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Great Goddess hypothesis

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Venus of Moravany. Venus figurines were among the earliest works of human culture and are widely hypothesized to have represented an epitome of femininity and fertility in the cultures that created them.

The Great Goddess hypothesis theorizes that, in Palaeolithic, Mesolithic, and/or Neolithic Europe and Western Asia and North Africa, a singular, monotheistic female deity was worshipped.

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Transcription

Development of the theory

Fragmentary Snake Goddess icon from Gnossos, illustrated for the Outline of History by H. G. Wells

The theory had been first proposed by the German Classicist Eduard Gerhard in 1849, when he speculated that the various goddesses found in ancient Greek paganism had been representations of a singular goddess who had been worshipped far further back into prehistory. He associated this deity with the concept of Mother Earth,[1] which itself had only been developed in the 18th century by members of the Romanticist Movement.[2] Soon after, this theory began to be adopted by other classicists in France and Germany, such as Ernst Kroker, Fr. Lenormant and M.J. Menant, who further brought in the idea that the ancient peoples of Anatolia and Mesopotamia had influenced the Greek religion, and that therefore they also had once venerated a great goddess.[3] These ideas amongst various classicists echoed those of the Swiss judge J.J. Bachofen, who put forward the idea that the earliest human societies were matriarchal, but had converted to a patriarchal form in later prehistory. Commenting on this idea, the historian Ronald Hutton (1999) remarked that in the eyes of many at the time, it would have been an obvious conclusion that "what was true in a secular sphere should also, logically, have been so in the religious one."[3]

In 1901, the archaeologist Sir Arthur Evans—who in an 1895 work had dismissed the Great Goddess theory[4]—changed his mind and accepted the idea whilst excavating at Knossos on Crete, the site of the Bronze Age Minoan civilisation. After unearthing a number of female figurines, he came to believe that they all represented a singular goddess, who was the Minoan's chief deity, and that all the male figurines found on the site represented a subordinate male god who was both her son and consort, an idea that he based partially upon the later classical myth of Rhea and Zeus.[5] In later writings in ensuing decades he went on to associate these Neolithic and Bronze Age images with other goddesses around the Near East. As Hutton pointed out, "his influence made this the orthodoxy of Minoan archaeology, although there was always a few colleagues who pointed out that it placed a strain upon the evidence."[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Gerhard, Eduard (1849). Über Metroen und Götter-Mutter. Berlin. Page 103.
  2. ^ Hutton, Ronald (1999). The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft. New York: Oxford University Press. Page 33.
  3. ^ a b c Hutton, Ronald (1999). The Triumph of the Moon: A History of Modern Pagan Witchcraft. New York: Oxford University Press. Page 36.
  4. ^ Evans, Arthur (1895). Cretan Pictographs and Prae-Phoenician Script. Pages 124–131.
  5. ^ Evans, Arthur (1901-02). The Palace of Knossos in the Annual of the British School at Athens viii.

Further reading

Eisler, Riane Tennenhaus, (1987). The chalice and the blade : our history, our future (1st ed.). Cambridge [Mass.]: Harper & Row. p. 5. ISBN 0-06-250287-5. OCLC 15222627.

Neumann, Erich,. The Great Mother : an analysis of the archetype. Manheim, Ralph, 1907-1992, (First Princeton classics edition ed.). Princeton, New Jersey. ISBN 978-1-4008-6610-6. OCLC 908042725.

Walker, Barbara G. (1996, 1983). The woman's encyclopedia of myths and secrets. Edison, N.J.: Castle Books. ISBN 0-7858-0720-9. OCLC 35824931

This page was last edited on 23 February 2024, at 14:51
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