammuz hymn.^ The figure of Tammuz is primevally Sumerian ; there- fore the diffusion of his cult among the various Semitic communities does not enable us to conclude that the death and resurrection of a divinity is an aboriginal Semitic tradition. As regards other evidence on the strength of which this dogma has been attributed to them by some scholars, it is of late authority and of doubtful validity. Josephus * tells us that at Tyre the ' Langdon, op. cit., 300-341 ; cf. Zimmern, " Sumerisch-Babylonische Tamuzlieder," in Siizungsber. Konig. Sachs. Gesell. Wissen., 1907, pp. 201-252, and his discussion, "Der Babylonische Gott Tamuz," in Abhandl. Konig. Sachs. Gesell. Wissen., 1909. 2 Vide supra, p. 105. ' Vide Langdon, op. cit., p. 501. * Antiqu., 8, 5, 3 ; cf. Clem. Recogn., 10, 24; Baudissin in his 252 GREECE AND BABYLON resurrection of Herakles was once celebrated by Hiram ; but this might well be a derivative of the non-Semitic Sandon cult of Tarsos, which will be considered below. And the legend of the death of Dido at Carthage, even if there is no doubt that the queen was originally the great goddess of Tyre, is no sufficient proof of a Phoenician ritual in which the divinity died annually. But as regards the non-Semitic peoples of anterior Asia, the question of borrowing is more difficult to answer with certainty. No Hittite monument nor any Hittite text has as yet revealed to us any figure that we can identify with Tammuz. But certain indications incline us to believe that the idea of the death of the god was not unfamihar to the Hittite religion or to some of the communities under Hittite influence. On the Boghaz-Keui relief we have noted the presence in the religious procession of those mysterious animals, calves, or bulls, wearing caps of peculiar Hittite fashion.^ Are not these " thean- thropic animals " to be sacrificed as a communion- link between man and God ? We know that the bull was worshipped as an incarnation of a Hittite deity ; and therefore from the sacrifice of the bull might emerge the dogma that the deity ceremoniously died at certain periods. From the sanctity of the bull in ancient Hittite cult-centres may have descended the mystic communion Eschmun-Asklepios {Oriental. Stud.zu Noldeke gewidmet, p. 752) thinks that the Healer-god, Marduk Asclepios Eschmun, is himself one who died and rose again in Assyrian and Phoenician theology. For Asklepios of Berytos we have the almost useless story of Damascius in Phot. Bibl., 573 H. ; the uncritical legend in Ktesias (c. 21) and Ael. Var. Hist., 13, 3, about the grave of Belitana at Babylon (to which Strabo also alludes, p. 740), does not justify the view that the death of Marduk was ever a Babylonian dogma. '■ Perrot-Chipiez, Histoire de I' Art, iv. pi. viii. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 253 rite of the Taurobolion or Tauropolion, which Cumont has shown good reason for supposing to have arisen in the worship of the Persian Anahita, and to have been adopted into the service of Kybele.^ More direct evidence is to be gleaned from the cult of Sandon or Sandes of Tarsos, a city which was once within the area of Hittite culture. The god of Tarsos comes later to be identified with the Tyrian Baal and the Hellenic Herakles ; and the legend of the death of the latter hero may be an echo of a hpog Koyog of Tarsos, inspired by an annual rite in which the god of the city was consumed on a funeral pyre, and was supposed to rise again from the flames in the form of an eagle.2 The later Tarsian coins display the image of the god, the pyre, the eagle, the double-headed axe, and the lion ; * and the last three of these symbols belong to the oldest religious art of the Hittites. The proof would be complete if it could be shown that the name Sandon or Sandes belongs to the Hittite language. All we know at present is that it is not a Babylonian or Sumerian word, or found in the vocabulary of any Semitic people. Prof. Sayce believes himself to have found it in a cuneiform inscription of Boghaz-Keui. This would be the direct proof that we require ; but the word that he transliterates as Sandes is said to be the ideogram of Hadad, the Syrian Semitic god, and that Hadad is used as the Semitic equivalent of Sandes is merely a conjuncture.* A still clearer and more striking example of the phenomenon with which we are dealing is the Phrygian 1 Rev. de Philol., 1893, p. 195. 2 Vide Frazer, op. cit., pp. 98-99. ' K. O. Muller, Kleine Schriften, vol. ii. pp. 102-103. * Journ. Roy. Asiat. Soc, 1909, pp. 966, 971 ; the information about the true meaning of the ideogram I owe to Dr. Langdon. 254 GREECE AND BABYLON and Lydian cult and legend of Attis. The various and often conflicting details in the story of his birth, life, and death, the various elements in his cult, are known to us from late sources ; the consideration of the whole question would not be relevant here ; but it is necessary for our purpose to determine, if possible, what are the aboriginal motives of the myth and cult. It seems likely that the earliest form of the Phrygian religion was the worship of the great mother-goddess, coupled with a son or lover,i a young and beautiful god who dies prematurely, and whose death was bewailed in an annual ritual, whose resurrection was presented in a subsequent or accompanying service. Of the death and the lamentation we have older evidence than for the resurrection and the rejoicing, but the one seems to be a necessary complement of the other. The family like- ness of Attis to Tammuz strikes us at first sight. As Tammuz appears as a young vegetation deity, identified partly with the life of trees, partly with the corn, so Attis in the Phrygian legend and ritual is presented as a tree-divinity, and in the verse of a late hymn, which is inspired by an ancient tradition, is invoked as " the corn cut by the reaper." And these two personalities of the Sumerian and Phrygian religions evoked the same psychologic senti- ment, sorrowful, romantic, and yearning. The h57po- thesis naturally suggests itself that the more Western people borrowed the cult from Mesopotamia, and that this had happened as early as B.C. 1500.^ All scholars are agreed at all events that the figure of Attis belongs to the older pre-Aryan stratum of the population of 1 Vide supra, p. 91 ; cf. Cults, ii. pp. 644-649 ; iii. pp. 300-305. ' The Babylonian myths of Etana and Adapa, and their ascent to heaven, may have given the cue to the Phrygian stories of Ganymede and Tantalos. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 255 Phrygia ; modern speculation is sometimes inclined to regard this as Hittite, and we know that tfie Hittites adopted some part of the Babylonian religion. But the name Attis itself is a stumbling-block to the hypo- thesis of borrowing from Mesopotamia. Believing Adonis to be a Western-Semitic form of Tammuz, we can explain the name as meaning merely " the Lord," a natural appellative of the Sumerian god. But we cannot so explain " Attis." It is non-Semitic, and must be regarded as belonging to an Anatolian language- group, nor can we yet discover its root-meaning. Again, there are many features of the Attis-worship and legend that are not found in the corresponding Sumerian, and one at least that seems essentially alien to it. The death of the vegetation-god, originally suggested by the annual phenomenon of nature, may be explained by various myths, when the personal deity has so far emerged from his nature-shell that he is capable of personal drama. The death of Tammuz does not appear to have been mythologically explained at all. We may suppose that the killing of Adonis by the boar was borrowed from the Attis legend, for in Phrygia, and also in Lydia — as the Herodotean Ates story proves — this animal was sometimes regarded as the enemy that slew the god. It is a reasonable belief that the boar came to play this part in the story through a misunderstanding of certain ritual, in which this victim was annually offered as incarnating the deity, or was reverentially spared through a sacrificial law of tabu. If this is an original fact of Attis-cult, it counts somewhat against the hypothesis of derivation from Mesopotamia, for the pig does not appear to have played any such part, positive or negative, in Meso- potamian, as in the ritual of the Western Semites and 256 GREECE AND BABYLON on the shores of Asia Minor ; nor can any connection at present be discovered between Tammuz and this animal. But another version of the death of Attis, current at some time among his worshippers, was that he died from the effects of self-mutilation, a motive suggested by the emasculation of the Phrygian Galloi. We have here a phenomenon in the cult and myth that was alien to the religious habits of the Mesopotamian communities. The eunuch as a secular functionary is a figure belonging to an immemorial social tradition of the East ; but the eunuch-priest is the morbid product of a very few religions, and there is no trace of such in Mesopotamia. The Babylonian church-law demanded an unblemished priesthood of strong virility, agreeing in this respect with the Judaic and the Hellenic, and according with an ancient sentiment that the vigour of the priest was the pledge of that continued flow of divine power which supported the vigour of the community. Self-emascula- tion was penalised in the religious rule of Jahwe, and the Gallos was excluded from temple-worship by the ritual code of Lesbos. The records of modern savagery and the history of ascetism, whether in modern and mediaeval India or in early Christianity, afford us varied illustration of the wildest excesses of self-inflicted cruelty against the human body, but not — so far as I am aware — of this particular form of self-destruction.^ As a religious practice it is a special characteristic of Phrygia, a land always fascinating to the student on account of its strange freaks of religious psychology ; and from Phrygia the practice spread into some adjacent communities, such as Bambyke. One may be allowed 1 Dr. Frazer, in Magic Art and the Evolution of Kings [G. B., vol. ii. p. 45), quotes from N. Tsackni (La Russie Sectaire, p. 74) an example of a fanatic Christian sect in modern Russia practising castration. I have not been able to find this treatise. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 257 to pause a little to consider the original motive that prompted it. At first sight one is tempted to explain it as due to a morbid exaggeration of the craving for purity. But elsewhere, where this impulse was most powerful, for instance, in the later Orphic and Isis cults, and in early and mediaeval Christianity, it produced many mental aberrations but not this particular one. Nor, again, have we any reason for supposing this craving to have been strong in the devotees of Phrygia ; the Galloi of Bambyke, according to Lucian, were pos- sessed by strong though impotent sexual desires and were allowed full license with women. The form of com- munion most ardently sought with the Phrygian goddess and with the later Sabazios was a marriage symbolised by a sexual act ; and Greek and Latin writers, both pagan and Christian, agree in reprobating the obscenities of Kybele-Attis worship ; we may note also that Phrygian sacred mythology is somewhat grosser than the Hellenic. We are compelled to seek another explanation, and I can suggest none other than that which I have hazarded elsewhere ; namely, that Phrygian religious emascula- tion was an act performed in a frenzy of exaltation by the priest or mystes desirous of assimilating himself as far as possible to the female nature of the great divinity.^ ' Vide Cults, iii. pp. 300-301. Dr. Frazer's theory is that the act of castration was performed in order to maintain the fruitfulness of the earth {op. cit., pp. 224-237). But this is against the countless examples which he himself has adduced of the character and function of the priest or priest-king as one whose virile strength maintains the strength of the earth ; the sexual act performed in the field by the owner increases the fruitfulness of the field (Frazer, GB'^, ii. p. 205). Why should the priest make himself impotent so as to improve the crops ? The only grounds of his belief appear to be that the priest's testicles were committed to the earth or to an underground shrine of Kybele {Arnob. Adv. Gent., v. 14, and Schol. Nikand. Alexipharm., 7; vide Cults, 3 ; Kybele Ref. 54a) ; but such consecration of them to Kybele would be natural on any hypothesis, and Arnobius' words do not prove that they were buried in the bare earth. 17 258 GREECE AND BABYLON The worship was under male ministration for the highest part ; but for the full exercise of divine power the male priest must become quasi-female and wear a female dress, the latter part of the role being common enough in primitive " theurgy." The priest is him- self at times the incarnation of the young god, and is called Attis. Therefore Attis was himself supposed to have performed the same act, even at the cost of his life. How early was this institution of a eunuch priesthood in Phrygia we have no direct evidence to prove. It may be a " Hittite " tradition ; for figures that Perrot reasonably interprets as eunuch-priests are seen on the reliefs of Boghaz-Keui. Returning to the topic of the death of the divinity, we may assume that in Phrygia this was a very ancient tradition, enacted yearly by a ceremonious laying out of the vegetation puppet on a bier, or the suspension of it on a pine-tree. We have no direct or otherwise trusty evidence for the immolation of the priest who incarnates the god ; doubtless the stories about the death of Marsyas and the harvest-sacrifice of Lityerses point to a ritual of human-sacrifice; whom Marsyas stands for is doubtful, but in the Lityerses legend it is merely the passing stranger who is slain, and neither of these traditions is explicitly linked with Attis-cult. Finally, we may pronounce the hypothesis of the derivation of the Phrygian cult from Mesopotamia to be unproved and unnecessary. Pursuing this phenomenon further afield, we come to the area of Minoan-Mycenaean culture. If the legend of the death of the Minotaur could be safely interpreted as arising from the periodic immolation of a bull-god, the idea that we are in quest of would be proved to belong to the Minoan Cretans ; but the COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 259 frescoes of Knossos present that event with S4ach a gay and sporting entourage that one feels shy of forcing a solemn religious significance into it. More important for our purpose is the traditional Zeus-legend of Crete. It is generally felt to be alien to the genuine Hellenic tradition concerning their high god, as something adopted by the immigrant Hellenes from an earlier Eteocretan ritual and creed.^ We have a glimpse of a ritual in which the deity is born, is worshipped as an infant, and then as a boy — xovpog, as he is invoked in the new fragment of the hymn of the Kouretes — and especially as the son of a great mother, not as a mature independent personality. Again, there appears an orgi- astic emotion and passion in the ritual that strikes a note in harmony with the Phrygian Kybele-Attis worship. The very early associations of Crete and the countries adjacent to the Troad are now being revealed by accumu- lating evidence, and may point to an affinity of stock. It may well have been, then, that the Minoan Cretans had their counterpart to Attis, a young god who was born and died periodically, whom they may have named Velchanos, the name of the young deity seen sitting under a tree on a Cretan coin of the fifth century. Though in age and character so unlike the Hellenic Zeus, we may suppose that the incoming Hellenes named him so because they found him the chief god of the island. We can also understand why the later Bacchic mystery flourished so fruitfully in Crete, if it found here already the ritual of a young god who died and rose again, and why in later times the inhabitants celebrated with such enthusiasm the Hilaria,^ the Easter festival of the resurrection of the Phrygian divinity. 1 Vide Cults, i. pp. 36-38. " Vide Evolution of Religion, p. 6z. 26o GREECE AND BABYLON This attempt to reconstruct a portion of old Cretan religion on the lines of the early Phrygian has only a precarious value, until some more positive evidence is forthcoming from the Minoan art-record, which hitherto has revealed to us nothing concerning an annual divine birth and death. The ritual-legend is incomplete : we hear sufficiently of the birth, and we may argue a priori that a periodic ritual of the god's birth implies a periodic death. Unfortunately all that we glean from ancient literature is that there was a grave of Zeus, perhaps in the Idaean cave, on which Pythagoras is said to have written an epitaph.^ But a sceptical doubt arises here from the fact which was pointed out by Rohde, that the grave of a divine personage was often a misnomer of the underground sanctuary of a chthonian deity ; and either the Idaean cave or the great cavern on Mount Dikte, whence the interesting relics of an immemorial cult have recently been gathered,^ might at a later period have come to be regarded as a grave. Still, we may ask, could the phrase " the grave of Zeus " have become prevalent among a people with whom the worship of this god was still a living creed, unless the faith alsp prevailed that the god who died rose again to power ? In that case the " grave of Zeus " could be a name for a sanctuary where the ritual of the death was enacted preliminary to the ritual of the birth. This reconstruction then, and the a priori deduction emphasised above, may claim to be at least legitimate. Finally, some evidence may be added from Cyprian cult for the view that the Minoan civilisation was 1 Porph. Vit. Pyth., 17 ; cf. Callim. H. ad. Jov., 8 ; Diod. Sic, 3, 61 ; vide Cults, i. pp. 36-37. » Vide A. Evans in Hell. Jouyn., xvii. 350. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 261 cognisant of the dogma of the death of the divinity. We hear of the grave of Ariadne-Aphrodite which was shown in later times in Cyprus,^ and the Cretan and Cypriote legends of the maidens called Gorgo, Parakup- tousa, and Galatea ^ reveal to us an Aphrodite who died periodically and was laid out on a bier and revived. The Aphrodite of Cyprus is most probably of " Minoan " origin ; and, being a goddess of vegetation, the idea of periodic death and resurrection might naturally attach to her, and might be associated with another type of ritual also, the annual casting of her puppet into the sea, which probably gave rise to such stories as the leap of Britomartis or Derketo into the waves.* We can now deal with the purely' Hellenic evidence. Confining our view first to the cults and legends of the higher divinities of Hellas, we cannot affirm that the death and resurrection of the deity is a primitive tradi- tion of the Hellenes. We may suspect it to have been a leading motive in some of the local Arcadian cults of Artemis, if, for instance, we interpret the Arcadian Kallisto as a form of the great goddess herself ; but it is very probable that Artemis in Arcadia and many other of her cult-centres represents the pre-Hellenic divinity of birth and fruitfulness. What we may dare to call the Hellenic spirit seems to speak in the answer given by Xenophanes to the people of Elea when they asked him whether they ought to sacrifice to Leukothea and bewail her " : "If you regard her as a deity, do not bewail her ; if as human, do not sacrifice." * But when we descend from the higher religion to ^ Vide Cults, vol. ii. p. 651 ; ci. Clem. Recogn., 10, 24, "sepulcrum Cypriae Veneris apud Cyprum." 2/6., pp. 651-652. » Vide Cults, vol. ii. pp. 447, n. c, 478, 638, n. a. * Aristot. Rhet., 2, 23. 262 GREECE AND BABYLON the old Hellenic agrarian cults associated with the heroes or daimones of the soil and field, we find evidence of sorrowful rites, ceremonies of bewailing, which belong to the same type as that of Tammuz ; and in the Greek, as in the Babylonian, the personage to whom they are attached is a youthful hero or heroine of vegetation : such are Linos, perhaps the earliest theme of a melan- choly harvest -song of pre-Homeric days ; Hyakinthos, the " youth " of the Laconian land who may or may not have been Hellenic, to whom the greater part of the Hyakinthia were consecrated ; Eunostos of Tanagra ; Erigone, " the early -born," of Ikaria. The life of all these passes away as the verdure passes, or as the crops are gathered in ; and to one of them at least, Hyakinthos, and perhaps to the others, the idea of an annual resurrec- tion was attached. But none of these came like Tammuz to play a world-part ; they remain the naive, half- realised forms of poetic folk-religion. Like to them is Bormos of Bithynia,^ whose death was bewailed at the harvest-time with melancholy songs, accompanied by sad flute-music, and Lityerses of Phrygia, whom the reapers lamented around the threshing-floor. Shall we say that all these are merely reflections cast afar by the great cult -figure of Babylon ? Then we must say the same of the peasant-hero " German " whom the modern Bulgarians adore and bewail, of the Russian Yarilo,^ and our own John Barley- corn. And at this point we shall probably fall back on the theory of independent similar developments, and shall believe that peasant religion in different parts of the world is capable of evolving strikingly parallel ' Athenae, p. 620 A (fijreii' airbv roiis ivb ttjs x'^P"'^ fierd, nvoi ii,efi,e\if- Syj/ihov 6p-ljvov Kal avaK\i)iTewi) ; Pollux., 4, 54. « Frazer, GB =, vol. ii. p. 106. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 263 figures in obedience to the stimulus of similar circum- stances and needs. • We have no surety, then, for a belief that Tammuz, or any shadow of Tammuz, was borne to the western shores of the Aegean in the days before Homer. And we know that Adonis, his nearest Anatolian representative, only arrived late in the post-Homeric period. Mean- time, whatever view we may hold concerning prehistoric religious commerce between East and West, this vital difference between Mesopotamian and Hellenic religion must be strongly emphasised : Babylonian liturgy is mainly a service of sorrow, and part of that sorrow is for Tammuz ; Hellenic worship was mainly cheerful and social, and only in a few chthonian cults is a gloomier tone discernible, nor can we anywhere hear the outbursts of violent and ecstatic grief. In this respect, and in its remoteness from any idea of the death and resurrection of the deity, Hellenic religion was further removed from that of Catholic Europe than was the old Phrygian or the Sumerian. The Babylonian temple-service was complex and varied, and offers many problems of interest to the comparative student. We gather that a Holy Marriage was part of a religious drama perhaps performed an- nually ; for instance, we find reference to the solemn nuptials of Ninib and Bau, and to the marriage presents given to Bau.^ In every anthropomorphic polytheism, especially when idolatry provides images that could be used for religious drama, this ritual act is likely to occur. It is recorded of the southern Arabians in the days before Islam, an ancient inscription speaking of the marriage ceremony of Athtar.^ It is a marriage of the great God • Vide Thureau-Dangin, Vorderasiatische Bibliothek, i. p. 77. ' Weber, Arabien vor dem Islam, p. 19. 264 GREECE AND BABYLON and Goddess that according to the most reasonable interpretation is represented on the Hittite reliefs of Boghaz-Keui. We may conj ecture that it was a ceremony of Minoan worship ; a Mycenaean signet-ring shows us a seated goddess with a young god standing before her and joining his forearm to hers, while both make a peculiar gesture with their fingers that may indicate troth-plighting ; ^ also, the later legends and the later ritual commemorating the marriages of Aphrodite and Ariadne may descend from the pre-HeUenic religious tradition. Finally, we have fairly full evidence of the same religious act in purely Hellenic cult. The /spoj yd,(Log of Zeus and Hera was enacted in many com- munities with certain traits of primitive custom ; ^ the nuptials of Kore and the lower-world god might be found in the ceremonies of certain temples ; ^ while the central scene of the Eleusinia, the greater if not the lesser, included a Holy Marriage.* The Roman religion, in the original form of which there may have been no marrying or giving in marriage, no family ties or genealogies of divinities, no doubt borrowed its "Orci nuptiae " from the Greek. But for the other cases, there is no need to resort to any theory of borrowing to explain a phenomenon so natural at a certain stage of religion. Nor is it an important phenomenon, so long as the ceremony was enacted merely by puppets or idols, as in the Boeotian Daidala.^ It only begins to be of higher significance for the history of religious practice and thought, when the part of one of the divinities in this drama is played by a human representative. For not only does this offer indefinite possibilities of exalta- ' Vide Evans in Hell. Journ., 1901, p. 176. ' Cults, i. pp. 184-191. " 76., iii. pp. 123-124. * lb., iii. p. 176 ; cf. vol. iv. p. 34 n. b. ' lb., i. pp. 189-190. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 265 tion for the mortal, but it may engender the mystic ideal and practice of communion with the divinity through sexual intercourse, which played a great part in Phrygian religion, and left a deep impress on early Christian symbolism. The question whether the Mesopotamian religion presents us with evidence of a "holy marriage " solemnised between a mortal and the divinity must finally involve the more difficult question as to the function and purpose of that strange Mesopo- tamian institution of temple-prostitutes. But, leaving this latter alone for the moment, we find explicit testi- mony in Herodotus to the fact with which we are immediately concerned. In describing the great temple of Bel at Babylon,^ he asserts, on the authority of his " Chaldean priests," that the deity chose as his nightly partner some native woman, who was supposed to pass the night on the couch with him, and who was obliged to abstain from all other intercourse with men ; and he compares a similar practice of belief found in the temple of Zeus in Egyptian Thebes, and in the oracular shrine of Apollo at Patara in Lycia. Now Herodotus' trust- worthiness in this matter has been doubted by Assyrio- logists ; 2 nevertheless, a phrase used in the code of Hammurabi concerning a holy woman dedicated to temple service, calling her " a wife of Marduk," seems to give some colour to the Herodotean statement.' Only, this term might have merely a spiritual-symbolic significance, like the designation of a nun as " the bride of Christ " ; for the original Babylonian documents have supplied as yet, so far as I am aware, no evidence of a woman fulfilling the role of Belit, the wife of Bel. >i, 181. ' Vide, for instance. Dr. Langdon in the Expositor, 1909, p. 143. ' Winckler, Die Gesetze Hammurabi, p. 182. 266 GREECE AND BABYLON As regards the adjacent religions, the idea that a mortal might enter into this mode of communion with the divinity was probably an ancient heritage of the Phrygian religions, for it crops up in various forms. The priest of Attis was himself called Attis, and, therefore, probably had loving intercourse with the goddess, and the later mysteries of Kybele extended this idea and offered to every votary the glory of a mystic marri- age ; 1 it was the unconscious stimulus of an immemo- rial tradition that prompted the Phrygian heresiarch Montanus to give himself out as the husband of the Virgin Mary.^ It also appears as a fundamental tenet of the Sabazian mystery and of the Hellenistic-Egyptian Hermetic theospphy. The simple ritual-fact, namely, that a woman serves as the bride of the god, could prob- ably be traced far afield through many widely distant peoples. According to Sahagun,* the human sacrifices of the Mexicans had sometimes the purpose of sending away a woman victim into divine wedlock. In pre-Christian Sweden we find a priestess generally regarded as the wife of the god Freyr, and enjoying considerable power from the connection.* Similar examples can be quoted from modern savage com- munities. Therefore if we find the same institution in the Mediterranean, we shall not think it necessary to suppose that it was an import from Babylon or from any Semitic people. As regards the Minoan worship, it is legitimate at least to regard the legend of Pasiphae and her amour with the bull-god as an unfortunate ' Vide pieterich, Miihras-Liiurgie, pp. 126-127 ; Reizenstein, Die hellenistischen Mysterien-religionen. ' Vide Herzog's Real-Encyclop., s.v. " Montanismus.'' ' Jourdanet et Simian transl. of Sahagun, pp. 147-148. * Golther, Handbuch der Germanischen Mythologie, p. 229 ; cf. Mannhardt, BaumkuUus, p. 589. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 267 aetiologic myih distorting the true sense o^ a ritual in which a mortal woman enjoyed this kind of divine communion, and here again we should mark a religious affinity between Crete and Phrygia. And, it is likely that the idea was not unfamiliar to the Hellenes, though the record of it is scanty and uncertain. According to the early Christian fathers, the inspiration of the Pythia of Delphi was due to a corporeal union with Apollo akin at least to — if not identical with — sexual inter- course. Of more value is Herodotus' definite assertion that the priestess of Patara gained her inspiration by her nuptial union with Apollo. In the rare cases where the cult of a Hellenic god was administered by a priestess we may suspect that a kpSg ydf/jog was part of the temple-ritual ; in the two examples that I have been able to find, the cults of Poseidon at Kalaureia and of Heracles at Thespiai, the priestess must be a maiden, as on this theory would be natural.^ The maiden-priestesses of the Leukippides, the divine brides of the Dioskouroi at Sparta, were themselves called Leukippides ; in all probability because they were their mortal representatives in some ceremony of holy marriage. 2 But the most salient and explicitly recorded example is the yearly marriage of the Queen-Archon at Athens with Dionysos, the bull-god, in the feast of Anthesteria, the significance of which I have discussed elsewhere.* It seems that the Queen by uniting her body with the god's, unites to him the whole Athenian state and secures its prosperity and fruitfulness ; this historic fact may also explain the myth of the union ^ Pausan., 2, 33, 3; g, 27, 6 ; cf . my article in Archiv. fiir Religionswiss., 1904, p. 74 ; E. Fehrle, Die KuUische Keuschheit im Alterthum, p. 223, gives other examples which appear to me more doubtful. " Paus., 3, 16, I. » Cults, V. pp. 217-219. 268 GREECE AND BABYLON of Althaia, Queen of Kalydon, with the same god. Finally, let us observe that nothing in any of these Hellenic records suggests any element of what we shotdd call impurity in the ritual ; we are not told that these holy marriages were ever consummated by the priest as the human representative of the god ; or that the ceremony involved any real loss of virginity in the maiden-priestess. The marriage could have been consummated symbolically by use of a puppet or image of the deity. We may believe that the rite descends from pre-Homeric antiquity ; the ritual which the Queen-Archon performed might naturally have been established at the time of the adoption into Athens of the Dionysiac cult, and there are reasons for dating this event earlier than looo b.c.^ We now come to a very difficult and important question concerning the position of women in the old Mesopotamian temple-ritual. Our first document of value is the code of Hammurabi, in which we find certain social regulations concerning the status of a class of women designated by a name which Winckler translates doubtfully as " God's-sisters," regarding it, however, as equivalent to consecrated, while Johns trans- lates it merely as " votary." ^ At least, we have proof of a class of holy women who have certain privileges and are under certain restrictions. They were the daughters of good families dedicated by their fathers to religion ; they could inherit property, which was exempt from the burden of army-tax ; they could not marry, and were prohibited from setting-up or even entering a wine-shop under penalty of death. It is something to know even as much as this about them, ' Vide Cults, v. p. 109. ^ Winckler, op. cit., p. no ; Johns, op. cit., p. 54. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 269 but we would very gladly learn more. Is i^ to their order that the personage described as " the wife of Marduk"! belongs, who has been considered above? Is it from among them that the priestesses of Ishtar were chosen, who interpreted the oracles of the goddess ? ^ It seems clear that a father could dedicate his daughter to any divinity, that their position was honourable, and that they are not to be identified with the temple- prostitutes of Babylon or Erech, who excited the wonder and often the reprobation of the later Greek world. This peculiar order of temple-harlots is also recognised — according to some of the best authorities ^ — in Ham- murabi's code, where they are mentioned in the same context with the " consecrated" or the " God-sisters," and yet are clearly distinct from them ; another clause seems to refer to male prostitutes (§ 187). Certain rules are laid down concerning their inheritance of property, and concerning the rearing of their children, if they had any, who might be adopted into private families. Evi- dently these " Qadishtu " were a permanent institution, and there is no hint of any dishonour. There may be other references in Babylonian literature to these temple- women ; in the Epic of Gilgamesh, the courtesan who won over Eabani evidently belongs to the retinue of Ishtar of Erech. From these two institutions we must distinguish that other, for which Herodotus is our earliest authority : * according to his explicit statement, once in her lifetime every Babylonian woman, high or low, had to stand in the temple-precincts of the goddess Mylitta — probably a ' Code, § 182. ' Jastrow, op. cit., ii. 157. ' Vide Winckler's interpretation of §§ 178, 180, 181 ; cf. also Zimmern in K.A.T.^, 423. * I, 199- 270 GREECE AND BABYLON functional appellative of Ishtar, meaning " the helper of childbirth " — and to prostitute herself to any stranger who threw money into her lap and claimed her with the formula, " I invoke the goddess Mylitta for you." Herodotus hastens to assure us that this single act of unchastity — which took place outside the temple — did not afterwards lower the morality of the women, who, as he declares, were otherwise exemplary in this respect. But he is evidently shocked by the custom, and the early Christian and modern writers have quoted it as the worst example of gross pagan or Oriental licentious- ness. Some devoted Assyriologists have tried to throw doubt on the historian's veracity : ^ the wish is father to the thought : and it is indeed difficult for the ordinary civilised man to understand how an ancient civilisation of otherwise advanced morality could have sanctioned such a practice. But Herodotus' testimony ought not to be so impugned ; nor is it sufficient evidence for rejecting it that no reference to the custom which he describes has been found hitherto in the cuneiform literature. Strabo merely repeats what Herodotus has said ; but independent evidence of some value is gathered from the apocryphal Epistle of Jeremias : ^ " The women also with cords about them sit in the ways, burning bran for incense ; but if any of them, drawn by some that pass by, lie with them, she reproacheth her fellow that she was not thought as worthy as herself, nor her cord broken." The context is altogether religious, and this is no ordinary secular immorality ; certain details in the narrative remind us of Herodotus, and make it clear that the writer has in mind the same social usage that the historian vouches for. This usage may be described as the consecration to the goddess of 1 E.g. Zimmern in K.A.T.^, p. 423. » Verse 43. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 271 the first-fruits of the woman's virginity before jnarriage ; for, though Herodotus does not explicitly say that it was a rite preliminary to marriage, yet the records of similar practices elsewhere in Asia Minor assure us on this point. We have now to begin the comparative search in the adjacent regions, keeping distinct the three types of consecration which I have specified above, which are too often confused.^ The first type has its close analogies with the early Christian, mediaeval, and modern conventual life of women. The code of Hammurabi presents us with the earliest example of what may be called the religious sisterhood ; the Babylonian votaries were dedicated to religion, and while the Christian nuns are often called the brides of Christ, their earliest prototypes enjoyed the less questionable title of " God's-sisters." We find no exact parallel to this practice in ancient Greece ; from the earliest period, no doubt, the custom prevailed of consecrating individual women of certain families as priestesses to serve certain cults, and sometimes chastity was enforced upon them ; but these did not form a conventual society ; and usually, apart from their occasional religious duties, they could lead a secular life. In fact, the monastic system was of Eastern origin and only reached Europe in later times, being opposed 1 The first to insist emphatically on the necessity of their distinc- tion was Mr. Hartland, in Anthropological Essays presented to E. B. Tylor,pp. 190-191; but he has there, I think, wrongly classified — ^through a misunderstanding of a phrase in Aelian — the Lydian custom that Herodotus (i, 93) and Aelian {Var. Hist., iv. i) refer to ; both these writers mention the custom of the women of Lydia practising pros- titution before marriage. Aelian does not mention the motive that Herodotus assigns, the collection of a dowry; neither associates it with religion. Aelian merely adds that when once married the Lydian women were virtuous ; this need have nothing to do with the Mylitta-rite. 272 GREECE AND BABYLON to the civic character of the religion of the old Aryan states. The second class of consecrated women served as temple-harlots in certain cult-centres of Asia Minor. We cannot say that the custom in all cases emanated from Babylon ; for there is reason to think that it was a tradition attaching to the cult of the goddess among the polytheistic Semitic stocks. We have clear allusions in the Bible to temple-prostitution practised by both sexes in the Canaanite communities adjacent to the Israelites, who were themselves sometimes contaminated by the practice.^ We hear of " hierodouli " among the pagan Arabs,^ of women " of the congregation of the people of Astarte " at Carthage,* of numbers of dedicated slave women in the cult of Aphrodite at Eryx,* which was at least semi-Semitic ; and it is likely that some of these at least were devoted to the impure religious practice. As regards non-Semitic worships, it is only clearly attested of two, namely, of the worship of Ma. at Comana in Pontos,^ and of Aphrodite Ourania in Corinth.* In these cases we have the right to assume Semitic influences at work ; for we do not find traces of this practice in the ancient cult of Kybele ; and Ma of Cappadocia and Pontus, who had affinities with her, was partly contaminated with Anahita, a Persian goddess, who had taken on Babylonian fashions. Nor can we doubt that the practice gained recognition at Corinth in post-Homeric times through its Oriental trade ; for it was attached to the cult of Aphrodite 1 E.g. Hosea iv. 13 ; Deut. xxiii. 18 ; i Kings xiv. 24. 2 Weber, Arabien vor dem Islam, p. 18. 3 C. J. Sent., I, 263. * Strab., 272. 5 Strab., 559. « Pind. Frag., 87 ; Strab., 378; [Cults, ii. p. 746, R. gge). COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 273 Ourania, whose personality, partly at least, was identical with that of the Semitic goddess. The practice sur- vived in Lydia in the later period of the Graeco-Roman culture. For a woman of Tralles, by name Aurelia Aemilia, erected a column with an inscription that has been published by Sir William Ramsay,^ in which she proclaims with pride that she had prostituted herself in the temple service " at the command of an oracle," and that her female ancestors had done like- wise. Finally, we may find the cult-practice reflected in certain legends ; in the legend of Iconium, for instance, of the woman who enticed all strangers to her embraces and afterwards slew them, but was herself turned to stone by Perseus, and whose stone image gave the name to the State.2 The other custom recorded by Herodotus of Babylon, the consecration of the first-fruits of virginity to the goddess before marriage, which I have con- sidered as distinct from the foregoing, may often have been combined or confused with it ; for the temple- harlotry, carried on for some considerable period, might be occasionally a preliminary to marriage. The most exact parallels to the Babylonian custom are found in the records of Byblos, Cyprus, and the Syrian Helio- polis or Baalbec. Lucian attests the rule prevailing at Byblos, that in the festival of Adonis women ex- posed themselves for purchase on one single day, and i Cities and Bishoprics, i. 94. In his comment he rightly points out that the woman is Lydian, as her name is not genuine Roman ; but he is wrong in speaking of her service as performed to a god (Frazer, Adonis, etc., p. 34, follows him). This would be a unique fact, for the service in Asia Minor is always to a goddess ; but the inscrip- tion neither mentions nor implies a god. The bride of Zeus at Egyptian Thebes was also a temple-harlot, if we could believe Strabo, p. 816 ; but on this point he contradicts Herodotus, i, 182. ^ Et. Mag., s.v. 'Ik6hov. 18 274 GREECE AND BABYLON that only strangers were allowed to enjoy them ; but that this service was only imposed upon them if they refused to cut off their hair in lamentation for Adonis.^ Similarly the Byzantine historian Sozomenos declared that at Heliopolis (Baalbec), in the temple of Astarte, each maiden was obliged to prostitute herself before marriage, until the custom and the cult were abolished by Constantine.* The statements about Cyprus, though less explicit, point to the same institution : Herodotus, having described at length the Babylonian practice, declares that it prevailed in Cyprus also, and Justin ' that it was a custom of the Cyprians " to send their virgins before marriage on fixed days to the shore, to earn their dowry by prostitution, so as to pay a first-offering to Venus for their virtue henceforth (pro reliqua pudicitia libamenta Veneri soluturas)." The procession to the shore may indicate the rule that intercourse was only allowed them with strangers,* and nothing points to prolonged prostitution. It is probably the same rite that the Locrians of the West vowed to perform in honour of Aphrodite in the event 1 De Dea Syr., 6 ; cf. Aug. De Civ. Dei, 4, 10 : "cui (Veneri) etiam Phoenices donum dabant de prostitutione filiarum, antequam eas jun- gerent viris " : religious prostitution before marriage prevailed among the Carthaginians in the worship of Astarte (Valer. Max., 2, ch. i, sub. fin. : these vague statements may refer either to defloration of virgins or prolonged service in the temple). * See Frazer, op. cii., p. 33, n. i, quoting Sozomen. Hist. Eccles., 5, 10, 7 ; Sokrates, Hist. Eccles., i, 18, 7-9 ; Euseb. Vita Consiantin., 3, 58. Eusebius only vaguely alludes to it. Sokrates merely says that the wives were ^n common, and that the people had the habit of giving over the virgins to strangers to violate. Sozomenos is the only voucher for the religious aspect of the practice ; from Sokrates we gather that the rule about strangers was observed in the rite. » 18, 5. * This is confirmed by the legend given by ApoUodoros {Bibl., 3, 14, 3) that the daughters of Kinyras, owing to the wrath of Aphrodite, had sexual intercourse with strangers. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 275 of deliverance from a dangerous war.^ But, in the worship of Anaitis at Akilisene in Armenia, according to Strabo,^ the unmarried women served as temple- harlots for an indefinite time until they married ; and Aurelia Aemilia of Tralles may have been only main- taining the same ancient ritual in Lydia. In these two countries, then, it seems as if there had been a fusion of two institutions that elsewhere were distinct one from another, harlot-service for a prolonged period in a temple, and the consecration of each maiden's virginity as a preliminary to marriage. Such institutions mark the sharpest antagonism between the early religious sentiment of the East and the West. Of no European State is there any record, religious or other, that the sacrifice before marriage of a woman's virginity to a mortal was at any time regarded as demanded by temple ritual. Such a rite was abhorrent to the genuine Hellenic, as it was to the Hebraic, spirit ; and only in later times do we find one or two Hellenic cult-centres catching the taint of the Oriental tradition : while such legends as that of Melanippos and Komaitho and the story of Laokoon's sin express the feeling of horror which any sexual licence in a temple aroused in the Greek.* ' Justin, 21, 3 ; Athenaeus, 516 A, speaks vaguely, as if the women of the Lokri Epizephyrii were promiscuous prostitutes. " Pp- 532-533- ' The lovers, Melanippos and Komaitho, sin in the temple of Artemis Triklaria of the lonians in Achaia ; the whole community is visited with the divine wrath, and the sinners are ofiered up as a piacular sacrifice (Pans., 7, 19, 3) ; according to Euphorion, Laokoon's fate was due to a similar trespass committed with his wife before the statue of Apollo (Serv. Aen., 2, 201). It may be that such legends faintly reflect a very early lepbs yi/ios once performed in temples by the priest and priestess : if so, they also express the repugnance of the later Hellene to the idea of it ; and in any case this is not the institution that is being discussed. 276 GREECE AND BABYLON It is imperative to try to understand the original purpose or significance of the Semitic and AnatoHan rites that we have been dealing with. To regard them as the early Christian and some modern writers have done, as mere examples of unbridled Oriental lust masquerading in the guise of religion, is a false and unjust view. According to Herodotus, the same society that ordained this sacrifice of virginity upon the daughters of families maintained in other respects a high standard of virtue, which appears also attested by Babylonian religious and secular documents. Modern anthropology has handled the problem with greater insight and seriousness ; but certain current explana- tions are not convincing. To take the rite described by Herodotus first, which is always to be distinguished from the permanent institution of " hierodulai " in the sense of temple-harlots : Mannhardt, who was the first to apply modern science to the problem, explained it as a development of vegetation-ritual.^ Aphrodite and Adonis, Ishtar and Tammuz, represent vegetation, and their yearly union causes general fertility ; the women are playing the part of the goddess, and the stranger represents Adonis ! The Babylonian rite, then, is partly religious (Jbifjijiiat;, the human acting of a divine drama, partly religious magic good for the crops. But in spite of Mannhardt 's great and real services to science, his vegetation-theory leads him often astray, and only one who was desperately defending a thesis would explain that stranger, a necessary personage in the ritual at Babylon, Byblos, Cyprus, and Baalbec, as the native god. There is no kind of reason for connecting the Babylonian rite with Tammuz, or for supposing that the women were representing ' Antike Wald II., xvi. 228. ^ Od., ii. 261. ' 11, i. 313. 19 290 GREECE AND BABYLON the riddance of the smell of blood from the house. Sulphur is there called xuxZv axog,^ " a remedy against evil things " ; but we cannot attach any moral or spiritual sense to xuxd,, nor is Homeric xadagaii re- lated, as far as we can see, to any animistic belief. There is one passage where Homer's silence is valuable and gives positive evidence ; Theoklumenos, who has slain a man of his own tribe and fled from his home, in consequence approaches Telemachos when the latter is sacrificing and implores and receives his protection : there is no hint of any feeling that there is a stain upon him, or that he needs purification, or that his presence pollutes the sacrifice. ^ All this would have been felt by the later Greek ; and in the post-Homeric period we have to reckon with a momentous growth of the idea of impurity and of a complex system of purifica- tion, especially in regard to homicide, leading to im- portant developments in the sphere of law and morality which I have tried to trace out on other occasions.^ But Homer may well be regarded as the spokesman of a gifted race, the Achaeans, as we call them, on whom the burden of the doctrine of purification lay lightly, and for whom the ghostly world had comparatively little terror or interest. Besides the Achaeans, however, and their kindred races there was the submerged popula- tion of the older culture who enter into the composition of the various Hellenes of history. Therefore the varied development in the post-Homeric period of cathartic ideas may be only a renaissance, a recrudescence of forces that were active enough in the second millennium. ' Od., xxii. 481 : In the passage referred tQ above, Achilles uses sulphur to purify the cups. 2 Od., xiii. 256-281 : This is rightly pointed out by Stengel in his Griechische Kuliusaltertiimer, p. 107. ' Evolution of Religion, pp. 139-152 ; Cults, iv. pp. 295-306. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 291 Attica may have been the home where the qjd tradi- tion survived, and cathartic rites such as the Thargelia and the trial of the axe for murder in the Bouphonia have the savour of great antiquity. May not the Minoan rehgion of Crete have been permeated with the ideas of the impurity of bloodshed and the craving for purification from sin ? For at the beginning of the historic period Crete seems to have been the centre of what may be called the cathartic mission ; from this island came Apollo Delphinios, the divine purifier par excellence, to this island the god came to be purified from the death of Python ; and in later times, Crete lent to Athens its purifying prophet Epimenides.^ If we believe, then, that the post-Homeric blood-purification was really a recrudescence of the tradition of an older indigenous culture, we should use this as another argu- ment for the view that the Greece of the second mil- lennium was untouched or scarcely touched by Baby- lonian influence. For, as we have seen, purification by blood or from blood appears to have been wholly alien to Babylonian religious and legal practice. The ritual of purification belongs as much to the history of magic as religion. Now, the student of religion is not permitted to refuse to touch the domain of magic ; nor can we exclude its consideration even from the highest topics of religious speculation. Some general remarks have already been made ^ concerning the part played by magic both in the worship and in the • Vide Cults, iv. pp. 144-147, 300 : To suppose that Hellas learnt its cathartic rites from Lydia, because Herodotus (i. 35) tells us that in his time the Lydians had the Hellenic system of purification from homicide, is less natural. Lydia may well have learnt it from Delphi in the time of Alyattes or Croesus. Or it may have survived in Lydia as a tradition of the early " Minoan " period ; and, similarly, it may have survived in Crete. 2 Vide supra, pp. 176-178. 292 GREECE AND BABYLON social life of the peoples that we are comparing. Any exact and detailed comparison would be fruitless for our present purpose ; for, while the knowledge of early Babylonian magic is beginning to be considerable, we cannot say that we know anything definite concerning the practices in this department of the Hellenic and adjacent peoples in the early period with which we are dealing. From the Homeric poems we can gather little more than that magic of some kind existed ; and that Homer and his gifted audience probably despised it as they despised ghosts and demons. It is only by inference that we can venture to ascribe to the earliest period of the Greek race some of the magic rites that are recorded by the later writers. It would require a lengthy investigation and treatise to range through the whole of Greek ritual and to disentangle and expose the magic element which was undoubtedly there, and which in some measure is latent in the ritual of every higher religion yet examined. By way of salient illustration we may quote the ceremonies of the scapegoat and the (papiJbaKoi;} modes of the magic-transference of sin and evil ; the strewing of sacred food-stuff that is instinct with divine potency over the fields in the Thesmophoria ; the rain magic performed by the priests of Zeus Lykaios ; ^ we hear at Kleonai of an official class of " Magi " who controlled the wind and the weather by spells, and occasionally in their excitement gashed their own hands, like the priests of Baal ; * such blood- magic being explicable as a violent mode of discharging personal energy upon the outer objects which one wishes to subdue to one's will. Another and more 1 Vide Cvlts, iv. pp. 268-284. " For similar practices, vide Cults, pp. 415-417. *CIeni. Alex. Strom., p. 755, Pott. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 293 thrilling example of blood-magic is the process of water- finding by pouring human blood about the earth, a method revealed by an old legend of Haliartos in Boeotia about the man who desired water, and in order to find it consulted Delphi, and was recommended by the oracle to slay the first person who met him on his return ; his own young son met him first, and the father stabbed him with his sword ; the wounded youth ran round about, and wherever the blood dripped water sprang up from the earth.^ No one will now venture to say that all these things are post-Homeric ; the natural view is that they were an inheritance of crude andprimitive thought indigenous to the land. Many of them belong to world-wide custom ; on the other hand, some of the striking and specialised rites, such as the blood-magic and the ritual of the (pupfjtjccxos, are not found at Babylon. But before prejudging the question, some salient and peculiar developments of Babylonian magic ought to be considered. One great achievement of Meso- potamian civilisation was the early development of astrology, to which perhaps the whole world has been indebted for good and for evil, and which was associated with magic and put to magic uses. Astro- logical observation led to the attachment of a magic value to numbers and to certain special numbers, such as number seven. Whether the Judaic name and institution of the Sabbath is of Babylonian origin or not, does not concern our question. But it concerns us to know that the seventh days, the 14th, the 21st, and 28th of certain months, if not of all, were sacred at Babylon, and were days of penance and piacular duties when ordinary occupation was suspended.^ We can discern the origin of the sanctity of this number : the observation of the • Paus., 9, 33, 4. " For the facts vide Zimmern, K.A.T.^, p. 592. 294 GREECE AND BABYLON seven planets, and the division of the lunar month into four quarters of seven days. The early Greeks, doubt- less, had their astrological superstitions, as most races have had ; the new moon is naturally lucky, the waning moon unlucky ; but no one can discover any numerical or other principle in the Hesiodic system, which is our earliest evidence of Hellenic lucky and unlucky days. His scheme is presented in naive confusion, and he con- cludes humorously, " one man praises one day, one another, and few know anything about it." ^ His page of verse reflects the anarchy of the Greek calendars ; and we should find it hard to credit that either Hesiod or the legislators that drew up those had sat attentively at the feet of Babylonian teachers. But a few coincidences may be noted. Hesiod puts a special tabu on the fifth day of the month ; in fact, it is the only one in his list that is wholly unlucky, a day when it would seem to be best to do nothing at all, at least outside the house, for on this day the Erinyes are wandering about. ^ Now, a Babylonian text published by Dr. Langdon con- tains the dogma that on the fifth day of Nisan " he who fears Marduk and Zarpanit shall not go out to work." ^ This Babylonian rule is the earliest example of what may be strictly called Sabbatarianism, abstinence from work through fear of offending the high god. Such would probably not be the true account of Hellenic feeling concerning the " forbidden daj^s," which were called a,7ro Vide supra, pp. 248-249; Cults, iv. p. 191. 2 For the main facts relating to the Babylonian system and the " baru "-priests, vide Zimmern, Beitrdge, etc., pp. 82-92; for the Hellenic, vide Cults, iv. 190-192, 224-231 ; also vol. iii. 9-12. ' The documentary evidence, from a very early period, is given by Zimmern, Beitrdge, etc., pp. 85-97. ' L. 322 : Clytemnestra speaks of pouring oil and vinegar into the same vessel and reproaching them for their unsociable behaviour. 302 GREECE AND BABYLON that the ancient divination of the two peoples agreed in certain respects, namely, in that both used, like most communities at a certain stage of culture, the auguries of birds and the revelations of dreams. As regards the facts relating to the former, we know more about Greece than at present about Babylon. But in the matter of dream-oracles, it is manifest that the Hellenic phenomena are entirely independent of Mesopotamian fashion. The Assyrian and Babylonian documents reveal the fashion of dream-prophecy in its simplest and highest form : the high deity of his own pleasure sends a dream, and the divining priest or skilled interpreter interprets it. No hint has so far been detected of that artificial method of provoking prophetic dreams by " incubation " or iyxoifjbriffig, the fashion of laying oneself down in some sacred shrine and sleeping with one's ear to the ground, that was much in vogue in ancient Hellas and still survives in parts of the modern Greek world and which may be regarded as an immemorial tradition. In this divination, the divine spokesman was the power of the underworld. And this was the most important difference between the Western and the Eastern society in respect of the divine agency. In an early period of Hellenic history that may be called pre-ApoUine, the earth-mother was conspicuously oracular by the vehicle of dreams ; and this power of hers was generally shared by the nether god and buried heroes. Nor could the religion of Apollo suppress this " chthonian " divination. But in Mesopotamia the earth-powers and the nether world have no part or lot in this matter. It is almost the prerogative of Shamash, the sun-god, though Adad is sometimes associated with him ; ^ ^ We have also one example of an oracle of Ishtar (in plain prose), Keil. Bibl., ii. p. 179. COMPARISON OF THE RITUAL 303 both being designated as "Bele-Biri" or "Lords of Oracles." 1 Another remarkable distinction is the fact that the ecstatic or enthusiastic form of prophecy, that of the Shaman or Pythoness possessed and maddened by the inworking spirit of god, is not found in the Baby- lonian record, which only attests the cool and scientific method of interpreting by signs and dreams and the stars. Perhaps Mesopotamia from the third millennium onward was too civilised to admit the mad prophet and prophetess to its counsels. But such characters were attached to certain Anatolian cults, especially to those of Kybele,2 and also to the Sjnrian goddess at Hierapolis;* we have evidence of them also in a record of the Cretan Phaistos in the service of the Great Mother.* Some scholars have supposed that prophetic ecstasy was only a late phenomenon in Hellas, because Homer is silent about it. But there are reasons for suspecting that demoniac possession was occasionally found in the pre- Homeric divination of Hellas,^ an inheritance perhaps from the pre-Hellenic period. In any case, the theory that primitive Hellas was indebted to Babylonia for its divination-system is strongly repugnant to the facts. 1 Zimmem, op. cit., p. 89. ^ Cults, iii. p. 297. ' Lucian, De Dea Syr., 43. * Cults, iii. p. 297. ' Vide Cults, iv. pp. 191-192 ; iii. p. 11. CHAPTER XIV. ': Summary of Results. This comparative exposition of the Sumerian-Baby- lonian and the most complex and developed pre-Christian religion of Europe cannot claim to be complete or at any point finally decisive, but it may at least have helped to reveal the high value and interest of these phenomena for the workers in this broad field of inquiry. This was one of the main objects of this course. The other was the discussion of a question of religious ethno- logy, concerning the possible influence of Mesopotamia on the earliest development of Hellenic religion. The verdict must still remain an open one, awaiting the light of the new evidence that the future will gather. But the evidence at present available — and it may be hoped that none of first importance has been missed — constrains us to a negative answer or at least a negative attitude of mind. Confining ourselves generally to the second mil- lennium B.C., we have surveyed the religions of the adjacent peoples between the valley of the Euphrates and the western shores of the Aegean ; and have observed that morphologically they are generally on the same plane of polytheism, but that those of Meso- potamia and Hellas reveal inner differences, striking and vital enough to be serious stumbling-blocks to a theory of affiliation. These differences concern the 304 SUMMARY OF RESULTS 305 personality of the divinities and their relations to the various parts of the world of nature ; the most salient being the different attitude of the two peoples to the divine luminaries of heaven and to the chthonian powers of the lower world. They concern the cosmogonies of East and West, their views of the creation of the world, and the origin of man ; on these matters, certain myths which are easily diffused do not appear to have reached Hellas in this early period. They concern the religious temperaments of the Babylonian and Hellene, which appear as separate as the opposite points of the pole ; the rapturous fanatic and self-abasing spirit of the East contrasting vividly with the coolness, civic sobriety, and self-confidence of the West. They concern the eschatologic ideas of the two peoples : the cult of the dead and some idea of a posthumous judgment being found in early Hellas, while the former was rare, and the latter is scarcely discoverable, in Mesopotamia. They concern, finally, the ritual ; and here the salient points of contrast are the different views of the sacrifice, of the sacrificial victim, and the sacrificial blood ; the different methods of purification and the expulsion of sin ; the ritual of sorrow associated with the death of the god, so powerful in Babylonia and so insignificant (by comparison) in Hellas ; the un-Hellenic Mylitta-rite, and the service of the " hierodoulai " ; and, to conclude with the most vital difference of all, the manifestations of magic and its relation to the national religions, so complex, so pregnant for thought and faith, and so dominant in Mesopotamia ; on the other hand, so insig- nificant and unobtrusive in Hellas. Two other points have been incidentally noticed in our general survey, but it is well in a final summing up to emphasise their great importance as negative 20 306 GREECE AND BABYLON evidence. The first concerns the higher history of European rehgion : the estabhshment of rehgious mysteries, a phenomenon of dateless antiquity, and of powerful working in Hellenic and Aegean society, has not yet been discovered in the Mesopotamian culture. The second is a small point that concerns commerce and the trivialities of ritual : the use of incense, universal from immemorial times in Mesopotamia, and proved by the earliest documents, begins in Greece not earlier than the eighth century B.C. This little product, afterwards everywhere in great demand, for it is pleasant to the sense, soothing to the mind, and among the harmless amenities of worship, was much easier to import than Babylonian theology or more complex ritual. It might have come without these, but they could scarcely have come without it. Yet it did not come to Hellenic shores in the second millennium. And this trifling negative fact is worth a volume of the higher criticism for the decision of our question. Those who still cling to the faith that Babylonia was the centre whence emanated much Mediterranean religion, may urge that the negative value of the facts exposed above may be destroyed by future discoveries. This is true, but our preliminary hypotheses should be framed on the facts that are already known. Or they may urge that the generic resemblances of the two religious systems with which we have been mainly concerned are also great. But, as has been observed, the same generic resemblance exists between Greek and Vedic polytheism. And for the question of rehgious origin general resemblances are far less decisive than specific points of identity, such, for instance, as the identity of divine names or of some peculiar divine attribute. Later we can trace the migrations of Isis SUMMARY OF RESULTS 307 and Mithras throughout Europe by their names or by the sistrum or by the type of the fallen bull, of the Hittite god Teschub in the Graeco-Roman guise of Jupiter Dohchenos as far as Hungary, perhaps as far as Scandinavia, by the attribute of the hammer. It is just this sort of evidence of any trace of Babylonian influence that is lacking among the records of early Greece. No single Babylonian name is recognisable in its religious or my thologic nomenclature ; just as no characteristically Babylonian fashion is found in its ritual or in the appurtenances of its religion. This weU accords with what is akeady known of the Mediterranean history of the second millennium. For long centuries the Hittite empire was a barrier between the Babylonian power and the coastlands of Asia Minor. So far, then, els our knowledge goes at present, there is no reason for believing that nascent Hellenism, wher- ever else arose the streams that nourished its spiritual life, was fertilised by the deep springs of Babylonian rehgion or theosophy. INDEX OF NAMES AND SUBJECTS. Adad (Ramman), 62, 101-102, 142, 143- Adonis, 251, 255, 273-274. Aliiat, 44. AUatu, 57, 206, 218. Aniconic worship, 225-230. Animism, 43. Anthropomorphism, in Greece, 10-12, 75-80; in Mesopotamia, 51-52, 55-57 ; i" Canaan, 57-58 ; in Hittite religion, 60-61 ; in Phrygia, 63-64 ; in Crete, 64-75. Aphrodite, Cretan-Mycenaean, 96 ; in Cyprus, 261 ; Ourania, 272-273. Apollo, 49, 295 ; theory of Lycian origin, go; Agyieus, 136; Del- phinios, 291 ; Lykeios, 76. Arabian divinities, 85, 263. Aramaic divinities, 85. Artemis, of Brauron, 244 ; in Cilicia, 89 ; at Ephesos, 91 ; aboriginal Mediterranean goddess, 96. Aryan migration into Greece, 34. Asshur, 58, 225. Astarte, 57, 58, 59, 86, 107. Astral cults, in Mesopotamia, 102 ; in Greece, 111-114. Atargatis (Derketo), 57. Athena, aboriginal Mediterranean goddess, 96. Athtar, Arabian deity, 85, 263. Attar, in Arabia, 168. Attis, 91, 254-258, 266; nairaios, 95- Axe-cult, in Crete, 70, 93. Baalbec, 273-274. Baptism, 284. Bau, Babylonian goddess, 263. Belit, Babylonian goddess, 83, 84, 104. I Birds, cult of, 63, 69-73. Boghaz-Keui, reliefs of, 47, 60, 125 ; cuneiform texts at, 61. Borrowing, tests of, in religion, 37. Boundaries, sanctity of, 127-128. Bouphonia, in Attica, 237-238. Britomartis, 170. Bull, Hittite worship of, 252-253. Burial-customs, 208-210. Byblos, Adonis-rites at, 273-274. Chemosh, of Moab, 59, 86. Cilicia, Assyrian conquests in, 35 (vide Typhoeus). Cities, religious origin of, 118. Communion-service with dead, 209. Confessional-service in Mesopotamia, 151, 288. Convent-system in Mesopotamia, 268-269. Cook, Mr., 66, 69, 73. Cosmogonies, 179-182. Courtesans, sacred, 269-283. Cowley, Dr., 90. Creation of man, 184-185. Cyprus, religious prostitution in, 273-274. Days, sacred character of, 293-295. Dead, worship of, 122, 210, 21 1, 213; tendance of, 211, 212; evocation of, 214-215. Death of deity, 27-28, 238-240, 249-263. Demeter, 80. Demonology, 154, 206-208, 297-300. Dionysos, 239-240 ; marriage with Queen-Archon, 267. Divination, through sacrifice, 248- 249, 301-302 ; ecstatic, 303. Dualism, 19, 158. 309 310 INDEX OF NAMES AND SUBJECTS Ea, Babylonian god, 53, 102, 117, 121. Eagle, Hittite worship of, 63. Earth, divinity of, in Mesopotamia, 103 ; in Greece, 114. Enlil, Babylonian god, 59, 103-104, 142. Eros, cosmic principle, 181. Eschatology, 204-220. Esmun, Phoenician god, 57- Eunostos, Tanagran vegetation-hero, 262. Eunuchs, in Phrygian religion, 92, 256-258. Euyuk, relief at, 61. Evans, Sir Arthur, 17, 30, 64, 69-71, 73-74, 91. 97> 211,227. Evil gods, 19, 142-143. Faith, not a religious virtue in Greece, 23-24. Fanaticism, in Mesopotamia, 197- 203. Fassirlir, Lion-goddess at, 88. Father-god, 48, 95. Fetichism, 225^228. Fire-god, in Greece and Babylon, 146-147, 285. Fire-purification, 285-286. Frazer, Dr., 17, 60, 79, 89, 257 n. I, 277, 282. Functional deities (Sondergiitter), no, 133- Goddess-worship, importance of, 5, 81-82 ; in Mesopotamia, 17, 82-84 ; among Western Semites, 85-86 ; Hittites, 87-88 ; on Asia- Minor coast, 88-91 ; in Crete, 92-94 ; Aryan tradition of, 94- 96 ; in early Greece, 96-98. Hammer, sacred Hittite symbol, 63. Hammurabi, code of, 129-132, 212. Harpalyke, legend of, 239. Harrison, Miss Jane, 67, 69-70. Hartland, Mr. Sidney, 271 n. i, 280-281. Hearth-worship, 132-133. Helios, at Tyre and Palmyra, 107 ; in Greece, iio-iii. Hell, Babylonian conception of, 205-206 Hera, ? Aryan-Hellenic, 96; Bourns, 76. Hierodoulai, 272. Hittite ethnology, 36. Hogarth, Dr., 74. Homicide, Babylonian laws concern- ing, 129-130; Hellenic religious feeling about, 138-140 ; purifica- tion from, 287-288. Hyakinthos, 262. Ibriz, Hittite monument at, 47. Idolatry, in Greece, 12-13, 228. Incense, 231-232, 306. Incest, Babylonian laws concerning, 131- Incubation, divination by, 302. Ira, goddess of plague, 143. Ishtar, 55, 83, 103, 120, 142, 164- 167 ; descent of, 204, 208. Jastrow, Prof., 37, 58. Katharsis, Homeric, 289-291. Kingship, divine character of, in Mesopotamia, 119, 122-123 5 among Western Semites, 123 ; among Hittites, 124-125 ; in Phrygia, 125 ; in Crete, 125-126 ; in Greece, 126-127. Knots, magic use of, 300. Kybele, 63, 91-92, 109, 170, 226. Labartu, demon-goddess, 298. Langdon, Dr., 56, 205 n. I, 296, 298. Leto ? Lycian origin of, 89-90. Leukothea, 261. Linos, 197, 262. Lion-divinity, Phrygian Hittite Meso- potamian type, 62-63. Lykaon, Arcadian sacrifice of, 239. Ma, Anatolian goddess, 169, 272. Magic, in Greece, 158, 176-179, 292- 293 ; in Babylon, 291-301. Male deity, predominant among Semites, 85-86 ; at Olba and Tarsos and in Lycia, 89. Mannhardt, 276. Marduk, 103, 120, 265. Marriage of god and goddess, 263- 268 ; marriage ceremonies in Babylon, 134. Mercy, attribute of divinity, 158-160. Minotaur, 74, 266-267. Mitani inscriptions, 46. Monotheism, 187-189. Monsters, in Cretan art, 74-75. Moon-worship, Semitic, 85 ; Hellenic, 112. Morality and religion, 20. Mylitta, rites of, 269-271. INDEX OF NAMES AND SUBJECTS 311 Nature- worship, 40-41, 97 ; in Meso- potamia, 99-106 ; West-Semitic, 106-107 ; Hittite, 108 ; Hellenic, 110-114. Nebo, 52, 102, 119, 121, i88. Nergal, loi, 142. Niji/idXia, wineless offerings, 112. Ninib, loi, 117, 127, 263. Ninlil, 84. Ninni, relief of, 52. Nusku, 117. Omnipotence, divine attribute, 173- I7S- Orotal, Arabian deity, 44. Pan-Babylonism, 30-33. Pantheism, 161-162. Perjury, 147-149. Personal religion, 1 91-196. Pessimism, in Babylonian hymns, ISS- Petrie, Professor, 223. Phallic cults, 228-230. Phratric system, religious sanction of, in Greece, 138 ; non-existent (?) in Mesopotamia, 138. Poseidon, 146. Punishment, posthumous, 215-216. Purification, 155-158, 282-291. Purity, 163-172. Qadistu, meaning of, 269. Ramman, vide Adad. Ramsay, Sir William, 117, I70> 273, 277. Rewards, posthumous, 216-218. Sacrament, 25-26, 236-242, 250. Sacrifice, theory of, 24-26, 235-236, 240-242 ; bloodless, 230-231 ; chthonian, 233 ; human, 244- 246 ; at oath-taking, 247-248 ; "sober," 231-232; vicarious, 242-244. Sandon, 252-253. Sayce, Professor, 169, 253. Scapegoat, 247. Science, relation to religion, in Greece and Mesopotamia, 23. Sentimentality, in Babylonian re- ligion, 196-197. Sex, confusion of, 58-60. Shamash, Babylonian sun-god, 99, 100, 120-121, I2f, 142, 208, 302. Sin, Babylonian moon-god, 99, 100. Sin, non-moral ideas of, 152-154. Sinjerli, relief at, 61. Smith, Prof. Robertson, 25, 226, 235, 238, 241. Snake-goddess, in Crete, 64-65 ; snake-cult, 78. Tammuz, 105-106, 219-220, 242, 250-263. Tanit, Carthaginian goddess, l68. Taurobolion, 253. Temples, erection of, 223-225 ; deifi- cation of, 225. Teshup, Hittite god, 46, 62. Teukridai, at Olba, 89. Theanthropic animal, 77-78. Theism, 7-9, 40-49. Theriomorphism, in Egypt, 15 ; in Mesopotamia, 14, 52-55 ; in other Semitic communities, 57- 58 ; Hittite, 60-62 ; in Crete, 66-75 ; i" Greece, 75-80. Tiamat, in Babylonian cosmogony, 181. Tiele, Professor, 40, 42, 81, 199. Tralles, religious prostitutes at, 275. Trinities, 185-187. Truthfulness, religious virtue, 148. Typhoeus, legend of, 182-183. Van Gennep, 279. Ver Sacrum, in Greece, 137. Virgin-goddesses, not found among Aryans, 95 ; Mediterranean, 96. Virginity, sacrifice of, 269-281. Virgin-Mother, idea of, 166-171. Westermarck, Professor, 41 n. 1, 278. Wilde, Dr., I. Word, mystic value of, 15, 5^i 57> 176-179, 295-297. Worship, ambiguity in term, 67, 77- Zeus, 49 ; grave of, in Crete, 93, 259-260 ; Herkeios, 149-150 ; Horios, 152 ; Kouros, 259 ; Panamaros in Caria, 90 ; Polieus, 238 ; Thunderer in Bithynia, 95. 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