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Dropping Ecstasy? Minoan Cult and the Tropes of Shamanism

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Cult scenes illustrated in miniature on administrative stone seals and metal signet rings from Late Bronze Age Minoan Crete are commonly interpreted as “Epiphany Scenes” and have been called “shamanic”. “Universal shamanism” is a catch-all anthropological term coined to describe certain inferred ritual behaviors across widely dispersed cultures and through time. This study re-examines evidence for Minoan cultic practices in light of key tropes of “universal shamanism”, including consumption of psychoactive drugs, adoption of special body postures, trance, spirit possession, communication with supernatural beings, metamorphosis, and the journey to other-worlds. It is argued that while existing characterizations of Minoan cult as “shamanic” are based on partial, reductionist and primitivist assumptions informed by neo-evolutionary comparative ethnologies, shamanism provides a dynamic framework for expanding understandings of Minoan cult. It is of course understood that while this study is a careful, informed analysis of the evidence, it is but one interpretation among others.
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Dropping Ecstasy? Minoan Cult and the
Tropes of Shamanism
Caroline J. Tullya & Sam Crooksb
a School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, Faculty of Arts,
University of Melbourne, Parkville, Vic. 3010, Australia
b Department of Archaeology and History, School of Humanities
and Social Sciences, College of Arts, Social Sciences and
Commerce, La Trobe University, Bundoora, 3086, Australia
Published online: 08 Apr 2015.
To cite this article: Caroline J. Tully & Sam Crooks (2015) Dropping Ecstasy? Minoan Cult and the
Tropes of Shamanism, Time and Mind: The Journal of Archaeology, Consciousness and Culture, 8:2,
129-158, DOI: 10.1080/1751696X.2015.1026029
To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1751696X.2015.1026029
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Dropping Ecstasy? Minoan Cult
and the Tropes of Shamanism
Caroline J. Tully
a
*and Sam Crooks
b
a
School of Historical and Philosophical Studies, Faculty of Arts,
University of Melbourne, Parkville, Vic. 3010, Australia;
b
Department
of Archaeology and History, School of Humanities and Social
Sciences, College of Arts, Social Sciences and Commerce, La Trobe
University, Bundoora, 3086, Australia
(Received 23 November 2014; accepted 18 February 2015)
Cult scenes illustrated in miniature on administrative stone seals and
metal signet rings from Late Bronze Age Minoan Crete are commonly
interpreted as Epiphany Scenesand have been called shamanic.
Universal shamanismis a catch-all anthropological term coined to
describe certain inferred ritual behaviors across widely dispersed
cultures and through time. This study re-examines evidence for
Minoan cultic practices in light of key tropes of universal shaman-
ism, including consumption of psychoactive drugs, adoption of spe-
cial body postures, trance, spirit possession, communication with
supernatural beings, metamorphosis, and the journey to other-worlds.
It is argued that while existing characterizations of Minoan cult as
shamanicare based on partial, reductionist and primitivist assump-
tions informed by neo-evolutionary comparative ethnologies, shaman-
ism provides a dynamic framework for expanding understandings of
Minoan cult. It is of course understood that while this study is a
careful, informed analysis of the evidence, it is but one interpretation
among others.
Keywords: Minoan; glyptic; shamanism; epiphany; cult
*Corresponding author. Email: carolinejtully@gmail.com
Time & Mind, 2015
Vol. 8, No. 2, 129158, http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1751696X.2015.1026029
© 2015 Taylor & Francis
Downloaded by [101.176.83.200] at 01:30 25 July 2015
Introduction
Enigmatic images interpreted as cult scenes
depicted in the miniature art of stone seals
and metal signet rings have led scholars to
describe the religion of Late Bronze Age
Minoan Crete as ecstatic. Said to involve
the consumption of psychoactive sub-
stances, spirit possession, and visionary
trance states, Minoan religion has also been
identified as shamanic(Evans 1930,315;
Morris and Peatfield 2002,2004; Morris
2004; Peatfield and Morris 2012). The
word shamanderives from the Siberian
Tungusic (Evenki) term šaman;asanoun
denoting one who is excited, moved,
raisedand as a verb to know in an ecstatic
manner(Jolly 2005,127;Znamenski2007;
viii). First recorded in 1672, by the late eight-
eenth century shamanwas used to
describe a Siberian religious specialist who
undertook to heal or harm other humans
through a dramatic public performance. In
contrast the term shamanism,ascholarly
construct, describes religious phenomena
observed across the world which appear
similar to the Siberian prototype. There is
no consensus on the definition of the term
(Hutton 2001;vii;Vitebsky2001,161;Jones
2006).
1
Generally however, a shamanis
said to be a specialist practitioner who inter-
cedes with the non-human otherworld
on behalf of a human community in order
to moderate relationships between that
community and other-than-human beings
(Harvey 2010, 30). The shaman achieves
this through a combination of public perfor-
mance and the altering of their own state of
consciousness. While performative aspects
of shamanism appear cross-culturally, the
interior psychological states of shamans
may vary. Said to interact with an attendant
group of spirits, shamans may be possessed
by or in dialogue with these spirits, or travel
out of their body to meet them (Hutton
2001,65).
2
Already in the early twentieth century
Arnold van Gennep (1903) warned that
shamanismwas an imprecise term as it
gave the impression that it signified a type of
religion when in fact it refers to a technique
(Bowie 2001, 191). In the mid-twentieth
century Mircea Eliade expanded the term
to include all non-Western and pre-
Christian European spiritualities in which
practitioners underwent altered states of
consciousness (Eliade 1989;Znamenski
2009, 197). Viewed as a primordial religion
characterized by ecstaticstates, scholar-
ship on shamanism influenced by Eliade
tends to focus on the interior state of the
shaman, and to use the term shamanism
as a synonym for altered states of conscious-
ness (Atkinson 1992, 310). Academic disci-
plines including religious studies, psychology
and archaeology, as well as popular self-
actualization and New Age literature, typi-
cally apply the term shamanin Eliades
transcultural, impressionisticmanner,
while anthropological ethnographies focus
upon single cultural traditions. The latter
argue that the psychological component of
shamanism is not its defining feature and
that it should not be defined in isolation
from the individual cultural system within
which it is situated (Znamenski 2009,200;
Atkinson 1992,308).
There are, however, certain tropes of
shamanism that have been observed across
widely dispersed cultures and through time,
leading to the inference of so-called uni-
versal shamanism, a term positing set
tropes or behavioral correlates which may
be interpreted as shamanicsuch as the
public performance of ecstatic states, spirit
communication and shamanic ascent or
flight (Atkinson 1992, 308; Díaz-Andreu
2001, 125; Walter and Fridman 2004;
Znamenski 2009, 190191). These com-
monalities are explained in terms of uni-
versal human proclivities; behaviors that
130 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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can be exhibited by all humans with nor-
mally functioning nervous systems from all
known societies and which derive from the
shared characteristics of the human brain
(DAquili and Newberg 1998; Winkelman
2004; Watson 2009,1213).
3
Generalizing
theories of shamanism necessarily impose
delimiting parameters around this dynamic
and ambiguous phenomenon, drawing in
diverse practices from temporally and geo-
graphically disparate contexts. It is not the
project of the present study to critique this
already much discussedterm, but rather, to
reassess the material evidence from a spe-
cifically Bronze Age Aegean context, not as
shamanism, but in light of shamanistic
practices.
This study argues that the religion of
Late Bronze Age Minoan Crete exhibits
characteristics which may be termed shama-
nistic. Key shamanic behaviors including
use of psychotropic drugs, body postures,
ecstatic trance, dialogue with spirits, spirit
possession, therianthropic metamorphosis,
communication with ancestors, and other-
world journeying within a tripartite model of
the cosmos will be analyzed. Pieter Jolly
(2005, 127) characterizes shamanic cultures
as possessing religious functionaries who
draw on the powers in the natural world,
including the powers of animals, and who
mediate, usually in an altered state of con-
sciousness, between the world of the living
and that of the spirits including the spirits
of the dead. Evidence for such practices,
drawn from both artwork and the archae-
ological remains of cult sites, suggests that
the cult practices of Late Bronze Age Crete
may be understood in this light.
4
Rather than
claiming that practitioners of Minoan religion
were shamanshowever, the description
shamanisticwill here serve to describe
those aspects of Minoan religion that appear
to conform with practices classified under
the rubric of universal shamanism.
Minoan Crete
Discovered at the beginning of the
twentieth century by Sir Arthur Evans,
Minoan civilization was named after the
mythical King Minos, and initially inter-
preted with reference to the well-
known Classical mythological tales of
Pasiphae and the Bull, Ariadne and
Theseus, and the latters killing of the
Minotaur in the Labyrinth (Morford and
Lenardon 1985). Ubiquitous bull ima-
gery from the palatial site of Knossos
and the palaceslabyrinthinearchitec-
ture appeared to confirm the myth
butwhatofthereality?Crete,thelar-
gest of the Greek islands, is located in
the Mediterranean on the ancient sea
routes between Europe, Asia and
Africa, a position contributing to its
important role in the network of trade
and transmission of culture throughout
the ancient world (Cline 1994). First
inhabited in the Neolithic period
(ca.70003500 BC), small hamlets and
villages remained the dominant feature
of Crete until the end of the Early
BronzeAge(theEarlyMinoanIII
ca.22002100/50 BC). From the
MiddleBronzeAgeonwardsamore
complex society emerged which culmi-
nated in the appearance of the first
palaces, termed the Protopalatial period
(Middle Minoan IBIIIA-B ca.19251750
BC). Destruction of the palaces, prob-
ably by an earthquake, and their subse-
quent rebuilding marked the beginning
of the Neopalatial period (Late Minoan
IA) around 1700 BC. The Minoan
palaces formed the center of adminis-
tration, storage, religion and trade until
their destruction by the Mycenaeans in
the Final Palatial period (Late Minoan
IBII) ca.14701420 BC, with Knossos
itself finally destroyed around 1350 BC
(Tomkins 2010; Manning 2010).
Time & Mind 131
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The Neopalatial period is characterized
by the rebuilding on a more monumental
scale of palatial structures destroyed in the
preceding Middle Minoan II period.
Increased unification across the island is
centered on the palace of Knossos and
management of agricultural production,
surplus storage, trade in commodities, and
the expansion of Minoan cultural influence
within the Cycladic islands are evident
(Driessen, Schoep, and Laffineur 2002;
Rehak and Younger 2001). During this
period Minoan palatial control was exerted
through a system of regional administrative
villas and religious sites such as cave and
peak sanctuaries. One of the most charac-
teristic material signatures of the palatial
administrative system is the seal. Seals,
also known as glyptics, were used to secure
and identify property, to designate owner-
ship, and as a symbol of office or authority
(Boardman 2001, 13; Krzyszkowska 2005,
21), their ubiquitous presence in Minoan
Crete reflecting a sophisticated and orga-
nized bureaucracy concerned with trade
and the exchange of commodities, the
accumulation of property and the
hierarchical exercise of authority
(Weingarten 1986).
Seals and Minoan Religion
Glyptic art is the most extensive body of
Aegean Bronze Age representational art
and consists of carved seals in the form
of seal stones, engraved metal signet rings
and the clay impressions (sealings) that
the seals are used to produce. Seal ico-
nography was carved directly onto stone
or the large, flat bezels of gold, silver, or
bronze rings (Boardman 2001, 13;
Krzyszkowska 2005,1215). Usually
under 3 cm in size, the primary purpose
of seals was the identification of their
owner, however, because of their dec-
orative aspects, they also functioned as
jewelry. Stone seals could be worn on
the body as bracelets, necklaces,
pendants, or pins (Weingarten 2010,
317). The small hoops of the metal seal
rings suggest that they may have
belonged to people with very small fin-
gers perhaps young women and/or
children or been strung upon necklaces
rather than worn upon fingers. When
found in intact tombs, they usually lie
next to the left wrist as if worn on a
bracelet, or on the chest as if suspended
from a necklace; however, they have also
been found in proximity to hands, sug-
gesting they may also have been worn
upon fingers (Müller 2005, 171;
Dimopoulou and Rethemiotakis 2000,
43; Krzyszkowska 2005, 21; Rehak and
Younger 2008, 159; Popham, Catling,
and Catling 1974, 223).
5
While approximately 11,000 seals
and sealings are known from the
Aegean Bronze Age,
6
the number depict-
ing human forms is comparatively small.
In the Neopalatial period human figures
occur on about 10% of seal-types
(Krzyszkowska 2005, 137). The most
complex and spectacular figurative scenes
are engraved on the metal signet rings
and are thought to depict human and
divine figures engaging in cultic activities
(Younger 1988,x; Boardman 2001, 16;
Krzyszkowska 2005, 127, 137). Clay seal-
ings attest the existence of at least 334
different signet rings; however, only 102
of these have thus far been recovered
archaeologically. As well as depicting cult
activities the engraved bezels portray
hunting, fighting, chariot driving, and bull
leaping scenes (Weingarten 2010, 322).
In the absence of deciphered texts from
Minoan Crete, glyptic iconography is the
132 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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richest and most diverse category of evi-
dence relied upon in the interpretation of
Minoan cult.
Previous Research
Early scholarship claimed that Minoan
cult involved spirit possession achieved
through consumption of psychotropic
substances. At the beginning of the twen-
tieth century Arthur Evans, excavator of
the palatial site of Knossos on Crete,
described Minoan religion as primitive,
distinguished by aniconic cult objects
deriving directly from the landscape
such as trees and stones which, according
to his evolutionary schema, preceded
more sophisticated anthropomorphic
sculpture (Evans 1901; Mettinger 1995;
Gaifman 2012). Influenced by Tylorian
animism, which posited that early reli-
gions were characterized by belief in the
animate quality of natural phenomena, as
well as James G. Frazer who argued for
the universality of spirit possession, Evans
proposed that the trees and stones of
Minoan cult could be temporarily inhab-
ited, or possessed, by supernatural beings
such as spirits or deities. Ritual interaction
with these possessed trees and stones
subsequently lead to the possession of
human participants (Evans 1901; Tylor
1871; Frazer 1890).
Evans proposed that Minoan posses-
sion involved the descent of a deity in the
form of a bird onto a tree or stone,
thereafter possessing a nearby human
cult practitioner. Because trees are living
things they were thought to function as
the permanent abodes of spirits and
could act as conduits between humans
and the supernatural. Stones, however,
required human intervention through
ritual to invoke their inhabitation by spir-
its (Crooks 2013). Evans (1901, 124) saw
this theory illustrated in a gold ring from
Knossos (Figures 1 and 2) which he
described as depicting an armed God
descending in front of his sacred obe-
lisk, before which the votary stands in the
attitude of sacred adoration, this being
the artists attempt to express the spiri-
tual being, duly brought down by ritual
incantation, so as to temporarily possess
its stony resting place.
Evans later proposed that dancing,
chanting and consumption of psychoac-
tive substances were additional methods
Figure 1. Gold ring from Knossos, Crete. (AM1938.1127. CMS VI.2 No. 281 [CMS])
Time & Mind 133
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through which Minoans achieved ritual
possession, suggesting that the Minoan
practice was analogous to Saami shaman-
ism (Evans 1930, 315).
7
The Sacred
Grove and Dance fresco from Knossos
depicts female figures engaging in what
Evans described as an orgiastic dance
accompanied by incantatory chanting,
while the scene depicted on a gold ring
from Vapheio (Figure 3) illustrates a
female dancing while a male figure pulls
on a tree, thought by Evans to depict the
ritual harvesting of psychoactive fruit
(Evans 1930, 68, 142). Influenced by
comparative mythology stemming from
Indo-European studies, Evans suggested
that this fruit was the source of the
juice like the Soma of the Vedas,
that supplies the religious frenzy, and at
the same time implies a communion with
the divinity inherent in the tree …” In
Evansframework the female figure is
thrown into an ecstatic frenzy by the
juice of the sacred fruit [and] falls
entranced on the shield of her male con-
sort(Evans 1930, 142; Ackerman 1991;
Wasson 1967).
8
Evans identifies further
evidence for the use of psychoactive sub-
stances in a scene depicted on the Tiryns
Ring (Figure 4), which he interprets as a
group ritual in which a chalice containing
the juice of a sacred tree was shared by
Figure 3. Gold ring from Vapheio, Greece. (CMS I No. 219. [CMS])
Figure 2. Gold ring from Knossos, Crete. (CMS VI.2 No. 281 [CMS])
134 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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all participants (Evans 1936, 392). A
female figure depicted on a Mycenaean
ring (Figure 5), in which a male figure
pulls upon a tree, is described by Evans
as waiting for the fruit that shall inspire
her ecstatic trances(Evans 1936, 177).
However, Evans is unclear regarding
what this trance-inducing substance actu-
ally was. Evans was incorrect in identifying
clusters of grapes on the Mycenae
Acropolis Ring (Figure 6), from which he
inferred consumption of wine, as the plant
in question is in fact a tree laden
with fruit (Evans 1936,394395; Tully,
forthcoming). Evans further identifies fig,
pine, cypress, and plane trees depicted in
Minoan glyptic art, none of which has psy-
choactive properties, while grape vines
never appear in cult scenes (Evans 1901,
101).
9
As a result of Evansanalysis how-
ever, terms such as possession,ecstatic
trance,andorgiastic frenzybecame pre-
valent in the discussion of Minoan religion,
and in combination with putative psy-
choactive drug use, suggested that Minoan
religion was characterized by complete loss
of control (Nilsson 1950, 275; Warren
1981,1990; Niemeier 1989; Cain 2001).
More recently, Christine Morris and
Alan Peatfield have refigured scenes said
to depict possessionas altered states
of consciousness”–non-ordinary bodily
Figure 4. Gold ring from Tiryns, Greece. (CMS I No. 179 [CMS])
Figure 5. Gold ring from Mycenae, Greece. (CMS I No. 126 [CMS])
Time & Mind 135
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states in which sensations, perceptions,
cognition and emotions are modified,
not necessarily distinguished by a loss of
control (Morris and Peatfield 2004, 39).
10
Rather than being possessed by a being
originating in a location external to the
ritual participant, and aided in this venture
by the ingestion of psychotropic sub-
stances, Morris and Peatfield (2004) pro-
pose that Minoan spirits or deities are
experienced whilst in a trance state facili-
tated by particular bodily postures per-
formed by the ritual participant.
Approaching Minoan religion from the
perspective of embodiment, their analysis
relies on the concept of mind-body
synthesis, exemplified in shamanic prac-
tice. According to this model physical
action can affect emotional and psycho-
logical states and therefore be used to
access altered states of consciousness. In
this analysis of Minoan religion the mind-
body connection functions as both the
method and the vehicle through which
communication with the otherworld is
achieved, shamanic activity apparently
overcoming the modern distinction
between body and mind (Morris and
Peatfield 2004; Huskinson and Schmidt
2010, 14).
Morris and Peatfield suggest that
ecstatic states can be achieved through
fasting, sensory deprivation or concentra-
tion, sound, rhythmic movement, and phy-
sical gestures. They claim that rather than
being possessed, shamans are in fact
entranced, theorizing that trance states
have a neurological basis and are accessi-
ble to all humans with normally function-
ing nervous systems (Morris and Peatfield
2004,3637, 40). Minoan glyptic art and
figurines from peak, rural and cave sanctu-
aries evince a formalized, repeated reper-
toire of physical gestures. Held for
extended periods of time, these gestures
are thought to represent one method for
achieving the trance state (Morris and
Peatfield 2002,2004; Morris 2004;
Peatfield and Morris 2012).
11
This idea is
based on anthropologist Felicitas
Goodmans(1986,1988,1990)experi-
ments with various restrictive body pos-
tures derived from ethnographic examples
of shamanistic rituals which, in
Figure 6. Gold ring from Mycenae Acropolis, Greece. (CMS I No. 17 [CMS])
136 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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combination with sonic driving(the
repetitive application of sound), produced
altered states of consciousness.
Psychoactive Drugs
Both Evanstheory of drug-induced
trance and Morris and Peatfields hypoth-
esis of trance naturally induced through
the adoption of certain body postures
may be correct. While there is no evi-
dence that the classic hallucinogens asso-
ciated with shamanic trance such as the
fly agaric and psilocybin mushrooms, the
peyote cactus, ergot, henbane, or datura
grew in Bronze Age Crete (Helvenston
and Bahn 2005),
12
evidence suggests that
the Minoans did have access to both
opium and alcohol. A small limestone
half capital from the Palace at Knossos,
dating to the Late Minoan I period
(17001580 BC) may be the earliest
representation of a poppy capsule in the
Aegean world (Merrillees 1999).
13
The
poppy goddess from the Late Minoan
sanctuary at Gazi wears a headdress
decorated with incised poppy capsules,
and a clay cylinder found in its vicinity
has been interpreted as a tool with
which to smoke opium (Marinatos
1937, 287). Globular rhyta with painted
scars from Mycenaean Mochlos evoke
the scored poppy pods from which
opium could be harvested (Nicgorski
1999). In addition, a Minoan-style gold
ring from Mycenae (Figure 6) depicts a
female figure holding a bunch of opium
poppies, gold and rock crystal dress pins
in the shape of poppy pods were also
found at Mycenae, and there is archae-
obotanical evidence for opium at Tiryns
(Collard 2008, 59; Kroll 1982; Arnott
2005). Opium consumption may have
triggered an altered state of conscious-
ness characterized by euphoria and visual
hallucinations (Yaniv 2006, 28; Collard
2008,6061). Evidence for alcohol con-
sumption in conjunction with ritual has
been found in caves in Crete (Tyree
2001, 45) and may have functioned to
produce the frenziedeffect proposed
by Evans. Alcohol functions differently to
opium, suppressing inhibition and facilitat-
ing commensality rather than individual
reverie (Jay 2010, 81). It could also be
used as a carrierto which other sub-
stances may be added, and may have
been used in this way as a substitute for
opium, itself perhaps the singular pro-
vince of a select category of cult practi-
tioner (Hoffman and Ruck 2004, 115).
Body Postures
Altered states of consciousness can, on
the other hand, be achieved through
mental and physical activity without
recourse to drugs, as Morris and
Peatfield propose and as Yogic practi-
tioners over the centuries would attest
(Wilson 2004, 88). Morris and Peatfields
(2004) theory that the Minoans used
body postures to trigger visionary states
relies on ethnographic comparanda and
remains hypothetical as no formal
physical experiments testing their claims
have been published. In 2005 Erin
McGowan applied a modified form of
Goodmans experimental techniques to
test whether Minoan ritual gestures can
induce altered states of consciousness
(McGowan 2006). The experiment was
conducted within a darkened room
approximating a cave-like environment
in conjunction with sonic driving through
shaking a sistrum. Each of the adopted
gestures resulted in participants experien-
cing altered states of consciousness of
varying visual and aural complexity.
Morris and Peatfield, in conjunction with
Time & Mind 137
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contemporary shamanic practitioner
Robinette Kennedy, a student of Felicitas
Goodman, have since undertaken physi-
cal experiments with Minoan postures
and sonic driving, including at the
Minoan peak sanctuary of Atsipadhes on
Crete, reporting multisensory effects
involving visions and sensations of bodily
transformation (Kennedy 2011; Peatfield
and Morris 2012).
14
While such experi-
ments expand the range of interpretive
possibility, they are delimited by our own
frame of reference and cannot definitively
replicate Minoan practice.
Gold Rings
Scenes depicted upon gold signet rings
appear to illustrate ecstatic trance,
dialogue with spirits, and possession,
and are traditionally interpreted as
Epiphany Scenes.Epiphanyis a cate-
gory of religious experience well known
within the study of Minoan religion. First
identified by Martin Nilsson in the late
1920s, and elaborated upon 30 years
later by Friedrich Matz, Minoan epiphany
was further defined in the mid-1980s by
Robin Hägg as occurring in two different
forms: envisioned and enacted epiphany.
Hägg (1983, 184185) explains
envisioned epiphany as a vision seen by
an individual or group of worshippers
either spontaneously or through cult
practices. Recently it has been suggested
that, rather than depicting visions, such
images represent subjective feeling
states (Morris 2004; McGowan 2006).
Such a state may be further emphasized
by the depiction of figures with
aniconicheads (Figures 3,7,8,26)
possibly signifying the shamanic shift of
selfinvolved in a trance state (Morris
and Peatfield 2002, 114; Kyriakidis
2004). Envisioned epiphanic images
appear as small hovering objects, birds,
animals, and human figures, while in
scenes of enacted epiphany the role of
a deity appearing before worshippers is
performed by a human substitute who
acts as the personification of the deity.
15
In the apparent absence of cult images,
envisioned and enacted epiphany are
thought to be the methods by which
the Minoans interacted with the divine
in ritual.
Figure 7. Gold ring from Isopata, Crete. (CMS II.3 No. 51 [CMS])
138 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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Ecstatic Trance
Envisioned epiphany, in which human fig-
ures perceive hovering objects, may be
explained as entoptic phenomena.
16
Entoptic phenomena are produced by
the human optic system, and include a
range of luminous images independently
of any external light source, including
incandescent, shimmering, moving, and
rotating forms such as grids, zigzags,
lines, dots, spirals, and curves. Entoptic
phenomena can be induced by psychoac-
tive drugs, fatigue, sensory deprivation,
intense concentration, sonic driving,
hyperventilation, and rhythmic move-
ment, as well as migraine and schizophre-
nia. Entoptic phenomena can be divided
into phosphenes which derive from
within the eye, and form constants
which originate beyond the eyeball but
within the optic system. They are distin-
guished from hallucinations, which derive
from the brain, but the two can occur
concurrently (Lewis-Williams and
Dowson 1988, 202203). Entoptic phe-
nomena are interpreted according to cul-
tural expectations which may explain
why some of the Minoan examples
resemble recognizable objects from else-
where in the Minoan cultural vocabulary
including Cretan script signs, cult stands,
double axes, rhyta, and bucrania (Lewis-
Williams and Dowson 1988; Kyriakidis
2005)(Figures 3,5,7,8,9,13,14).
Dialogue with Spirits
Entoptic phenomena can appear in
diverse forms including animals, people,
and monsters (Lewis-Williams and
Dowson 1988, 202203). Minoan glyp-
tic provides examples of hovering
insects, birds, and human figures. Birds
and insects are naturally flying creatures;
however, the insects in question are
often depicted in unnaturally oversize
scale (Kyriakidis 2005, 147) (Figures 9,
10,13,25,27,28,29). While the hover-
ing human figures can be female or
male, and wear the same flounced skirts
and kilts typical of the other figures in
these scenes, they appear comparatively
small in size, and are always facing or in
proximity to the full-size human figures
(Figures 1,2,6,7,11). Hovering anthro-
pomorphs never appear alone in an epi-
phanic scene. Minoan glyptic art is
usually interpreted in two dimensions,
however it has been claimed that the
small-sized, hovering anthropomorphs
should be interpreted from a three-
dimensional depth perspective, and that
Figure 8. Gold ring from Mochlos, Crete. (CMS II.3 No. 252 [CMS])
Time & Mind 139
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they only appear to be small because
they are in fact far distant in the back
of the field. However, many examples
have downward-pointing feet suggesting
that they are not standing upon the
ground, while some have long hair
which curves upwards as though they
are descending through the air. The fig-
ures may represent ancestors, numina,
spirits, or deities. These images then
may be interpreted as scenes of immi-
nent enstasy the arrival of spirits for
the purpose of interaction with a human
being (Huskinson and Schmidt 2010, 7).
An ear and an eye depicted on the
Ashmolean Ring (Figure 11) suggest
that the anthropomorphic figures, crea-
tures and objects of envisioned epiphany
may have been both seen and heard. If
depicting an act of communication
between a human figure and a spirit
being, it is likely that such images repre-
sent the subjective state of the human
practitioner rather than a performance
for an audience.
Possession
While images of envisioned epiphany
can be interpreted as depicting the
ecstatic trance state and the enstatic
dialogue with spirits, scenes of enacted
Figure 10. Clay sealing from Zakros, Crete. (HM 1154. CMS II.7 No. 6 [CMS])
Figure 9. Gold ring from Sellopoulo, Crete. (HM 1034 [Marinatos])
140 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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epiphany may represent states of pos-
session in which the supernatural being
has entered into the body of the human
figure. Enacted epiphany is primarily,
though not exclusively, performed by
female figures. Most examples depict a
seated female figure, a position of
authority in Minoan figurative art
(Rehak 1995),
17
but standing male and
female figures do also occur (Figures 3,
4,5,6,7,8,11,12,13,14,24). The
seated figures appear calm and still,
while the standing figures appear more
kinetic; some may be dancing. While the
envisioned epiphanic deity may only be
seen or sensed by one person, the
enacted epiphanic figure is meant to be
seen. Rather than depicting the subjec-
tive state of an envisioned epiphany dur-
ing which the practitioner sees and
communicates with supernatural phe-
nomena, in scenes of enacted epiphany
the human figure communicates with
other humans as a representative of
the supernatural being. Possession
could thus function as a system of com-
munication in which elite figures mediate
between the numinous and mortal
worlds (Huskinson and Schmidt
2010,29).
Figure 11. Gold ring, unknown provenance. (AM 1919.59 CMS VI No. 278 [CMS])
Figure 12. Gold ring Thebes, Greece. (CMS V No. 199 [CMS])
Time & Mind 141
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Therianthropic Metamorphosis
While gold rings are a prestige artistic
medium, images engraved upon stone
seals may have represented shamanistic
activity undertaken by lesser elites.
Glyptic from Zakros depict composite
figures combining female anthropo-
morphs with parts of birds, goats, cows,
deer, lions, and trees (Figures 15,16,17,
18,19) and may have represented ima-
ginary creatures,monsters, and
demons(Hogarth 1902; Weingarten
2009). It has been suggested that the
artist responsible for these images may
have suffered from schizophrenia (Gill
1981,8586). The hybrid figures from
Zakros may reflect a spectrum of
human activity ranging from masked and
costumed performance, to the subjective
experience of therianthropic metamor-
phosis as part of a trance state
(Simandiraki-Grimshaw 2010, 94;
Krzyszkowska 2005, 152). Some images
depict the complete disintegration of
both the human and the animal and
may represent the liminal stage in the
process of transformation between
human and animal forms (Figure 19).
Like the enacted epiphany observed in
the scenes on gold rings then, these
images may once again depict the enact-
ment by humans of non-human beings, in
Figure 14. Gold ring, unknown provenance. (CMS XI No. 29 [CMS])
Figure 13. Gold ring from Archanes, Crete. (HM 989 [Marinatos])
142 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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these cases most commonly bird or ani-
mal in form. In contrast to the entoptic
phenomena characteristic of envisioned
epiphany however, these hybrid images
may portray the interior experience of an
intense trance state that could have been
Figure 15. Clay sealing from Zakros, Crete. (CMS II.7 No. 126 [CMS])
Figure 16. Clay sealing from Zakros, Crete. (CMS II.7 No. 145 b [CMS])
Time & Mind 143
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induced by any of the shamanistic meth-
ods already discussed.
Another type of typically Cretan ther-
ianthropic metamorphosis involves the
human-bull hybrid known from Greek
myth as the Minotaur. Half bull, half
man, glyptic images of Minotaurs date to
the Mycenaean period on Crete (1490
Figure 17. Clay sealing from Zakros, Crete. (CMS II.7 No. 177 [CMS])
Figure 18. Clay sealing from Zakros, Crete. (CMS II.7 No. 119 [CMS])
144 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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1300 BC) and may have been inspired by
the earlier Neopalatial images and
actual practice of bull leaping (Figures
20,21,22,23). Like scenes of bull leap-
ing, Minotaurs in glyptic art usually appear
in contorted poses signifying exaggerated
movement (Schlager 2008; Krzyszkowska
2005, 207; Simandiraki-Grimshaw 2010,
96). Minotaur imagery may be connected
with the mastery of animals. Successful
mastery over the bull, symbolized by
the perilous athleticism of bull leaping,
may have brought with it a symbolic
merging of bull leaper and powerful
male animal, appropriating qualities of
strength and virility amalgamated in
representations of the bull-man hybrid.
The later Greek myth of Theseus and
the Minotaur in the Labyrinth also incor-
porates shamanistic tropes including the
use of a rope or thread to symbolize a
spirit path, a symbolic katabasis or jour-
ney to an Underworld, and a bird
(crane) dance (Morford and Lenardon
1985, 413425).
The Labyrinth of Greek myth may
recall the multi-roomed Minoan palace at
Knossos, the killing of the Minotaur by
Theseus symbolizing Mycenaean domina-
tion of Crete during the Late Bronze Age.
Theseus was the son of Poseidon, a deity
worshipped by the Mycenaeans
(Weilhartner 2012). In the myth Theseus
triumphs over Zeusson, King Minos of
Crete, by killing the monsterwithin
Minospalace.
18
Both Poseidon and Zeus
were represented by bulls, the former
impregnating Minoswife Pasiphae by
proxy, perhaps symbolizing a human and
spirit-animal sexual alliance or a marriage
alliance between a Mycenaean wanax
(ruler) and the Minoan queen of Knossos.
Ioan Lewis (2003) defines shamans as peo-
ple who welcome possessionas an
aspect of sexual and/or marital relationship
with otherworld persons.
Figure 19. Clay sealing from Zakros, Crete. (CMS II.7 No. 170 [CMS])
Time & Mind 145
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Tripartite Cosmology
That the Minoans perceived a tripartite
vertical cosmology, characteristic of shama-
nic conceptions of the world (Eliade 1989,
259),
19
is suggested by the location of
Minoan cult sites upon mountain peaks, in
rural earthly domains, and within subterra-
nean caves. As mentioned above, gestures
represented in clay and bronze figurines
found at such sanctuaries may reflect phy-
sical techniques performed during ritual in
order to induce an altered state of con-
sciousness. Glyptic iconography depicts
cult activity thought to have taken place at
peak, rural, and cave sites (Figures 1,2,3,6,
7,9,14,25,26,27). Minoan architecture
references these natural locations, under-
scoring their importance. Tripartite shrines,
Figure 20. Gold ring, Knossos, Crete. (AM 2237. CMS VI.2 No. 336 [CMS])
Figure 21. Stone seal from Phaistos, Crete. (CMS III No. 363. [CMS])
146 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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stepped altars, and openwork platforms
may represent mountains in architectonic
form, the latter sometimes surmounted by
a female figure or a tree (Figures 12,13,
24), while Lustral Basins and Pillar Crypts
within palatial architecture may evoke
sacred caves (Preziosi and Hitchcock
1999; Hitchcock 2007; Crooks, Tully, and
Hitchcock Forthcoming).
Communication with Ancestors
Glyptic scenes in which human figures
kneel before and clasp large baetylic
stones (Figures 9,10,11,13,14,25,26,
27) may represent communication
between mortals and their ancestors
(Crooks 2013). Possession by ancestors,
deceased shamans, other dead humans
or animals is characteristic of shamanism
(Eliade 1989,8283, 339344; Hutton
2001, 40, 59, 7273, 116). Minoan bae-
tyls can have funerary associations and
may have acted as abodes for the dead.
In images featuring baetyls the human
figure either leans their head upon the
baetyl as though asleep (this pose has
also been interpreted as mourning:
Persson 1942, 88) or faces away from it
toward other full-sized human figures or
miniature hovering figures, creatures, or
objects. Images in which the human figure
presses their head against the baetyl
(Figure 26) may indicate verbal or silent
communication with the numen of the
stone, while those in which the human
figures look away suggest that the baetyl
itself is not the focus of the activity, but
rather that it is one part of a more ela-
borate ritual sequence. Evidence of food
and liquid offerings in the vicinity of actual
baetyls however may indicate that cultic
attention was directed toward the stone
itself (Crooks 2013). Enacted epiphanic
figures may represent ancestors or
chthonic deities, while swooping birds,
as Evans suggested, may signify a deity in
ornithomorphic form. Ritual activity
Figure 22. Stone seal from Chania, Crete. (CMS VS3 No.150 [CMS])
Time & Mind 147
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oriented around the stone may have
invoked the ancestors as intermediaries
between the human and superhuman
realms (Crooks 2012,2013,7,1519,
42, 58), or facilitated the possession of
the human participant by a deity or
ancestor, baetylic numina thus function-
ing to transform human actors into sites
of manifestation for otherworld beings
(Keller 2002).
Journey to the Otherworld
The traversal of cosmic realms sky,
earth, and underworld sometimes
through the conduit of a sacred tree, is
a common trope of shamanism (Eliade
1989, 259274). Trees, as well as
columns and pillars, feature prominently
in Minoan cultic iconography. Glyptic
imagery depicts human figures clasping
and apparently vigorously shaking trees
Figure 23. Stone seal from Chania, Crete. (CMS VS3 No.154 [CMS])
148 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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(Figures 3,5,13,27), and in two exam-
ples this occurs in proximity to a kneeling
human figure hugging a baetyl (Crooks
2013, 55). In each instance of tree-shak-
ing the legs of the figure are bent at the
knee, sometimes with one leg kicked
backwards, a posture suggestive of ener-
getic movement which has been inter-
preted as a frenzied state characteristic
of some forms of possession (Marinatos
2009; Tully, forthcoming). Tree shaking
may have been a technique through
which ritual practitioners travelled out of
their bodies in an ecstatic trance state in
order to interact with the other-than-
human beings located on other cosmic
planes (Huskinson and Schmidt 2010,7;
Walsh 2001, 33).
Sacred trees feature in many images of
Minoan ritual and were evidently an
Figure 24. Clay sealing from Chania, Crete. (CMS VSIA No. 176 [CMS])
Figure 25. Clay sealing from Ayia Triada, Crete. (CMS II.6 No. 4 [CMS])
Time & Mind 149
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important component of Minoan cult sites
(Tully 2012). The Ring of Nestor (Evans
1925,1930;Pini1998;Krzyszkowska2005,
334335; Marinatos and Jackson 2011)
(Figures 28,29) perhaps provides the
strongest evidence for the importance
ofthetreeinMinoancosmology.This
ring depicts a very large, centrally
positioned tree, its vertical trunk and hor-
izontal branches dividing the scene into a
quadripartite composition. The presence
of supernatural and powerful animals
including the Minoan Dragon, griffin,
lion, and bird-headed women and the
positioning of human figures sitting and
standing on the branches of the tree,
Figure 26. Stone seal from Knossos, Crete. (Str. Ex. No. 80/1229. [Warren, BSA])
Figure 27. Gold ring from Kalyvia, Crete. (CMS II.3 No. 114 [CMS])
150 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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suggest that this is not a realistic scene,
but rather a mythical or metaphysical
space. Evans (1930, 151) suggests that
we are here observing a depiction of the
Underworld, on the basis of two butter-
flies in the upper left of the scene which
he interprets as souls.Whetherthe
image depicts a celestial or chthonic loca-
tion, the presence of an enormous tree
structuring the scene suggests that the
Minoans may have conceptualized the
sacred tree as axis mundi, facilitating
mobility to otherworld locations through
ritual.
Conclusion
The evidence presented here has shown
that Late Bronze Age Minoan religion exhi-
bits characteristics that can be described as
shamanistic. Examination of behaviors classi-
fied under the rubric of universal shamanism,
including the consumption of psychoactive
drugs and the enactment of special physical
Figure 29. Gold ring, unknown provenance. (AM 1938.1130 CMS VI.2 No. 277 [CMS])
Figure 28. Gold ring, unknown provenance. (AM 1938.1130 CMS VI.2 No. 277 [CMS])
Time & Mind 151
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postures as methods for achieving trance,
confirms the utility of reconsidering Minoan
religion in light of shamanic tropes. The
further re-figuring of Minoan epiphany and
hybridity in light of shamanistic practices
such as ecstatic trance, dialogue with spirits,
possession, therianthropic transformation,
communication with the dead, and traversal
of other worlds, provides compelling evi-
denceforthepresenceofshamanisticele-
ments within Minoan cult activity. Further
research, particularly the archaeobotanical
analysis of psychoactive plants in Bronze
Age Crete, and the refinement of experi-
ments with Minoan postures, may shed
more light on this fertile area of inquiry.
Acknowledgments
The authors wish to thank Professor Robert
Arnott, Dr Paul Bahn, and Dr Sabine Beckman
for useful advice and references regarding psy-
choactive plants. Thanks also to Professor
Nanno Marinatos, Professor Peter Warren, and
the British School at Athens, and to Professor
Ingo Pini and Dr Maria Anastasiadou from the
Corpus der Minoischen und Mykenischen Siegel,
for permission to reproduce glyptic imagery.
Finally, our thanks to the anonymous reviewers
from Time & Mind.
Notes
1. Piers Vitebsky (2001,161)suggeststhat
the term shamanry, like wizardry,
couldbeusedfortheshamans activities,
shamanshipcould describe the sha-
mans professional quality, and the plural
shamanisms, be used because of the
lack of a unifying ideology.
2. Graham Harvey (2010, 31) questions
the focus upon the psychological state
of the shaman and the utility of the term
spirits, suggesting instead that shaman-
ism is characterized by relationality in
which a shaman negotiates communal
wellbeing between humans and other
life forms within their environment.
3. Watson (2009,1213) defines universals
as relatively stable human characteristic
of innate or hard wiredbiological struc-
ture, including species-typical architecture
of perceptual information-processing
mechanisms and other relevant aspects
of neuroanatomy.
4. Without recourse to historical sources,
the iconographic evidence from Minoan
Crete remains ambiguous. While the pre-
sent study seeks to expand our interpre-
tive range through analogy with
shamanism, the result remains but one
interpretation among many.
5. Popham (1974, 223) suggests that the rings
may have been worn between the first and
second knuckles of the finger, making them
easier to stamp impressions with.
6. The seals and sealings are published with
bibliography in the Corpus der minoischen
und mykenischen Siegel (CMS) series.
7. The Saami, whose traditional territory is
northern Scandinavia spanning modern-
day Norway, Sweden, Finland, and
Russia, practice a form of shamanism simi-
lar to the canonical Siberian type (Hutton
2001, 137).
8. It is generally agreed now that the object
on this shield is a sacral knot rather than a
mourning figure.
9. Evans did identify Crocus in the Knossos
Linear B tablets, a plant reputed to have
narcotic properties, see note 12; however,
did not suggest that it might be psychoac-
tive (Evans 1899).
10. Altered State of Consciousnessis
usually abbreviated to the acronym
ASCand, according to Atkinson (1992,
310), has been the buzz-word in interdis-
ciplinary studies on shamanism since the
early 1980s.
11. Loeta Tyree (2001,4142) endorses
Morris and Peatfieldsinterpretation of
Minoan gesture and Altered States of
Consciousness in regard to figurines, in
this case, from caves.
12. An African variant of the sea daffodil
(Pancratium Trianthum), a plant depicted in
Minoan fresco, glyptic and ceramic decora-
tion, is used as a psychoactive substance by
the Bushmen from Dobe, Botswana; how-
ever, the Aegean version (Pancratium
Maritimum) does not appear to have
such properties (El-Hadidy et al. 2012).
Saffron is another plant depicted in
152 C.J. Tully and S. Crooks
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Aegean art; the Cretan variety is Crocus
cartwrightianus. Safrol, the predominant
part in oil of saffron, deriving from Crocus
sativa was used as a medical narcotic in the
ancient Mediterranean (Emboden 1979,
49). Saffron may have been used medicin-
ally on Crete (Day 2011, 371). Henbane
(Hyoscyamus niger) is mentioned in the
Ebers Papyrus ca. 1500 BC (Helvenston
and Bahn 2005, 41). Sabine Beckman
(personal communication 19 October
2014) identifies two Cretan varieties of
henbane, Hyoscyamus albus and
Hyoscyamus aureus, and has observed
datura growing in Crete although it is
most probably a late import. However,
we do not know what level of alkaloids
the henbane varieties contain and
whether they were used in the Bronze
Age. Minoans may have been familiar
with mandrake (Mandragora officinarum),
thebluelotus(Nymphaea caerulea), and
hemp (Cannabis sativa), mild psychoactive
plants that grew in Egypt (Manniche 1989,
8889, 123, 132134). Beckman has sug-
gested that mandrake may be one of the
best candidates for a Minoan hallucinogen
(unpublished presentation given at the 9th
International Congress of Ethnobiology in
Canterbury, 2004). Another potential
candidate for a psychoactive plant possibly
used in Minoan Crete is ivy (Sherratt
2004, 330).
13. The most ancient evidence for opium
poppy use comes from the Mediterranean,
specifically Italy (Merlin 2003,302).
14. Contemporary Western shamanic practi-
tioners, also termed Neo-Shamans,
mainly derive their practice from anthro-
pologist-turned-shamanic-teacher, Michael
Harner, and his method of Core
Shamanismwhich teaches that anyone
can enter an altered state of conscious-
ness or trance and progress to activities
such as divination and healing (Harner
1980; Atkinson 1992; Wallis 1999).
Morris and Peatfield have apparently
been working with Kennedy on Minoan
gestures since 1998 (Kennedy 2011,20
21; Morris and Peatfield 2002, 116; 2004,
53), but only mention their own physical
experiments explicitly in Morris and
Peatfield 2012, 241.
15. Or is the human being playedby the
deity? Mary Keller (2002) suggests that
possessed humans are played like an
instrument by ancestors, deities, and
spirits.
16. Kyriakidis (2005) has suggested such float-
ing objects are astronomical constellations.
17. The rocks and constructed openwork plat-
forms that female figures sit upon may be
symbolic of mountains, further enhancing
the idea of authority (Crooks, Tully, and
Hitchcock Forthcoming). The Knossos
throne features a baetylicback that also
may evoke a mountain (Crooks 2013,53).
18. The Minotaur was also, technically, a son
of Poseidon. In the Skoteino cave near
Knossos rock protuberances are carved
to resemble monstrous animals. Paul
Faure interpreted this as the original
Labyrinth (Burkert 1979, 91).
19. While Siberian shamanism envisions a
three-layered cosmos, not all shamanic
conceptions of the world are tripartite
(Vitebsky 2001, 17).
Notes on Contributors
Caroline J. Tully (University of Melbourne) holds
qualifications in Classical Studies and
Archaeology from The University of
Melbourne, and in Fine Art from Monash
University. Her current research focuses on
Late Bronze and Early Iron Age cultic traditions
in the ancient Aegean, eastern Mediterranean,
and Egypt. Caroline also has a strong interest in
Reception Studies, particularly in regard to
Minoan and Egyptian religions.
Sam Crooks (La Trobe University) holds an
MA in Aegean Prehistory from The University
of Melbourne. He has published a monograph
on Minoan baetyl cult in the BAR International
Series and is an invited contributor to the
forthcoming Cambridge Dictionary of
Ancient Mediterranean Religions. His current
research focuses on value and identity in
Cyprus during the third millennium BC.
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... 14 The question of rulership often seems secondary to matters of religious structure, and scholarship frequently appears to assume that for the Aegean, as for its neighboring cultures, the two were intertwined. 15 Monotheistic (Peatfield 2000;Morris 2006), polytheistic (Marinatos 1993(Marinatos , 1996(Marinatos , 2010, shamanic (Tully and Crooks 2015;Crooks et al. 2016), and animist systems (Herva 2006;Tully and Crooks 2015;Wyatt 2008) have been proposed, sometimes as intentional, singular systems and sometimes as overlapping, interwoven ways of life. Some scholars advocate for a single and central Mother Goddess figure (Figure 4) due to the iconographic abundance of nature, (mortal?) human women, and floral imagery, together with the relatively infrequent depiction of male figures. ...
... 14 The question of rulership often seems secondary to matters of religious structure, and scholarship frequently appears to assume that for the Aegean, as for its neighboring cultures, the two were intertwined. 15 Monotheistic (Peatfield 2000;Morris 2006), polytheistic (Marinatos 1993(Marinatos , 1996(Marinatos , 2010, shamanic (Tully and Crooks 2015;Crooks et al. 2016), and animist systems (Herva 2006;Tully and Crooks 2015;Wyatt 2008) have been proposed, sometimes as intentional, singular systems and sometimes as overlapping, interwoven ways of life. Some scholars advocate for a single and central Mother Goddess figure (Figure 4) due to the iconographic abundance of nature, (mortal?) human women, and floral imagery, together with the relatively infrequent depiction of male figures. ...
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RESUMEN: El presente trabajo pretende construir, como hipótesis, que La Almoloya (Pliego, Murcia) pudo haber sido una ciudad sagrada de la Cultura de El Argar. Se ha elaborado esta hipótesis, principalmente, mediante el estudio comparativo entre dicho yacimiento y complejos palaciales del Egeo, así como con construcciones templarias o rituales de otros puntos de Próximo Oriente. Palabras clave: El Argar; La Almoloya; ciudad sagrada; edificios rituales; religión. ABSTRACT: The present paper aims to elabore the hypothesis that La Almoloya (Pliego, Murcia) could have been a sacred city of El Argar´s culture. This hypothesis has been elabored, mainly, through a comparative study between La Almoloya´s settlement and palacial complexes from the Aegean Sea, as well as templary or ritual buildings from other places sited at Near East. Key words: El Argar; La Almoloya; sacred city; ritual buildings; religion.
Article
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The Philistine culture (Iron Age, ca. 1200-604 BCE) profoundly impacted the southern Levant's cultural history, agronomy, and dietary customs. Nevertheless, our knowledge of the Philistines’ cultic praxis and deities, is limited and uncertain. Here, we combine archaeological data with a meticulous study of plant use at two successive temples at Tell eṣ-Ṣâfī/Gath. We provide a list of the plants used, their time of harvest, mode of offering, and possible symbolism. Analysis of the temples' macrobotanical (seed and fruits) plant assemblage reveals the offerings; that the inception date for rites was early spring; and sheds light on the date of the final utilization of the temples (late summer/early fall). Besides food crops, we note the earliest cultic use of chaste tree (Vitex agnus-castus), crown daisy (Glebionis coronaria), and scabious (Lomelosia argentea). These wide-spread Mediterranean plants were known so far only in later cults—of early Greek deities, such as Hera, Artemis, Demeter, and Asclepios. We discuss the data as reflecting that the Philistine religion relied on the magic and power of nature, such as fresh water and seasonality, which influence human life, health, and activity. In sum, our results offer novel insights into the culture of the Philistines.
Conference Paper
To hear (in Greek) more about the recent work from the Minoan-Style Peak Sanctuary at Stelida, Naxos, please click the link below. Our presentation begins from approximately 1.36. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a0zD3q6ZIz4
Chapter
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Previous work by the authors has argued for a shamanic element to Cretan Bronze Age religion. Late Minoan gold rings with engraved ritual scenes show clear affinities with imagery expressive of ecstatic religious experience in other ancient and traditional societies. We interpret the clay figurines from Minoan peak sanctuaries as similarly expressive of the participants’ spiritual experience, whereby the body was a medium to access altered states. The authors’ excavation of the western Cretan peak sanctuary of Atsipadhes Korakies is presented as a case study. Our work has been firmly located within current archaeological interest in the body, and in experiential and experimental methodologies. We also argue for the importance of a fully sensory archaeology, which engages with the dynamics of ritual and spirituality on these mountain shrines. In this chapter we explicitly address the issues raised by our own encounters and experimentation with shamanic practices in a Cretan context, particularly the apparent tension between objective and subjective analysis, and how that may be resolved.
Book
"An important book which deserves the careful attention of serious students of religion." -Religious Studies ReviewAnthropologist and spiritual explorer Felicitas Goodman offers a "unified field theory" of religion as human behavior. She examines ritual, the religious trance, alternate reality, ethics and moral code, and the named category designating religion.
Book
"The book is clearly written for the general reader and includes many descriptions of trance experiences. It may serve as a good introduction to the nature and appeal of the shamanic revival in modern Western cultures." -Theological Book Review"... a case study in experiential anthropology that offers a unique mix of autobiography, mythology, experiential research, and archaeological data to support a challenging thesis-that certain body postures may help induce specific trance states." -Shaman’s Drum"This is a spellbinding and exceptionally readable book by an extraordinary woman." -Yoga Journal"And suddenly the understanding of my own vision washed over me like a mighty wave... For life or for death, I was committed to that mighty realm of which I was shown a brief reminder, the world where all was forever motion and emergence, that realm where the spirits ride the wind." -from the PrologueGoodman reexamines our notions of the nature of reality by studying the ritual postures of native art assumed by her subjects during trance states. For readers desiring to discover this world of ancient myths, she has included a practical guide on how to achieve such ecstatic experiences.
Article
The so-called Nestor Ring was found in 1924 and was accepted as authentic by Sir Arthur Evans whereas many other scholars condemned it as a forgery. In recent years, scholars have claimed its authenticity anew. This article examines the background of the find circumstances and judges them suspicious. It also adds the criterion of semantic coherence in the debate and argues that the coherence depends on Egyptian prototypes and that the use of the butterfly motif argues against the artifact’s authenticity.
Article
Among the greater monuments or actual structural remains of the Mycenaean world hitherto made known, it is remarkable how little there is to be found having a clear and obvious relation to religious belief. The great wealth of many of the tombs, the rich contents of the pit-graves of Mycenae itself, the rock-cut chambers, the massive vaults of the bee-hive tombs, are all indeed so many evidences of a highly developed cult of departed Spirits. The pit-altar over grave IV. of the Akropolis area at Mycenae, and the somewhat similar erection found in the Court-yard of the Palace at Tiryns, take us a step further in this direction; but it. still remains possible that the second, like the first, may have been dedicated to the cult of the ancestors of the household, and it supplies in itself no conclusive evidences of a connexion with any higher form of worship.
Book
This work by Sir James Frazer (1854-1941) is widely considered to be one of the most important early texts in the fields of psychology and anthropology. At the same time, by applying modern methods of comparative ethnography to the classical world, and revealing the superstition and irrationality beneath the surface of classical culture, and also by examining Christianity using the same techniques, it was extremely controversial. Frazer was greatly influenced by E. B. Tylor's Primitive Culture (also reissued in this series), and by the work of the biblical scholar William Robertson Smith, to whom the first edition is dedicated. That edition, reissued here, was published in two volumes in 1890; the third edition, greatly enlarged to twelve volumes, and published between 1911 and 1915, is also available in this series. Volume 1 considers the motif of the ritual murder of the priest/king in classical mythology.