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Mithra

 

(West Asian mythology)

Of all the celestial beings ruling over the earth he was the most popular with the Persians, who represented him as the son of Ahura Mazdah. He was the light that preceded the sun when it rose, the one who dispelled darkness; and from his penetrating gaze could nothing be hidden. Mithra was aware of every happening, no matter how insignificant each might appear. In pre-Zoroastrian times Mithra and Ahura were most likely twin sky gods, looked upon as payu-thworeshtara, ‘the two creator-preservers’ of the cosmic order. Later theological adjustment to Zoroaster's elevation of Ahura Mazdah as the supreme being indicates how potent a divinity Mithra actually remained. ‘When I created Mithra of wide pastures,’ said Ahura Mazdah, ‘I made him as worthy of veneration and of reverence as I am myself’.

As a terrible war god Mithra was the special protector of the warriors, the rathaeshtar or ‘riders on chariots’. Though all-wise and knowing, his warlike aspect found expression in ruthlessness, the merciless and relentless pursuit of those who had the temerity to oppose him. His weapons were deadly arrows, a huge mace, incurable diseases, and the boar Verethraghna, ‘sharp in tusk, unapproachable, a raging beast…. He smashes the backbone. At one fell blow he destroys everything: bones and hair, brains and blood of men who break their contracts he mashes up together with mud.’ Even his own devotees stood in awe of such limitless fury. ‘Mithra, evil you are yet most good to the nations. Mithra, evil you are yet most good to men. In the world you have power over peace and war.’ This ‘evil’, however, was reserved for the false, those who broke faith with ‘the wise lord’, Ahura Mazdah, and chose the dishonesty of Ahriman, ‘the destructive spirit‘. Mithra means ‘friend’. He extended friendship towards people who honoured the sacred obligations–between men and men as well as between men and heaven.

Mindful of his complaint that people were paying him little worship Ahura Mazdah invited Mithra to take part in the haoma rite, which was central to the Zoroastrian liturgy. The consumption of the fermented juice of this plant appears to have descended from ancient practices of ritual intoxication. Having been so incorporated in worship, he was firmly re-established in the Persian pantheon, and the situation ready for his final development as the ‘mystery’ deity, Mithras.

The Mithraic mysteries which swept through the Roman Empire came from the late Zoroastrian acceptance of Mithra as the ‘mystery of the sorcerers’. In the second century Plutarch wrote that between Ohrmazd and Ahriman ‘is Mithras, whom the Persians call the Mediator. From him they learnt how to sacrifice votive offerings and thank offerings to the one, but to the other offerings for averting evil, things of gloom.’. The origin of the bull-sacrifice in the Roman cult of Mithras is obscure, not least for the reason that the slayer of the primeval ox was Ahriman. Its consequences were thought of as twofold: continued prosperity and fertility in the material world, but also the continued life of the soul in the spiritual world, after death. Appealing to soldies, the cult spread along the frontiers of the Roman Empire from the Danube to Britain. In the twilight of the pagan gods it also offered refreshment to high-born traditionalists like the Emperor Julian. At his palace in Constantinople he installed in 362 a mithraeum, a cave-sanctuary, and celebrated there a taurobolium, in which he sat in a trench over which a bull was slaughtered, and so was bathed in its blood. There is a possibility that the rite was borrowed from the Phrygian cult of Attis.

Roman sculpture of Mithra slaying the bull
Roman sculpture of Mithra slaying the bull

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In Indo-Iranian myth, the god of light. He was born bearing a torch and armed with a knife, beside a sacred stream and under a sacred tree, a child of the earth itself. He soon rode, and later killed, the life-giving cosmic bull, whose blood fertilizes all vegetation. This deed became the prototype for a bull-slaying fertility ritual. As god of light, Mithra was associated with the Greek Helios and the Roman Sol Invictus. The first written reference to Mithra dates to 1400 BC. See also Mithraism.

For more information on Mithra, visit Britannica.com.

Asian Mythology: Mithra
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An ancient Indo-Iranian god, corresponding originally to the Vedic (see Vedic entries) Mitra (see Mitra), Mithra was repudiated along with other ancient gods by the prophet Zarathustra (see Zoroaster) in favor of the one Wise Lord, Ahura Mazda (see Ahura Mazda). In this context, he was demoted to a position as judge of the dead. But the cult of Mithra remained strong and gained popularity in the first centuries CE in the Roman world as well as in Iran. Historically, Mithra is a rival to Ahura Mazda for the central place in pre-Islamic Iranian religion. His name is derived from the concept of proper arrangements or contracts. He represents loyalty, true friendship, and truth. Mithra is also a war god, a promulgator of the faith and of the Iranian “nation.” He is also a solar god. Many extraordinary myths are associated with Mithra in both his Iranian and assimilated Roman form: the magical cave in which the sun god lives when he is not driving his chariot pulled by white horses across the sky, his birth from a rock (see Virgin Birth, Hero Quest), and his ritual slaying of the primal bull, the symbol of disorder. This slaying reminds us more of the Vedic Indra (see Indra), the slayer of the primal demon Vṛtra (see Vṛtra, Indra and Vṛtra), than it does of the Vedic Mitra (see Mithraism).

 
Mithra (mĭth'), ancient god of Persia and India (where he was called Mitra). Until the 6th cent. B.C., Mithra was apparently a minor figure in the Zoroastrian system. Under the Achaemenids, Mithra became increasingly important, until he appeared in the 5th cent. B.C. as the principal Persian deity, the god of light and wisdom, closely associated with the sun. His cult expanded through the Middle East into Europe and became a worldwide religion, called Mithraism. This was one of the great religions of the Roman Empire, and in the 2d cent. A.D. it was more general than Christianity. Mithraism found widest favor among the Roman legions, for whom Mithra (or Mithras in Latin and Greek) was the ideal divine comrade and fighter. The fundamental aspect of the Mithraic system was the dualistic struggle between the forces of good and evil. Mithra, who gave to his devotees hope of blessed immortality, represented the fearless antagonist of the powers of darkness. The story of Mithra's capture and sacrifice of a sacred bull, from whose body sprang all the beneficent things of the earth, was a central cultic myth. The ethics of Mithraism were rigorous; fasting and continence were strongly prescribed. The rituals, highly secret and restricted to men only, included many of the sacramental forms common to the mystery religions (e.g., baptism and the sacred banquet). Mithraism, which bore many similarities to Christianity, declined rapidly in the late 3d cent. A.D.

Bibliography

See F. Cumont, The Mysteries of Mithra (reissued, 1956) and M. J. Vumaseren, Mithras, the Secret God (1963).


Wikipedia: Mithra
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This article is about the Zoroastrian yazata Mithra (Miθra). For other divinities with related names, see the general article Mitra.

Mithra (Miθra) is the Avestan language name of the Zoroastrian divinity (yazata) of covenant and oath.

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. In Middle Iranian languages (Middle Persian, Parthian etc), 'Mithra' became 'Mehr', 'Myhr' etc, from which New Persian and Armenian Mihr ultimately derive.

Contents

Etymology

Together with the Vedic common noun mitra, the Avestan common noun miθra derives from proto-Indo-Iranian *mitra, from the root mi- "to bind", with the "tool suffix" -tra- "causing to." Thus, etymologically mitra/miθra means "that which causes binding", preserved in the Avestan word for "covenant, contract, oath".

In scripture

Mithra is described in the Zoroastrian Avesta scriptures as, "Mithra of wide pastures, of the thousand ears, and of the myriad eyes,"(Yasna 1:3)[1], "the lofty, and the everlasting...the province ruler,"(Yasna 1:11)[2], "the Yazad (divinity) of the spoken name"(Yasna 3:5)[3], and "the holy,"(Yasna 3:13)[4]

The Khorda Avesta (Book of Common Prayer) also refer to Mithra in the Litany to the Sun, "Homage to Mithra of wide cattle pastures,"(Khwarshed Niyayesh 5)[5], "Whose word is true, who is of the assembly,Who has a thousand ears, the well-shaped one,Who has ten thousand eyes, the exalted one,Who has wide knowledge, the helpful one,Who sleeps not, the ever wakeful.We sacrifice to Mithra, The lord of all countries,Whom Ahura Mazda created the most glorious, Of the supernatural yazads. So may there come to us for aid, Both Mithra and Ahura, the two exalted ones,"(Khwarshed Niyayesh 6-7)[6], "I shall sacrifice to his mace, well aimed against the skulls of the Daevas,"(Khwarshed Niyayesh 15)[7]. Some recent theories have claimed Mithra represents the sun itself, but the Khorda Avesta refers to the sun as a separate entity as well as the moon with which the sun has "the best of friendships,"(Khwarshed Niyayesh 15)[8]

Like most other divinities, Mithra is not mentioned by name in the Gathas, the oldest texts of Zoroastrianism and generally attributed to Zoroaster himself. Mithra also does not appear by name in the Yasna Haptanghaiti, a seven-verse section of the Yasna liturgy that is linguistically as old as the Gathas. The lack of Mithra's presence in these texts was once a cause of some consternation amongst Iranists. An often repeated speculation of the first half of the 20th century was that the lack of any mention (i.e. Zoroaster's silence) of Mithra in these texts implied that Zoroaster had rejected Mithra. This ex silencio speculation is no longer followed. Building on that speculation was another series of speculations that postulated that the reason why Zoroaster did not mention Mithra was because the latter was the supreme god of a blood-thirsty group of daeva-worshipers that Zoroaster condemned. However, "no satisfactory evidence has yet been adduced to show that, before Zoroaster, the concept of a supreme god existed among the Iranians, or that among them Mithra - or any other divinity - ever enjoyed a separate cult of his or her own outside either their ancient or their Zoroastrian pantheons."[9]

As a member of the ahuric triad, a feature that only Ahura Mazda and Ahura Berezaiti (Apam Napat) also have, Mithra is an exalted figure. As the divinity of contract, Mithra is undeceivable, infallible, eternally watchful, and never-resting. Mithra is additionally the protector of cattle, and his stock epithet is "of wide pastures." He is guardian of the waters and ensures that those pastures receive enough of it.

Together with Rashnu "Justice" and Sraosha "Obedience", Mithra is one of the three judges at the Chinvat bridge, the "bridge of separation" that all souls must cross. Unlike Sraosha, Mithra is not however a psychopomp. Should the good thoughts, words and deeds outweigh the bad, Sraosha alone conveys the soul across the bridge.

The Avestan hymn to Mithra (Yasht 10) is the longest, and one of the best preserved, of the Yashts.

In tradition

Investure of Sassanid emperor Ardashir I or II (3rd century CE bas-relief at Taq-e Bostan. On the left stands the yazata Mithra with raised barsom, sanctifying the investiture.

In the Zoroastrian calendar, the sixteenth day of the month and the seventh month of the year are dedicated to Mithra, and under whose protection those days and months are. (The Iranian civil calendar of 1925 adopted Zoroastrian month-names, and as such also has the seventh month of the year named 'Mihr'). The position of the sixteenth day and seventh month reflects the Mithra's rank in the hierarchy of the divinities; the sixteenth day and seventh month are respectively the first day of the second half of the month and the first month of the second half of the year. The day on which the day-name and month-name dedications intersect is (like all other such intersections) dedicated to the divinity of that day/month, and is celebrated with a Jashan (from Avestan Yasna, "worship") in honor of that divinity. In the case of Mithra this was Jashan-e Mihragan, or just Mihragan in short.

While Mithra is not the divinity of the Sun in Zoroastrian scripture (or in Indian scripture either), this being the role of Hvare.khshaeta (literally "radiant Sun", whence also Middle Persian Khorshed for the Sun), in Zoroastrian/Iranian tradition, Mithra became the divinity of the Sun. How, when or why this occurred is uncertain, but is commonly attributed to a conflation with Babylonian Shamash, who – in addition to being a Sun god – was a judicial figure like Mithra. In the Hellenistic era (i.e. in Seleucid and Parthian times), Mithra also seems to have been conflated with Apollo, who – like Mithra – was an all-seeing divinity of the truth.

Royal names incorporating Mithra's (e.g. "Mithradates") appear in the dynasties of Parthia, Armenia, and in Anatolia, in Pontus and Cappadocia.

In Manichaeism

Persian and Parthian-speaking Manichaeans used the name of Mithra current in their time (Mihryazd, q.e. Mithra-yazata) for two different Manichaean angels.

  1. The first, called Mihryazd by the Persians, was the "The Living Spirit" (Aramaic rūḥā ḥayyā), a savior-figure who rescues the "First Man" from the demonic Darkness into which he had plunged.
  2. The second, known as Mihr or Mihr yazd among the Parthians, is "The Messenger" (Aramaic īzgaddā), likewise a savior figure, but one concerned with setting up the structures to liberate the Light lost when the First Man had been defeated.

German academic Werner Sundermann has asserted that the Manicheans adopted the name Mithra to designate one of their own deities. Sundermann determined that the Zoroastrian Mithra, which in Middle Persian is Mihr (in russian "Mir" = world), is not a variant of the Parthian and Sogdian Mytr or Mytrg; though sharing linguistic roots with the name Mithra, those names denote Maitreya.

In Parthian and Sogdian however Mihr was taken as the sun and consequently identified as the Third Messenger. This Third Messenger was the helper and redeemer of mankind, and identified with another Zoroastrian divinity Narisaf.[10] Citing Boyce,[11] Sundermann remarks, "It was among the Parthian Manicheans that Mithra as a sun god surpassed the importance of Narisaf as the common Iranian image of the Third Messenger; among the Parthians the dominance of Mithra was such that his identification with the Third Messenger led to cultic emphasis on the Mithraic traits in the Manichaean god."[12]

References

  1. ^ http://www.avesta.org/yasna/y0to8s.htm
  2. ^ http://www.avesta.org/yasna/y0to8s.htm
  3. ^ http://www.avesta.org/yasna/y0to8s.htm
  4. ^ http://www.avesta.org/yasna/y0to8s.htm
  5. ^ http://www.avesta.org/ka/niyayesh.htm
  6. ^ http://www.avesta.org/ka/niyayesh.htm
  7. ^ http://www.avesta.org/ka/niyayesh.htm
  8. ^ http://www.avesta.org/ka/niyayesh.htm
  9. ^ Boyce 2001, p. 243, n.18.
  10. ^ Sundermann, Werner (1979). "The Five Sons of the Manichaean God Mithra". in Bianchi, Ugo. Mysteria Mithrae: Proceedings of the International Seminar on the Religio-Historical Character of Roman Mithraism. Leiden: Brill. 
  11. ^ Boyce, Mary. (1962) On Mithra in the Manichaean Pantheon. In Henning, Walter B. and Yarshater, Ehsan (eds.). A Locust's Leg: Studies in Honour of S. H. Taqizadeh. London. 
  12. ^ Sundermann, Werner (2002). "Mithra in Manicheism". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Costa Mesa: Mazda Pub. 

Bibliography


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Copyrights:

World Mythology Dictionary. A Dictionary of World Mythology. Copyright © Arthur Cotterell 1979, 1986, 2003. All rights reserved.  Read more
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Asian Mythology. A Dictionary of Asian Mythology. Copyright © 2001, 2002 by David Leeming. All rights reserved.  Read more
Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
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