szarvas

Hungarian Mythology I.

God and his helpers
by Fred Hamori

The follwing essay also reveals who is the true creator of the humanity…

This only a short summary of Hungarian Mythology starting from before their conversion to Christianity. This first part will mainly be about God and his helpers, other parts will deal with the Devil and his deimons and Mythical Heroes.

The last millennium has obliterated much of the old traditions, especially since there was a strong anti-Hungarian propaganda in the Church, which tried to prove that the Christian Church was responsible for all that was good like religion, culture, letters and everything was thought to the “wild and nomadic” Hungarians by the church. This must always be taken with a healthy dose of skepticism especially since we have records and physical proof showing that Hungarians were literate using a script similar to the Central Asian Turks and the some of the Scythians, whose earliest remnants were found near Alma Ata. (Isik) Words for book, letters, writing are all from the east. Most of the words associated with religion, farming, cities, tools and basic professions were not European in origin in Hungarian but were from Asia.. therefore they were brought with them from their earlier homeland and not thought to them by the “civilized and cultured” Europeans, as the church maintained so long. Especially since this was the Dark Ages in Europe at that time. In any case after more than a millennium of living in the center of Europe, much of the Hungarian language has been Europeanized in the sense and meaning of their words. This sometimes causes problems in properly understanding the old meaning of some words in ancient times.

The type of religion they practiced was monotheistic, where god was a formless spirit, never represented with images and often associated with the Sun and the sky. Remnants of this association are found even today in remote Transylvanian villages. The following references from the European chroniclers of the time remain.. Recent evidence and research that many of the Huns & Sabirs who lived in the Caucasus were Christianized and these were in close contact with the Hungarians. The Georgian and Albanian early chronicles documented their conversion to Christianity under the guidance of Cardinal Israel and their building of Churches and translating and writing of the bible into their own language and their own runic script, whose remnants (the writing method) survived in Hungary into modern times.

Early Reference to their religion.

Theopylaktos Simocata /Greek/ : “The Turks (Hungarians) respect fire, air, water and even the earth and sing praises to earth, however they only worship the one who created heaven and earth.” [Note the Greeks called Hungarians at first Turks and only later did they get familiar with their proper Magyar (Macar) name after they settled next to them.]

Abufeda /Arab? or Persian/ :”The Magyars are a Turkic nation, their territory is between the Bedsenak (later absorbed by Hungarians) and the Sikul (also absorbed by Hungarians). Both were eastern nations in origin.

The other neighboring nations of the Hungarians before their settlement in their current homeland also had a similar religion as the following examples show.

Menander: The Avar-Hun Khan swears to the god of fire “deus ignis, aui in coelo est.”

Desguignes (French historian) “.. The Hiung-nu king Tanjou, as his name indicates him to be the ‘son of heaven and earth’, worshipped the sun at dawn and the moon at night, and gave offerings to the sky and to the earth.” [This refers to the eastern Hun emperor.]

Herodotus /Greek/ “.. amongst the gods they (Scythians) worship the following: first of all Hestia (fire)..”

In the first contact with Hungarians, some Christian priests believed them to be Christian due to their religious manners. However at the time of their settlements there were some who were also Manichean and some were Muslim as well. Many however were simply a variation of the Magian/Parse religion as is indicated by their religious terminology. God=Isten, Heaven=Meny, Hell=Pokol, Devil=Ordog are found in eastern Manichean terminology also. Greek references to the house of Álmos the father of Árpád, and the first Hungarian dynasty (in Europe) state that their religion was Manichean.

Priestly titles:
Táltos Priest king (root-word is wisdom, knowledge “Tud, Tut”
Magoch Magus, Magian priest (root-word magia=bonfire)
Bacsa,Baksa Priest of crafts, science
Harsány Priest of song and ceremonies
Arbis Priest of medicine (modern “doctor”=Orvos)
Barus,Rasdi Priest of magic (modern Varázs)
Garabonciás Priest of storm black magic. (from Kara-pan)

The name of the “bonfire” or the sacred flame of old, remains as Magia in modern Hungarian, recalling the old Magus priests who maintained the sacred flames.

The most typical Hungarian word for a church (not used by Catholics) is even today called Egy-ház, which in a simplistic way is translated as the house of ONE. However this same word EDGY or ÜGY is also holy in meaning and the word for GOD in Hungarian IS-TEN is also related to the universal ONE god, since in Babylon and Persia also a special word described the universal ONE as ISTEN (Babylon) and YSTEN (Persia). Hungarian legends all state that they came from the borderlands of Persia. This word ISTEN is not Persian in origin as far as I know. It can be best explained with Sumerian from the word ASH-TEN (first/one creator). The TEN word means godly spirit in the other Altaic languages also, and perhaps they passed the word even to the Chinese as the word for heaven “tien”. The word is also found in early Parthian as shown by an inscription on one of their temples to the goddess Nana. (N.N. Y.S.T.N.) It was the Parthians and not the Persians who ruled during the time of Christ, and from their territory came the three wise men.

The Creator God

The chief god and creator of the world therefore was called ISTEN and is still the Hungarian word for God. Today it is still used in the neighborhood of Persia, by the Kurds according to some tourists. I don’t know the circumstances of the usage, as it may be just a special title there.

The IS-TEN word is based on the archaic variation of the word for first & ancestor. Elso =As,es while first Os,us =ancestor.. as the ancestor of everything, the creator. The word Iz/is can also mean fiery. Ten can be related to the word TENY-esz meaning to breed, genetically manipulate, …create new life forms.

Other references to the name ISTEN for god found in Manfred Lurker’s, Lexicon der Gotter und Demonen, Stutgard, 1904.

ISTEN or ISDEN in Egypt a god related to TOTH (scribe and wisdom), in the later’s aspect as cynocephalus hamadryas./?/ In Hungarian TUD also means knowledge.

ISTANU was the Hittite sun-god, the Hattic form is ESTAN (=sunday). One of his main attributes is a winged sun as part of his head-dress.

ISTEN; Supreme god of the Hungarians. Among his attributes; the arrow, the Tree, the Horse.

Other important titles of God are “creator”, TEREM-tö” based on the root word TEREM, for creation, grow and flourish. Certain Finno- Ugrian tribes also use the TAREM word for the name of their chief god of heaven. While linguists may still be arguing about the original and common Finn-Ugor meaning of the root word, it is quite obvious in Hungarian. The name can be found as far east as the name of the Tarim Basin in western China and in India as the name of the Tree of Life among the Dravidian language family. In Sumerian his name Darama, was one of the titles of the god of knowledge and creator of many plants, better known as ENKI. In the Middle Ages a variation of this “pagan” god(?) DOROMO,DRUMO was made a devil by the Christian church, all the more so since its ancient dwelling according to the Sumerians was the deep subteranean waters. His son Saba (Hungarian Csaba) or Dumuzi (Hungarian Damacsek) was also retained in the early Pagan Szekely-Hungarian chronicle, as the god to which Csaba prayed to before returning to Scythia with his Hun army..

In old stories god is often described as living in the 7th heavens, in a golden kingdom. However he does interact with this world and he sometimes hurls great stones to earth “stones of heaven=menykö, or in anger may shoot his arrows down to earth “god’s arrow =istennyila”. Fires started from such lightning bolts were the source of the sacred flames tended by priests.

The best explanation I ever saw for the Hungarian name of God came from Persia, which was quite precise and closer to the original meaning than today’s Christianized form. It describes the perfect unity, self generated, not constituted of matter but ethereal, the uncreated creator of all. This comes from the archaic Yzdan-ite holy book the Dab-Istan, a religion which is pre-Persian.

While the Hungarians of the 10th century were monotheists in the sense that there was one god to which all was subservient, they also had memories of more archaic times, and these ancient gods were over time made to be angels, nymphs, heroes and devils, due sometimes to the influence of their newer religion.

One of the most beneficial of the ancient goddesses was called by several names:

Nagy Asszony meaning Great Queen.

Boldog Asszony meaning Bountiful & Glad Queen.

Baba meaning midwife, but also meaning God in some isolated Hungarian communities in the Carpathians.(Csango dialects)

In the lowlands of the Hungarian plains, the mirage of the sun is also called Déli Báb, the noonday BAB, the feminine mate of the Sun which is typically translated as FATA MORGANA.

She was the benefactor of marriages, childbirth, agriculture. These I believe were though to be the same, however they may have been differentiated in the distant past. The term “Boldog Asszony” was a predominantly associated with marriage and childbirth, and some women in the Hungarian city of Szeged still worshipped her in recent times after their childbirth and there are many folk customs associated with her, including the birthing bed. Her day is Tuesday, when women were warned not to wash or dirty the water. Apparently she was associated with fresh water also, like the eastern Scythian Anahita the source of fresh waters.

She was also associated with agriculture as many Hungarian folk holidays of Boldog Asszony are agriculturally named, and have nothing to do with Christianity. She was included into Hungarian Catholicism to ease the way to conversion, as the grandmother of Christ and today there are many hymns to her. In the east the Manichean religion also had a pure goddess of Joy, called RAM-ratuk. (RAMA=Hungarian OROM).

Historical association of the names show that these are early Mesopotamian in origin. For example the goddess of birth and fertility in Sumerian was called BAU meaning bounty, while DUG also meant gladness. From this one can readily get BODOG, which also means gladness in Hungarian while just BÖ means bounty.

The other title “Asszony” means queen in early 10th century Hungarian. Today it means lady. This word also is most closely associated with early Elamite, the neighbors of the Sumerians where USAN (ref. DS109,L301) means goddess. The same word in Sumerian of the Emesal dialect is GASAN meaning queen, lady (ref. G182). The chief Sumerian dialect Emegir uses the term NIN for lady, which is also still used in Hungarian Neni (lady, aunt..). The Accadians also borrowed it as ASATU meaning just wife (?). Persian also uses a more distorted form of the word, derived from the aboriginals of Iran, the Elamites. Often linguists state that Hungarians obtained the word from Iranians, who only got it from their aboriginals, whose language is much closer related to Hungarian than Persian was.

In Babylonian mythology BAU was also the wife of Nimrud which was a chief god at one period, hence the important Assyrian city of Nimrud. In Hungarian mythology he is not a god but a mythical ancestor of several nations, including Hungarians, Scythians and Iranians, who according to Hungarian traditions lived 201 years after the flood. That would make him a Pre-Sumerian king, possibly Elamite. (Elamites, Medes, Parthians? rather then Persians proper.) Hungarians including their neighbors all had stories of a mythical giant ancestor (like Nimrud) to whom they gave respect. Finnish Veine_MONEN while the Sabir Huns also had a giant ancestor. So it is no wonder that when they became Christians the NIMRUD name was adopted instead of the NEMERE name, which is often the name of the wild wind in Transylvania. The original Sumerian NINURTA or NIMURTA was also the wild southern wind, and the god of war. But Hungarian Chroniclers sometimes called him by his Scythian or Greek name Heracles, which the Romans took over as Hercules. This name also is from the east.

The chief holidays of Boldogaszony, the mother-goddess, was Christmas, which in Hungarian is called Kara’chon, a word also borrowed by Russians, Rumanians, Slovaks from the early eastern horsemen for Christmas. It means the new year, turning point of the sun. However if one takes notice of pronunciation distortions then Kara-acsony/aszony is another way of saying Nagy-Aszony, the name of the Great Queen, to which the Sun God Mithra sacrifices the bull at the end of the year, to free the sun. The earliest references to “Karácson” is from Iran, where January was called “Karasanaj” in early ancient references. “Kara/Kora” is root word for big in Hungarian found in composite words only. (me- kora=how big).

In Hungarian Mythology Boldog Aszony had seven daughters, who brought good things to mankind. In Assyrian/Babylonian mythology she was called Bau or ANUTA, which was the same as the mythical wife of Nimrud in Hungarian mythology ENETH, who also had 7 daughters.. the 7 days of the week. Whereas Nimrud ruled over 365 kings.. the days of the year as the Babylonian sun god.

TÜNDÉR

The ancient angels in Hungarian mythology became nymphs and special aerial phenomenon’s under Christian influence. These are called TÜN- DÉR. The word relates to the Altaic languages TEN-GRI and Sumerian DIN-GIR.. the lesser gods of the Sumerians of Messopotamia. The queen of the “nymphs” which were often associated with heaven and wet places, mountains etc. was the beautiful “Tündér-ILONA”, who often was represented by the swan in Hungarian fairy tales. This could be a variation of the Parthian and Mesopotamian NANA or Sumerian goddess Dingir-INANA, the daughter of the Moon, who was the young goddess of the heavens and also at times was warlike, and a seductress. Sometimes she is called szép-aszony meaning beautiful queen, in Hungarian.

In Mesopotamia she was at times the wife of the god of vegetation and shepherds DAMUZIG/SAB in Sumerian and Mesopotamian mythology. The old Hungarian word for shepherd is CHABA just as in many Altaic languages still use the word CHOBAN, which is SIPAD in Sumerian. Dumuzi or SABA, was also the Sumerian god of the rebirth of spring, and shepherds and is the source of the Hungarian word for Spring TAVAS. (MU often changes to V in Hungarian) from the later form of DUMUZI which became TAMUZ, in later Mesopotamian usage.

References for information on Hungarian Mythology


Kandra Kabos, “Magyar Mythologia”, Eger, 1897

Ipolyi Arnold, “Magyar Mythologia”, Pest, 1854

Dr Zakar András, “A Szumér Hitvilág és a Biblia”, 1973 (2nd publishing)

Dr Varga Zsigmond, “Az Ösmagyar Mitologia Szumir és Ural-Altáji Öröksége”, San Francisco, 1956.

Dr Bobula Ida, ” The Great Stagg, A “Sumerian divinity”, reprint from Ancient and Medieval History,
University of Buenos Aires, 1953?

Albert Wass, “Selected Hungarian Legends”, Astor, Florida 1971.

Dömötör Tékla, “Régi és mai magyar népszokások”, Budapest 1986

Lászlö Gyula, “Régészeti Tanulmányok- Az életfa és az ösi istenasszony”, Budapest.

Jankovics Marcel, “Csillagok között fényességes csillag – A szent László legenda és a csillagos ég”, Budapest 1987.

The Great Stag

The following essay proves that the sumerian god, Enki is Satan, the True Creator of the humanity, our “Good God”.

This essay was written by Bobula Ida, Hungarian sumerologist and linguist. She was the first one who started to reveal the the truth about the Hungarians that our ancestors are the Sumerians. The enemy tried to put her to silence many times…

A Sumerian Divinity by Bobula Ida

One of the elements of human culture which migrated from Western Asia into the Western World seems to be the concept of a benevolent, divine father who created mankind out of clay and who cares for the welfare of the Earth.

The Mesopotamian divinity, who in contrast with most other male gods of the early Pantheon, was considered benevolent, was the water-god Enki. It seems that his cult was so deep-rooted that it survived the fall of Babylonia and was inherited by many younger nations, who brought it to Europe, where traditions which have come down to modern times seem to be the still-living fragments of this ancient cult.

Enki came to be known later as Ea./1 Ea’s name was written with four strokes of the stylus; it seems that his holy number was four times ten: forty./2 It may be inferred from one of the texts that he was considered -at least in one period- the fourth in rank of the “Great Gods”./3 He was supposed to be the child of Enlil/4 and the goddess Nammu, the primeval sea./5

Enki was one of the first divinities of the Sumerian Pantheon to be identified by archaeologists, more than 50 years ago/6, as the water-god, whose regular attribute was the spouting, overflowing vase and two streams with fish.

The figure of Enki appears on many cylinder seals and other monuments./7 Seldom standing -more often seated on his throne- he wears the horned, high hat of the great gods/8, and often holds the rod and the ring, symbols of divine power, which in Sumerian art distinguish gods from mortals, but which are not special attributes of any one god./9 His special attribute is a horned animal, usually the ibex or mountain goat, which is often depicted together with the fish. On a few seals a third animal appears in Enki’s presence: a bird which seems to be the eagle.

Later the fish and the horned animal are contracted into one single monster: the well-known fish-ram symbol of Ea, which has long been recognized as a sign of the Zodiac./10

Many authors have asked: why is the name of the water-god Enki, which means “Lord of the Land”? Frankfort answers: in the marshes of Southern Mesopotamia land and water are so intimately mixed that they seem to be essentially the same!”/11 We cannot agree: land and water must have been contrasted even in the primitive Mesopotamian mind. But Ki did not mean “land” only, it meant “earth”, too; and we may presume that Enki was supposed to be the Lord of Earth. The three animals which we see around Enki -the fish, the bird and the horned goat- may well symbolize the totality of the animal world – all that flies, swims or runs. Water is essential to the life of all of them.

The transparent symbolism of Sumerian creation myths makes it clear that Father Enki was regarded as creator and special father of the plants, too, who are mothered by many goddesses./12 Finally the goddesses inspired Enki to create man, which he did – fashioning men from clay, to be the servants of the gods./13

Being thus responsible for the existence of man, Enki was naturally supposed to take far more interest in his creatures than any other god. Enki organized the peoples and decreed fates for them./14 He taught man agriculture, cattle-breeding and industry. He gave to mankind “bread to eat”. He wrote all the fundamental laws of civilization on clay tablets. These were kept in Enki temple at Eridu. He was the god of wisdom, healing and every other kind of magic. In danger he was the helper. He saved humanity from the deluge by secretly instructing Ut-Napistim, the Sumerian Noah, to build an ark in which he survived.

This myth, so reminiscent of the Biblical story, has led some earlier authors to believe that the strongly delineated square in which Ea’s figure sometimes appears is the Ark/15. Lately it is believed rather that this square symbolizes Ea’s home in the watery depths./16

It is possible that the square connected with Ea- the square which surrounds him or on which he sits- is the symbol of the World, which in the Sumerian mind was something four-cornered./17 The square is sometimes marked with a cross, a sign which is related to the number 40.

The most frequent divine companion of Ea is his Janus-faced messenger, whose name has been read as Usmu or Isimud. He is the man sent by the god on various errands./18 Another form of Ea’s servant is that of the fish-man.

Often we see one or two gigantic doorkeepers19 by the throne of Ea/20 ; these are called the twins./21

Enki-Ea had many names/22, one of them was Dara-Mah “The Great Stag”/23. On this quality of Ea we may read numerous comments./24 This name of Ea was probably of astrological origin, connected with his benevolent activities as helper of the Sun, his nephew, whom he liberates daily from his mountain grave.

It seems that the Zodiac was the subject of early speculations by Sumerian -maybe pre-Sumerian- astrologers. In the early art of the Near East we find everywhere horned animals -stags, deer, goats, ibexes – who wear between their horns the sun-disc or a symbol of it, which may be a square, a cross or a sun-bird: the eagle./25 The examples are well known, beginning with the pottery of Susa I. Sometimes, instead of two horns, there are two animals flanking the Sun symbol./26 If we ask, why is this motive so widespread, we may suppose: because it was a message of joy and happiness. When the Sun appears between the horns of the heavenly stag -ie. at the winter solstice- winter is passing, the sun regains its former strength, the days are getting longer, a new cycle, a new year begins. A disc or a bird between horns must have stood for the Great Stag, bringing back the Sun between its horns./27

The rout of winter darkness and the retrieving of the Sun must have meant the greatest possible service to a more or less primitive human society. No wonder that the cult of the benefactor persisted so long.

Helping humanity is traditional in Ea’s family. His son, Dumuzig -later known as Tammuz and much later as Adonis – is the shepherd-god who dies with the dying vegetation, but comes back to life, too, like the plants. The epithet of this god is SABA (staff holder, shepherd-prince), which recalls the name Csaba of the young prince of Hungarian legends, the immortal hero who always returns to help his people. His plant has the power to heal all wounds, too, probably being related to the evergreen Tree of Life, which is the symbol of Tammuz.

[The source of the Hungarian name of Spring, Tavasz.m/v common in Hungarian.]

Two Hungarian chronicles preserved a name taken from the ancient pagan religion: that of the god DAMACSEC. This corresponds obviously to DUMUZIG. After the conversion of the Hungarians to Christianity, most of the legends which made up the Magian religion of the forefathers, were discarded. Yet, the Csaba story survived. The figure of csaba was smuggled over, from mythology to history, by medieval chronicle writers, who rationalized the concept: “son of the great Ruler” and wrote that Csaba was son of Attila, king of the Huns. We are informed by those chronicles that the real Huns rallied around Csaba, who saved a small group when most of them were killed, led them to safety and bid them to prepare for reconquering Panonnia. Arpad, the historical figure of the Hungarian conquest in the ninth century A.D., is said to be a descendant of legendary Csaba. [Who married a Chorezmian woman in Scythia] It is well possible that in contrast with his father, Dar- Mah, the Great Stag, Saba was once thought of as the Little Stag or goat which would sound as Dar-Ge. This could account for later divine names in the Near East, like Tarku, Targitaos [ancestor of the Scythians], etc; ultimately for the names TURK and TURAN, this later being the land covered by the Norther Sky, the sky of Carpricorn as opposed to IRAN, covered by the Southern Sky (UR-AN), the sky of Leo. On the seal of the Kassites – a people of speech and race which is little known but of whom Moortgart remarks that they had many graphic ideas and symbols in common with the early Sumerians – we often see a divinity who may be Ea, or rather Marduk, the son of Ea. On these seals the Kassite cross appears frequently./28 We see also in the art of the mountain peoples, neighbors of Mesopotamia, horned animals defending the Tree of Life.

Sumerian thought deeply influenced Greek thought. We may wonder -like the British editor of Lenormant- whether the cult of EA had not something to do with the idea of Thales, that the first cause of all things was water? May not EA have influenced the use of the word EU “good”? [Hungarian YO] Had father Ea something to do with the concept of a later EU-piter? [The Japhet of the Bible?]

On the peripheries, far away in space and time, a snake cult, or a tree cult seems indicative of some cult of Ea and his family./29 But the staunchest survivor seems to be the stag cult.

Indeed, the Celtic divinity Cernunnos, so ably described by Phyllis Pray Bober, may well be one of Ea’s late manifestations./30 He is a god of waters, like Ea, wearing horns and a torque (the ring, left over after disappearance of the rod) like Sumerian divinities, and accompanied by a horned serpent, which is probably a variant of Ea’s horned fish. (The water streams of Ea, if they are carelessly drawn, may easily be mistaken for snakes.)

The Celts, however, were certainly not the last carriers of Mesopotamian traditions towards the West.

At the time of Rome’s decline, among the Eastern cults which invaded the empire must have been the cult of the divine stag, and his father, the divine bull (Enlil). Early Christianity found entrenched in Rome the Babylonian custom of celebrating New Year or winter solstice, with green wreathes, food and drink, song and dance, exchange of gifts, and people enacting the heavenly drama in masks of stags and bulls. The custom remained popular all over Europe. We have a series of documents from the fourth to the ninth centuries in which Church authorities of many countries forbid the people to have anything to do with these pagan practices./31 Condemned and vehemently denounced over many centuries, the originally benevolent stag divinity became in people’s minds the devil, with horns and cloven hoofs. This is why a diabolical stag, which leads its followers to destruction, appears in later European folklore. Such is the Finnish stag of Hiisi./32 [Hungarian IZ]

In a former study/33 I tried to explain how the Hungarians of the ninth century could bring with them a wealth of Babylonian traditions and the staunchly conserved hieratic language of the Magians. [Magy-ari]

It seems that they also brought along the cult of the benevolent stag divinity. The chronicles state that the Hungarians in their westward migration were guided by a white stag. According to the sense of the somewhat cryptic national traditions, the great mother of the Hungarians conceived the conquering duke in a hieros gamos with the divine eagle – (the eagle of Ea, the eagle of Lagash?). Her name is Emese. The corresponding Sumerian word Emes, according to Diemel, is “priestess of Ea”./34 She dreams about the future: a mighty river issuing from her womb covers distant lands…/35 Such a hieros gamos seems to be illustrated on a gold vessel said to be of Bulgaro-Turkish origin. We even find traces of the name Dara-mah./36 [A similar myth is also found in the Mede myth about the coming of a new dynasty]

The divinity to whom these signs point, was, it seems, regularly celebrated at the feast of Kar csony -the Hungarian word today for Christmas – of unexplained etymology. It seems to conserve in its first syllable the Sumerian GAR “turning” or “originating”. [Karacsony from the Scythian name of January or Karasanay. It also can mean Kara-acsony/aszony= Great Queen]

About 50 years ago a special ethnographic survey revealed in Hungary 179 villages which observed the tradition of “Reg”/37 or “Reg”l‚s” – the pagan or semi-pagan celebration of the New Year. [in song format, “Rig” means talk in Sumerian.] Gy. Sebesty‚n collected and published in one volume all the variants of the “Reg” ceremonies and songs; in a second volume he wrote a study on the probable origins and the European analogues of the custom/38. The essence of this custom is that on Christmas or New Year’s night/39 a group of singers go from house to house in the village, dressed in queer costumes or animal skins, often with blackened faces. They carry special instruments, drums, sticks with chains and other noise-makers, with which to rattle at the end of every verse they sing. They ask for permission to enter, and if admitted, they proceed to sing their song, which announces that God has descended upon the house, angels bringing a table covered with food and drink amid a great light: now is the time to feast! Most of the songs speak of a miraculous young stag, which comes through the clouds, from heaven, and brings the sun between its bright horns. In the song a lake appears full of fish, in the lake a round island rises/40, the miraculous stag descends upon it and feeds on the young reeds. In some variants, the stag speaks; he asks King Saint Stephen (the energetic uprooter of pagan traditions) not to hunt him, for he is not a wild animal, not a devil he is the Lord God’s messenger! After this, the most important part of the song is a series of blessings, which are all wishes for the prosperity and fertility of the family, their crops, their animals. In many places the singers arrange marriages; they mention together a girl and a boy who should get married. The young people take this seriously, it is the voice of public opinion. Every verse is followed by rattling, dancing and various forms of the following refrain: EJ REU REJTEM! This refrain, which has no meaning in Modern Hungarians, has been repeatedly analyzed for half a century and many suggestions have been offered to explain it, none of the satisfactory./41 The refrain may perhaps be a magic formula: Ea’s incantation. At the end of song, the singers levy a toll on the house; they ask for half of the cash the master of the house has, while from the mistress they ask a bountiful gift of foodstuffs./42 In fact they are satisfied with a much smaller gift, but the song may preserve the memory of ancient priestly demands. Today the group of the “reg”s” singers is usually a gang of young boys who keep up the old tradition for the sake of the gifts which may be collected./43 But the name “regos” points to an order of professionals which must once have performed the ceremony.

The “reg”s” name of the old royal entertainers is fully documented./44 May we add that, while 179 villages have conserved the old custom under its own special name, there are many more places where variants of the ceremony exist under different names: for example, the “turkaj r s”/45 or “szzgulyafordit s”/46.

[both names refer to bulls, cattle, the symbol of the great stag] Sebestyen [incorrectly] brings up many analogies in the solstice feasts of Poland, Rumania, and the Southern Slavic countries. While he recognizes expressly that the center of the territory where the custom still lives is Hungary, Sebestyen believes that the Hungarians inherited it from Rome, in a complicated way, through hypothetical Avar- Slovene Szekely-Hungarians. This explanation is scarcely acceptable. According to what we know of the Roman and the Western ceremonies, these were but faint echoes, a masquerading carnival with the masks of the Zodiac animals. The Hungarian ceremony was a serious religious rite -organic fertility magic- called by its true Mesopotamian name, which survived in Hungary only. It was a more complete and stronger variant which arrived in Europe at a time when the Western practice was dying. It did not come through Rome, but straight from the East, as the last conscious ritual in honor of the beneficent Great Stag god. Christian clerics made constant war against the pagan tradition and called it “the feast of the devil”/47- in Hungary, as elsewhere. Thus the ancient “Lord of the Deep” (the creator of man) gradually became the Lord of Hell.

Stags and birds remained popular subjects of art. But the Sumerian DARAMAH name of Enki survived only in the queer devil-names/48 DOROMO, DURUMO, DROMO, used all over Hungary to denote the Prince of Darkness/49.

Such was the end of the great and ancient bringer of light. In the decorative arts, the symbols of Ea live on independently. The stags who guard the Tree of Life reappear, but people have forgotten their meaning. The divine face goes into hiding, behind a camouflage of flowers. Only the keen glance discerns in Hungarian ornaments the round eyes, the eyebrows, the horns of the horned divinity. If you ask the Hungarian peasant woman what she embroidered on her pillowcase, she will answer: tulips. But look and you will see the ancient message of resurrection, the horns of the Great Stag and between them the disc of the victorious Sun. _______________________________ 1. Ea according to F. Lenormant: “dwelling, house” (Chaldean Magic, London, 1878, p 155). But in the Sumerian mind “to build” was related to create, “to generate”. Ea, “Beishlaf” F. Delitzsh, Sumerisches Glossar, Leipzig, 1914 p. 30. [Ea is also the name of river in Sumerian much like FinnUgor YU,YO as in fo-lyo=chief river].

2. A. Diemel: Sumerisches Lexicon II. 3. N 925.

3. Enki was preceded by Anu, the distant sky divinity of the universe and Enlil, the “Holy Wind”, the violent storm god. Ninmah, the great mother, goddes of birth-giving, preceded Enki, too. S. N. Kramer: Sumerian Mythology, Philadelphia, 1944, p. 63. [Again Sumir LIL = Hungarian LEL,LEHEL,LELEG..etc]

4.Kramer, op. cit. p. 63.

5. Kramer, op. cit. p. 70.

6. L. Heuzey: Le Sceau de Goudea. Revue d’Assyriologie, 1902, p.30.

7.Stephen Langdon: Semitic Mythology, p. 95, and L. Heuzey: Les Origines Orientales de l’Art, Paris, 1915, p. 156.

8. E. Douglas Van Buren: Symbols of the Gods in Mesopotamian Art. Annalecta Orientalia, Roma, 1945, p. 104.

9.Ibid. p. 155.

10. L. Heuzey: Le Sceau, de Goudea, p. 133.

11.H. Frankfort: Cylinder Seals, London, 1939, p. 122-23.

12.In one of the still not clear myths of creation we are told that after a rather complicated process of impregnating a series of divine ladies, Enki became the father of a variety of plants and trees. But being curious, he ate those plants, which reminds one of the later Saturn story. The goddess of birth cursed Enki for this and he almost died of the curse, but then the great lady had pity on him and began to bear again. That much is clear, that Father Enki, the personified Water, is the father of plants, too. Kramer, op. cit. p. 57. [In a desert of Messopotamia, plants are very dependant on irrigation indeed.]

13.Kramer, op. cit. p. 63.

14. Kramer, op. cit. p. 70.

15.L. Heuzey: Le Sceau de Goudea, p. 131.

16. Frankfort: op. cit. p. 123.

17.”Four corners of the world” are often mentioned. We may have inherited this concept in the four cardinal points of our compass, which are arbitrary. In connection with Ea’s throne, mostly square and bearing the signs of the cross we may recall that four strokes of the stylus made a sign which Delitzsch reads as NIG, “something, anything, treasure, possession”, connecting it with the identical written GAR, “to be, to become” (Op. Cit. pp. 80 and 200). Fossey gives to this sign the meanings: “four; to bring; to place”. (Syllabaire Cuneiforme, Paris, 1901, no. 509). Diemel reads it as NINDA and interprets it as having the meanings “four” and “bread box” (N. 597). The same sign is explained by J. Dineley Prince as having evolved from a square, with the meaning “building”. Prince believes that the sign has two pronunciations: GAR and NGA (p. 110). The same author explains an almost identical sign as “surround, totality, collect” pronounced GAAR, but the name of the sign is NINDA. He explains also the word NIGI as dwelling. The sign list of Stephen Langdon gives a square as the early sign for “totality, universe”. (p. 294). R. Jestin translates NIG as possession, treasury, luck everything: “toute chose”. (Le verbe Sumerien, Paris, 1943, p. 395). His words for GAR: “introniser, tetablir”. We may add to these data for consideration that in Hungarian for is NEGY, totality is MINDEN and the great feast of Ea, the winter solstice -today Christmas- is called (GAR-A-SU-MU) Karacsony. These data belong to the already copious literature on the “four corners”. /common in most ancient cultures/

18. Many years ago Lenormant believed that the fish-man Oannes mentioned by Berossus or the Euahannes of Hyginus are identical with Enki-Ea. (Freacois Lenormant: Chaldean Magic and Sorcery, p. 203). This view is still held by Charles Virolleaud (Legendes de Babylone, Paris, 1949, p. 17). We must rather believe that the two-faced messenger and doorkeeper, the door incarnate (Iauna) is the famous Oannes or later Janus, the divinity of entrance and beginning. January begins the year, fight after the feast of the winter solstice janus, the messenger of the water-god may be the prototype of the later Joannes, who christened with water before the God-man. The leader of the last pagan resistance in Hungary was called Janus, also. /IA is also the Hungarian root word for river/

19.These reminded L. Heuzey of the later myth about the columns of Hercules. Le. Sceau de Goudea, p. `33.

20.E. Douglas Van Buren: Symbols of the Gods, p. 46.

21.Talim meaning “twins or companions”. Frankfort, op. cit. p. 60. These twins may well be the heavenly Gemini, or the first Cherub angeles. KUR in Sumerian means “guarding” /becoming Cher- ub/ (Diemel, S. A., p. 147: Bewachung).

22.Lenormant’s reading of the name was HEA. On the names of Enki-Ea see Deimel: Akkadisch Sumerisches Glossar, p. 91. Among them are: Dingir Magur “the god boat”, NUDIMMUD “creator”, DINGIR KAR-RA-E and MUL GULA. In Sumerian times Enki, in Accadian times Ea was the generally used name. It may be supposed that these names were somehow related with the Sumerian root A. meaning both water and father, or generation. Deimel, when treating this root, mention its resemblance to Indoeur. AHWA “water”. (Sum. Akk. Gl. p. 1) A. Falkenstein writes: ” ..vielwehr kommt der Zeichen E in der alteren Zeit der Lautwert A zu…” (Die Sprache Gudeas. Roma. 1949, p. 25). These suggest one more addition to the innumerable attempts to explain the holy name JAHVE. Did not a very early common culture of many peoples possess the concept of a god-water or god father, the Creator? 23.DARA, DAR, TAR were in Sumerian generic names of the swift cervidae, ibex, mountain goat, deer, stag, perhaps mouflon. [a generic name in many language families for horned animals.]

24.”The ibex or ture (Capra Caucasica)… was also perhaps AYALUM in Babylonian, Hebrew AYAL… The Assyrian TURAKHU is translated Steinboch by Delitzsh. It is one of the names of Ea.. and forms part of four other names of Ea”. Ward: Cylinder Seals, p. 416.

25.A pre-Sargonid god of fertility, worshipped throughout the land, under a variety of epithets was represented everywhere in his warlike aspect by the “lion headed eagle”. Cf H. Frankfort: Early Dynastic Sculptured Mace-heads. A. Orientalia 1935, p. 105.

26.Creating one of the heraldic schemes, which Edith Porada has well called Mesopotamia’s legacy to later art. Mesopotamian Art in Cylinder Seals, N. Y. 1947.

27.Much material to illustrate the connection of art and astrology has been assembled by Prof. Willy Hartner, which he showed in a lecture: Early Traces of the Zodiac in the Near East. Chicago University. 1949.

28.Bildwerk und Volkstrum Vorderasiens zur Hethiterzeit. Leipzig. 1934, p. 12.

29.Ea was a divinity of the subterranean waters. Vladimir Georgiev, the Bulgarian decipherer of Minoan inscriptions, tells us that YA was the Minoan syllable expressed with what we call the Delta letter, and which corresponds to Latin ianus, underground passage. (Inscriptions Minoennes Quasi Bilingues Annuaire de l’Universite de Sofia. 1950, p. 21). The wise animal inhabiting the wet underground passages is the snake. And we are told: the mysterious prehistoric stone buildings of Western Europe occur invariably at spots where underground water currents are meeting (Charles Diot: Les Sourciers et les Monuments Megalithiques. Boug, 1935). Lenormant stated “that the serpent was one of the principal attributes and one of the forms of Hea”. (Chaldean Magic, p. 232). The snake of Ea seems to be somehow related to Marduk’s dragon. The dragon in Hungarian folklore is often called SARKANY-KIGYO “dragon-snake”.[which by the way is also often assosciated with rain, storms, and fertility!!]

30.American Journal of Archeology, Vol. 55. N. 1.

31.Enumerated by Sebestyen, op. cit. p. 291-304.

32.Hiisi is the spirit of the underworld, the underworld itself. Hiisi rides a vicious fish, who swims in the waters of Tuonela, the underworld. The fish tries to catch the souls of the deceased; he makes himself a body of plants and appears over the earth as stag to lure the living. Kalevala, 13th Runo.

33.Sumerian Affiliations, Washington, 1950.

34.”e. Priesterin Ea’s”. Sum. Akk. Glossar, p. 92.

35.Ea’s name may be hidden in the archaic Hungarian word for river: JO (pronounced YO). The idea of “good” is expressed in Hungarian by the word JO also. A royal edict of the XI-th century forbade Hungarians to celebrate at rivers, fountains and trees. But a belief in the fertility magic of water survived until modern times (East). [the Hungarian Easter custom of dunking of maidens.]

36.Konstantinos Porphyrogenetos, Byzantine emperor and writer, relates that in the X-th century a young prince of Hungary visited Constantinople -his name was Termatzous. (M. H. K. p. 128).

37. The Hungarian word REG corresponds to Sumerian RIG, “to speak, recite”. (Deimel, S.A., p. 191 Sprechen), also to Accadian RAGAHU (Deimel A. S., p. 395 schreien, rufen, beanspruchen); maybe to Sanscrit rk*, too -see Rig Veda.

38.Reg”s nekek, A. Reg”s”k. Budapest, 1902, Athenaeum.

39.In medieval centuries the year began on December 25th -only since the end of the 15-th century have Christmas and New Year been separated.

40. The house of Ea, the “mountain of Ea” emerged from the waters, too. (Falkenstein, op. cit. p. 25).

41.The first word: EJ or HEJ -an exclamation- contains perhaps the name EA or HEA. The second means: recitation. The third word: REJTEM may be related to Sumerian RI “to protect” – UH “magic” – Accadian RUGHTU “magic”. The refrain meaning: “EAs recitation: protective magic”.

42.In some variants the foods are enumerated: a large ox to roast, hazelnuts for stuffing and Perec cakes to hand on the horns of the ox. The perec is around hard cake, which has a hole like a doughnut and recalls the torques of Cernunnos. (pretzel)

43.Some texts of songs, photographs of the groups and descriptions of the ceremony in Vol. 3 of A Magyars g N‚prajza, Budapest, 1938. Egyetemi Nyomda, p. 357.

44.In a document of King Louis of Anjou, dated 1347. After the extinction of the national royal house, bad days must have come upon the former order of royal entertainers. The document states that the former property of the “Combibatorum Regalium condicionarium vulgariter Regus dictorum” the land called “Reg- teluk” is given now to a comes Lorand. K. Szab˘: A Kir lyi Reg”s”kr”l. Sz zadok, 1881, p. 553.

45.A group of boys go round leading ofne of their number in stags mask. Many variations of the custom are described in ethnographic publications.

46.The word means “turning the virgin cattle”. A group of men go from house to house on New Year’s night and make a noise with whips, horns and bells under the windows. This custom of several Hungarian villages in county Zempl‚n is described in Ethnographia, Budapest, 1926, p. 89. We may read there about the custom of Hajduszoboszlo county Hajdu: lighting fires and sounding cowbells at New Years night.

47.G. Helta: Dialogus. Kolozsv r, 1552, Introduction.

48. The name is documented in witch processes: witches confessing that they were in the “army of Dromo”. See also Ipolyi: Magyar Mythologia. The variant Doromo occurs in a play of Csokonai: Tempef”i. Listed as Durumo in the Magyar Etymologiai Sz˘t r with the remark, “etymology unknown”. (Gombocz Melich, Budapest, 1930, p. 1451).

49. B. Homan: a Hungarian scholar of German origin, contended that the stag of the Hungarian origin-myths was a loan from German traditions. ( A Magyar Hunhagyom ny ‚s HŁn -Monda. Budapest, 1932, p. 64-65). Berze-Nagy refuses to believe Sebesty‚ns good guess too, that the Hungarian stag is connected with the Capricorn of the Zodiac – he tries to prove that the Hungarian stag was female, could not have horns, and came from Eastern folklore and is of eschatologic character; it originated in the IX -the century A. D. We believe we have shown that Berze is right about the Eastern direction, but the stag is much older than a mere 1000 years. Being miraculous, it could well be female and have horns. We have pictures of such animals (e.g. Scythian art).

 

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