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The symbolism of the bull. Power potency fecundity, a protein symbol of divinity royalty and the elemental forces of nature.

 changing in significance between different epochs and cultures. In cave art the bull is second only to the horse as the most frequently painted image of vital energy.

As the incarnation of many Supreme eastern gods the bull was one of the most important sacrificial animals.

In ritual and iconography it has represented both the moon and the sun earth and the Sky rain and heat feminine procreation and male ardor.  Both death and regeneration.

As a symbol of death and resurrection it is central to mithraism a Persian cult popular in the Roman Empire. Myth rack sacrifices celebrated the sun God mithras slaughter of a primordial bull from whose blood and ***** spraying new life.

Bulls appear from northern Europe to India as an emblem of divine power especially linked with lunar solar and sky or storm gods including the Mesopotamia and EL who is bull horned and bow . The Egyptians Ra, Ausar,  Ptah who was incarnated as the sacred apis bull and Seth .

The Greek Zeus Dionysus and  Seibel. The Norse Thor and Freya . And the Hindu Indra Aditi,  Agni,  Rudra and Shiva.

Tibetan Buddhism has the bull headed fierce deity protector Yama Dharmaraja

The physical attributes of the bull underline much of its symbolism. Its horns or link with the Crescent moon its strength suggests a support for the world in Vedic and Islamic traditions it's prolific semanis stored by the moon in Persian myth.

 and its colossal dangerous energy was widely venerated notably in Minoan Crete. Were a dangerous ritualistic sport involved somersaulting over a bull's horns developed

The orchestrated ritual of modern bull fighting continues an ancient Mediterranean tradition of using the bull to flirt with death.

Crete is a setting of numerous later Greek bull miss most famously of the monstrous half man half bull the minotaur.

Zeus transformed himself into a bull in order to abduct Europia carrying her to Crete. A bull is thus one of the attributes of Zeus and may also symbolize the continent of Europe.

 A former beast the bull from ancient times became adversaries as well as icons. Challenging its power was a task of legendary heroes such as Heracles who captured another cretin bull as his 7th labor an fought Acilius in the guise of a bull.

 And Theseus who slew the minotaur.

 

The Bull of Heaven was a pawn of the goddess Inanna, and the vessel of her rage against the demi god Gilgamesh. She unleashed the bull on Earth, and he began a path of devastation. He was killed by Gilgamesh and his friend Enkidu.


 Blue symbolism of the color blue .

Blue is one of the three primary colours of pigments in painting and traditional colour theory, as well as in the RGB colour model. It lies between violet and green on the spectrum of visible light. The eye perceives blue when observing light with a dominant wavelength between approximately 450 and 495 nanometres.

Blue symbolizes Infinity, eternity, truth, devotion, faith, purity, chastity, peace, spiritual, and intellectual life . It is the color of the ocean and the sky; it often symbolizes serenity, stability, inspiration,wisdom or health. It can be a calming color, and symbolize reliability.

cultures associations that appear in many ancient cultures and expressed a general feeling that blue, the color of the Sky, is the coolest most attached and least material of all hues.

 

The Virgin Mary and Christ are often shown wearing blue and it is the attribute of many Sky gods including Amun of  kemitic beliefs,   the Sumerian great mother,  the Greek Zeus and Hera,  the Hindu gods Indra and Vishnu and Vishnu’s blue skinned incarnation Krishna.

 

Blue is linked to mercy in Hebrew tradition and to wisdom in Buddhism .

 

 In folk tradition it stands in Europe for Fidelity in parts of China for scholarship and happy marriage and more recently the term Blues means melancholy or sad.

 

Hues of blue include indigo and ultramarine, closer to violet; pure blue, without any mixture of other colours; Cyan, which is midway in the spectrum between blue and green, and the other blue-greens turquoise, teal, and aquamarine.

 

Blue also varies in shade or tint; darker shades of blue contain black or grey, while lighter tints contain white. Darker shades of blue include ultramarine, cobalt blue, navy blue, and Prussian blue; while lighter tints include sky blue, azure, and Egyptian blue.

 

In Kemet blue was associated with the sky and with divinity. The Kemetic god Amun could make his skin blue so that he could fly, invisible, across the sky. Blue could also protect against evil; many people around the Mediterranean still wear a blue amulet, representing the eye of God, to protect them from misfortune.


Muhingo God of War Bunyoro Bunyoro is a Bantu kingdom in Western Uganda. It was one of the most powerful kingdoms in Central and East Africa from the 13th century to the 19th century. The kingdom of Bunyoro was established in the early 14th century by Rukidi-Mpuga out of the after the disintegration of the Chwezi Empire or Empire of Kitara. He was invoked specifically by warriors before entering battle. He is a member of a pantheon or family of deities who are associated with variety of concepts, or natural forces.

Kauket

Classification: Primordial Goddess

 

Culture: Kemet

 

Kauket is one of the eight primordial deities of the Ogdoad cosmology.

She is representative of the chaos and darkness of pre existence of the universe.

She is paired with the god Kek  they appear in anthropomorphic form, Kauket with the head of the snake Kek, with the head of from. Some would argue that this ais a reference to binary code

Nun  and his wife Naunet symbolized the primordial waters

 Kuk and Kauket   represented darkness.

Huh and Hauhet the eternity of space.

Amun and Amaunet represent invisibility or the hidden.

As cosmic gods they are represented in anthropomorphic form. They are also sometimes conceived as chthonic animals the male gods appearing as frogs the female as snakes.

The pair epitomized the primordial darkness. The chaos existed without the light, and thus Kek and Kauket came to represent this darkness. They also symbolized obscurity, the kind of obscurity that went with darkness, and night.

 

She was depicted greeting the rising sun in the form of a baboon


Laurus nobilis is an aromatic evergreen tree or large shrub with green, glabrous smooth leaves, in the flowering plant family Lauraceae. It is native to the Mediterranean region and is used as bay leaf for seasoning in cooking.

 

The laurel is a symbol of victory, peace, purification, protection, divination, secret knowledge and immortality.  the aromatic bay species of Laurel was the crowning emblem of the Greco Roman world a wreath of laurels being worn by those worthy of honor especially poets hence poets laureate.

 

Paintings of victorious generals of ancient Rome also showed him crowned with the Laurel. The laurels honorific value derived from its Association with the God Apollo who is said to have purified himself with it in the Groves of the temple in Thessaly after slaying the Python at Delphi.

The priestess of his Delphic cult Pythia chewed Laurel before giving her prophecies. It was thought to deter pestilence and lightning a superstition believed by the emperor Tiberius who used to reach for the Laurel wreath during Thunder storms. The laurels associated with many classic deities including Dionysus Zeus, Hera  an Artemis . The Laurel was an emblem of truce or peace as well as triumph.

 

A secondary symbolism of chastity derives from the myth that the nymph Daphne was turned into a Laurel tree as she fled apollos advances. In art she's usually shown fleeing from the God as her arms metamorph into branches. Laurels had talismanic significance in North Africa and in China is the tree beneath which the lunar hair mixes the elixir of immortality. It is the Christian symbol of eternal life.

 

In herbal medicine, aqueous extracts of bay laurel have been used as an astringent and salve for open wounds.  It is also used in massage therapy and aromatherapy.  A folk remedy for rashes caused by poison ivy, poison oak, and stinging nettle.

 

The Roman naturalist Pliny the Elder listed a variety of conditions which laurel oil was supposed to treat: paralysis, spasms, sciatica, bruises, headaches, catarrhs, ear infections, and rheumatism.

Mithra

 

God of the Upper air

 

Culture Persian/Iranian

 

Known period of worship circa 400 bc to 200 common era.

 

Aliases Mitra (Hindu) Mithras (Roman)

 

Cult Center Persian influence

 

Literary Sources: The Avesta  The Avesta is the primary collection of religious texts of Zoroastrianism, composed in Avestan language.

commonly known as Mehr, is the Zoroastrian angelic divinity (yazata) of covenant, light, and oath.

Originating in India Mitra is a god of light who is translated in the attended of the God Ahura Mazda in the light religion of Persian. From this he was adopted into the Roman deity Mithras. He is regarded as the fertilizing power of warm light air. According to the Avesta, he possesses 10,000  eyes and ears and rides in a magical chariot.

 

He represent truth in the endless battle between light and darkness. He is responsible for keeping oaths and contracts.  In addition to being the divinity of contracts, Mithra is also a judicial figure, an all-seeing protector of Truth, and the guardian of cattle, the harvest, and of the Waters.

 

He was born from a rock, and legends tells us that he engaged in a primeval battle with Ahura Mazda’s first creation, a wild bull.

 

He subdued and restrained the bull. A crucial victory in the battle against chaos. The bull later escaped but was captured by Mithra who slit his throat. From his blood sprang the first plant life.

 

Mitra is not worshipped on his own but served as the intercessor between gods and men he was an integral part of the worship.

 

 



Modimo  - he who control the light and darkness

Classification – Creator God

Culture Tswana (Botswana, South Africa)

 

Associated: Creation of life, the balance of the universe

Supreme God of the Tswana. His very name is sacred,

Modimo and the universe have always existed, He is received as the river of existence which flows through space and time. He rules both aspects of light and dark opposite as well as the order of lie on Earth.

 

The Badimo of which there are many, are manifestations of him. Most of the Tswana people’s daily deity needs are met by the Badimo spirits, who act as Modimo’s little helpers and also ensure that rituals are performed correctly.


 Aesir

Classification: Pantheon/Civilization

Cultural Origin Icelandic

Viking worship from 700 to 1100 common era

 

Center of Cult : throughout areas of the Nordic Influence particularly in Uppsala in Sweden

 

Art references: engravings on stone and weapons, other art objects

Literary Sources : Prose Edda Historica Danica

The Aesir are the Gods of Norse mythology. They represent for these people the creators of the world as we know it, keep the forces of chaos at bay and will be consumed in the great reckoning Ragnarok

The 12 Aesir gods are headed by Odin the all father and are probably derived from the Germanic pantheon established in prehistory.

 

The Aesir exist in a realm called Asgard which is most likely the the Asegar Star cluster in the Taurus Star System.

 

Asgard is a grand empire, the finest in the 9 realms an important concept in their cosmology.

 

9 World Cosmology

The Aesir documented 9 distinct realms Niflheim, Muspelheim, Asgard, Midgard, Jotunheim, Vanaheim, Alfheim, Svartalfheim and Helheim.

 

The creation myth of the Aesir states that in the beginning there was a region of intense cold and one of incredible heat.

 

Muspell was the first world to exist. It was a place of light and heat. So hot that only those born to this place could survive its heat.

 

Beyond Muspell lay the great and yawing void called Ginningagap. And beyond that lay Niflheim the land of darkness and cold.

 

In between the two the perfect conditions existed and from the steam of the heat and mealting cold formed the frost giant Ymir.

 

Ymir slept, falling into a sweat. Under his left arm there grew a man and a woman. And one of his legs begot a son with the other. This was the beginning of the frost ogres.

Audhumla

Thawing frost then became a cow called Audhumla. Four rivers of milk ran from her teats, and she fed Ymir. The sacred cow obviously Hathor,

Buri, Bor, and Bestla

The cow licked salty ice blocks. After one day of licking, she freed a man's hair from the ice. After two days, his head appeared. On the third day the whole man was there. His name was Buri, and he was tall, strong, and handsome.

Buri begot a son named Bor, and Bor married Bestla, the daughter of a giant.

 

Odin, Vili, and Vé

Bor and Bestla had three sons: Odin was the first, Vili the second, and Vé the third.

It is believed that Odin, in association with his brothers, is the ruler of heaven and earth. He is the greatest and most famous of all men. A triad which we see in many beliefs. I think of Zeus, Posiedan Hades

 

The death of Ymir

Odin, Vili, and Vé killed the giant Ymir.

When Ymir fell, there issued from his wounds such a flood of blood, that all the frost ogres were drowned, except for the giant Bergelmir who escaped with his wife by climbing onto a lurFrom them spring the families of frost ogres

 

Earth, trees, and mountains

The sons of Bor then carried Ymir to the middle of Ginnungagap and made the world from him. From his blood they made the sea and the lakes; from his flesh the earth; from his hair the trees; and from his bones the mountains. They made rocks and pebbles from his teeth and jaws and those bones that were broken.  Tiamat and Marduk

 

To protect themselves from the hostile giants, the sons of Bor built for themselves an inland stonghold, using Ymir's eyebrows. This stonghold they named Midgard.

Ask and Embla

While walking along the sea shore the sons of Bor found two trees, and from them they created a man and a woman.

Odin gave the man and the woman spirit and life. Vili gave them understanding and the power of movement. Vé gave them clothing and names. The man was named Ask and the woman Embla.

 

 

The Vanir – The chronicles of the Aesir speak of a great war against another equal civilization who were the Vanir. The two would reach a peace after years of conflict. The Vanir are identified as the Pleiades or the so called blondes of Nordic myth. Their celestial home has been identified as the Pleiades star system.

 

The true enemies of the Aesir would be the various giants. And this represented the concept of order versus chaos as the central them of the mythology

 

 

Thor

The earth was Odin's daughter and his wife as well. By her he had his first son, Thor. Might and strength were Thor's characteristics. By these he dominates every living creature.

 

 

Thor would be significant as the face of the belief system and its primary protector hero. His battle against the Midgard serpent in the highlight of the conflict of order versus chaos.

 

Ragnarok,

 The Aesir prophecy of the end of creation was the inevitable event that would be known as Ragnarok. This was the time when the forces of chaos would win the day and all creation would burn in its fires.

 

But this is a story of renewal and though the old gods would die, a Son of Odin Vidar would rise as a new King. A Son of Thor would survive and become the realms new hero.

 

 


Acat  the God of Tattooers

Culture : Mayan

 

Classification: God or spirit

 

Association: Tattooers, the fetus.

 

Acat was a deity in Maya mythology associated with the process of tattooing. The Maya placed great importance on the tattooing process, believing that tattoos in the image of a god would imbue a person with some of that god's power.

many believe his name means ‘reed’ , a reference to the art of tattooing the skin with a reed.

Because of the importance and difficulty of this art form it was only natural that there was a god responsible for it. Acat was said to bless the ink, needles, and work spaces, and steady the hands of the artists for better results.

 

To them, tattooing was an act of faith. Body modification was very popular amongst the Mayans and became increasingly extreme by today’s standards the higher the person’ social standing was. Babies’ skulls were elongated by wrapping their heads tightly in cloth, or by tying a board to the backs of their head with cloth and gradually tightening a rope mechanism to create the desired shape. Numerous piercings were also encouraged, teeth were inlaid with precious stones and a more extreme form of tattooing was also practiced.

 

The Mayans decorated themselves with a plethora of images and iconography when tattooing: everything from celestial entities to flowers and gods, but the most important thing to them was the sacrifice and pain involved in the process. Without it, their world would quite literally cease to exist.

 

Tattoos had major religious significance for the Mayans. They believed that by drawing the symbols of gods on their bodies, they could attain to some of the characteristics of those gods. So accuracy was highly valued in such tattoos.

 

Tattoos had major religious significance for the Mayans. They believed that by drawing the symbols of gods on their bodies, they could attain to some of the characteristics of those gods. So accuracy was highly valued in such tattoos.


Vampires

 

Supernatural Undead

Culture: Romanian, Baltic, Slavic, Eastern European, Greek

The undead on Slavic Folklore

 

The Central theme of Vampirism include, the transference of life essence. Aversion to sun light, aversion to silver, sexuality.

A vampire is a creature from folklore that subsists by feeding on the vital essence (generally in the form of blood) of the living. In European folklore, vampires are undead creatures that often visited loved ones and caused mischief or deaths in the neighborhoods they inhabited while they were alive.

 

Vampire

Succubus

Chupacabra

 

Vampires have been featured in folklore and fiction of various cultures for hundreds of years, predominantly in Europe.

 

Central to vampire myth, however, is the consumption of human blood or other essence (such as bodily fluids or psychic energy), followed closely by the possession of sharp teeth or fangs with which to facilitate this task. In most depictions, vampires are “undead”—that is to say, having been somehow revived after death—and many are said to rise nightly from their graves or coffins, often necessarily containing their native soil.

 

Vampires are typically said to be of pale skin and range in appearance from grotesque to preternaturally beautiful, depending on the tale. Another frequently cited physical characteristic is the inability to cast a reflection or shadow, which often translates into an inability to be photographed or recorded on film.

 

A person may become a vampire in a variety of ways, the most common of which is to be bitten by a vampire. Other methods include sorcery, committing suicide, contagion, or having a cat jump over a person’s corpse.  

 

The are many tools in the vampire hunters cache of weapons. The most popular of those include a wooden stake through the heart, fire, decapitation, and exposure to sunlight. Vampires are often depicted as being repelled by garlic, running water, or Christian implements such as crucifixes and holy water. In some stories vampires may enter a home only if they have been invited, and in others they may be distracted by the scattering of objects such as seeds or grains that they are compelled to count, thereby enabling potential victims to escape.

 

 

Dracula is arguably the most important work of vampire fiction. The tale of the Transylvanian count who uses supernatural abilities, including mind control and shape-shifting, to prey upon innocent victims inspired countless works thereafter.

 

The pillars of vampirism

 

Transference of blood.

Blood a symbol of life force believed in many cultures to contain a share of divine energy or more commonly the spirit of an individual creature.

 

the oldest ancient deity who consumed blood was probably Lilith. She is also described as the first demon, or a female spirit which exemplified all of the darkest attributes of the world.

Persian folklore also speaks of some spirits who consumed blood. The most famous of these was Estries. She was a demon - specifically a shapeshifter.

 

 

 Usually she was believed to have appeared as a beautiful woman who looked for men to drink their blood. , She was also well-known in Jewish legends.

 

Silver is a precious metal with  well documented history with mankind

 

 

 

Silver

 

Silver is a chemical element with the symbol Ag (and atomic number 47. A soft, white, lustrous transition metal, it exhibits the highest electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity, and reflectivity of any metal.

 

It is associated with purity, chastity and eloquence

 

Eastern Europeans believed that silver protected against demonic entities such as vampires and werewolves.

 

Aversion to sunlight

one of the more important theme. It places the vampire as anti nature.

 

The ultimate creature of the night. Depended on the absent of the primarly life giver and thus anti life.

Photophobia, or light sensitivity, is an intolerance of light.

 

Photophobia often accompanies albinism (lack of eye pigment), total color deficiency (seeing only in shades of gray), botulism, rabies, mercury poisoning, conjunctivitis, inflammation of the cornea and iritis.

People who have an extreme sensitivity to sunlight are born with a rare disease known as xeroderma pigmentosum (XP).

 

Sexualization

The act of vampire feeding is sexual in its nature. Involving the exposed neck and the lips and tongue. So the  concept of seduction has always been an important element of Vampires.

 

Modern mythology of the vampire has progressed to necrophilia and necromancy where the undead is not a mystical seducer but a comforting lover. They are the love interest.

 

Necrophilia, is sexual attraction towards or a sexual act involving corpses. It is classified as a paraphilia by the World Health Organization (WHO) in its International Classification of Diseases (ICD) diagnostic manual, as well as by the American Psychiatric Association.

 

Necrophilia is a very disturbing component of human behavior. Herodotus suggested that the Greek tyrant Periander defiled his wife. Using the phrase “Periander baked his bread in cold ovens.”

 

Acts of necrophilia are depicted on ceramics from the Moche culture, which reigned in northern Peru from the first to eighth century CE.

 

Hittite law from the 16th century BC through to the 13th century BC explicitly permitted sex with the dead.

 

In the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders  necrophilia) is  marked by  distress or impairment in important areas of functioning.

 

Sergeant François Bertrand), known as the Vampire of Montparnasse, was a sergeant in the French Army. He was arrested in 1841 for necrophilia and jailed.

 

He stated that his necrophilic impulses began in 1846, and were accompanied by headaches and heart palpitations. He progressed to exhuming the corpses of both women and men from graveyards, whereupon he would eviscerate and dismember them before masturbating. Bertrand would later describe his experience with the corpse of a 16-year-old girl.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


The Abgal are seven Sumerian wise men who attend to the god Enki who emerged from Apsu. The Abgal are portrayed as fishlike men.

 

The Sumerian people of Mesopotamia believed in the seven wise deities that attended to the god Enki. They were also called the Apkallu by the Akkadian people. Some ancient texts mentioned them as the Ummanu. They were often described as being upright like mankind, but having fish heads. (Some say they even had bird heads.) They represented wisdom and knowledge. Here are the names of the seven sages:

Uanna, "who finished the plans for heaven and earth",

Uannedugga, "who was endowed with comprehensive intelligence",

Enmedugga, "who was allotted a good fate",

Enmegalamma, "who was born in a house",

Enmebulugga, "who grew up on pasture land",

An-Enlilda, "the conjurer of the city of Eridu",

Utuabzu, "who ascended to heaven".



Abgal – the dream maker

Culture Pre Islamic north Arabian

 

Classification: Jinn

Associated: the deserted 

 

Sacred Place; Temple at Khirbet Semrin

 

Known from the Palmyrian Desert regions as a tutelary god of the Bedouins and Nomads.

 

Representations of him are of a youth with long hair and a moustache, wearing local garb, and holding a lance.

He was venerated in the temple at Khirbet Semrin where he is portrayed on a relief riding a horse, equipped with bow and quiver attached to the saddle.

 

A stele with imagery of Abgal and Ashar, and earlier inscriptions at Kirbet-Semrin dates the active 'worship' of this jinn to between 154 and 270 AD – references to the deity appear in the Palmyrene Empire.

 

 

 

 

The Sumerian people of Mesopotamia believed in the seven wise deities that attended to the god Enki. They were also called the Apkallu by the Akkadian people. Some ancient texts mentioned them as the Ummanu. They were often described as being upright like mankind, but having fish heads. (Some say they even had bird heads.) They represented wisdom and knowledge. Here are the names of the seven sages:

Uanna, "who finished the plans for heaven and earth",

Uannedugga, "who was endowed with comprehensive intelligence",

Enmedugga, "who was allotted a good fate",

Enmegalamma, "who was born in a house",

Enmebulugga, "who grew up on pasture land",

An-Enlilda, "the conjurer of the city of Eridu",

Utuabzu, "who ascended to heaven".

It also appears that the Sumerian people believed in divine right to rule, which many ancient civilizations did. To support this, there would be an Abgal sage to attend to each king.


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