History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12) eBook

Gaston Maspero
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 330 pages of information about History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12).

History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12) eBook

Gaston Maspero
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 330 pages of information about History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12).
* Herodotus, i. 199:  of.  Stabo, xvi. p. 1058, who probably has merely quoted this passage from Herodotus, or some writer who copied from Herodotus.  We meet with a direct allusion to this same custom in the Bible, in the Book of Barueh; “The women also, with cords about them, sitting in the ways, burn bran for perfume; but if any of them, drawn by some that passeth by, lie with him, she reproacheth her fellow, that she was not thought as worthy as herself, nor her cord broken.”

The gods, who had begun by being the actual material of the element which was their attribute, became successively the spirit of it, then its ruler.* They continued at first to reside in it, but in the course of time they were separated from it, and each was allowed to enter the domain of another, dwell in it, and even command it, as they could have done in their own, till finally the greater number of them were identified with the firmament.

* Pk.  Lbnoemant, La Magie chez les Chaldeens, p. 144, et seq., where the author shows how Anu, after having at first been the Heaven itself, the starry vault stretched above the earth, became successively the Spirit of Heaven (Zi-ana), and finally the supreme ruler of the world:  according to Lenormant, it was the Semites in particular who transformed the primitive spirit into an actual god-king.

Bel, the lord of the earth, and Ea, the ruler of the waters, passed info the heavens, which did not belong to them, and took their places beside Ami:  the pathways were pointed out which they had made for themselves across the celestial vault, in order to inspect their kingdoms from the exalted heights to which they had been raised; that of Bel was in the Tropic of Cancer, that of Ea in the Tropic of Capricorn.  They gathered around them all the divinities who could easily be abstracted from the function or object to which they were united, and they thus constituted a kind of divine aristocracy, comprising all the most powerful beings who guided the fortunes of the world.  The number of them was considerable, for they reckoned seven supreme and magnificent gods, fifty great gods of heaven and earth, three hundred celestial spirits, and six hundred terrestrial spirits.  Each of them deputed representatives here below, who received the homage of mankind for him, and signified to them his will.  The god revealed himself in dreams to his seers and imparted to them the course of coming events,* or, in some cases, inspired them suddenly and spoke by their mouth:  their utterances, taken down and commented on by their assistants, were regarded as infallible oracles.  But the number of mortal men possessing adequate powers, and gifted with sufficiently acute senses to bear without danger the near presence of a god, was necessarily limited; communications were, therefore, more often established by means of various objects, whose grosser substance lessened for human intelligence and flesh and blood the dangers

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History of Egypt, Chaldæa, Syria, Babylonia, and Assyria, Volume 3 (of 12) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.