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  • Mithraic Mysteries and the Cult of Empire

    New American
    June 11 2010


    Mithraic Mysteries and the Cult of Empire

    Written by Charles Scaliger
    Friday, 11 June 2010 09:35

    The proud Roman general stood with his commanders and retinue as the
    wild hillsmen, dressed in the ragged but still-flamboyant clothes of
    corsairs, fell before him in turn, begging for clemency. It was about
    75 B.C. in the rugged hills near Coracesium in Cilicia, an untamed
    region along the coast of southwestern Asia Minor, and the Cilician
    pirates, possibly the most successful race of brigands the world has
    ever seen, were surrendering to the Roman general Pompey.

    Pompeius Magnus, as he was afterwards styled, would go on to conquer
    the Levant and to challenge Julius Caesar for supremacy over the
    fledgling Roman Empire, but his lightning-swift campaign against the
    Cilician pirates was perhaps his finest moment. The pirates, taking
    advantage of Roman naval weakness during a span of decades that saw
    Rome wracked by civil war, had controlled much of the Mediterranean,
    as far west as the Balearic Islands.* Now, thanks to Pompey's
    masterful combination of resolute military action and unconditional
    clemency for all pirates who surrendered to him in person, the
    once-feared Cilicians were admitted to the Roman Empire and given the
    opportunity to live respectable lives. Most, according to Plutarch's
    account of events, accepted Pompey's offer. They were resettled in
    various parts of the Roman dominion, bringing their families and
    possessions with them. They also, according to Plutarch, brought with
    them a peculiar system of religious beliefs and practices, one of the
    so-called `mystery cults' typical of the pre-Christian Mediterranean.

    The cult of the Mithras was doubtless regarded at first as just
    another Oriental import, a product of Mediterranean multi-culturalism.
    But it grew into the most formidable occult secret society in the
    ancient world, claiming emperors and legionaries alike in its
    membership. At the peak of its power and influence ' when it held
    hostage the very machinery of empire ' it threatened to fling the
    Roman world back to its pagan roots and to eradicate the young
    Christian faith.

    No one knows the precise origins of the cult devoted to the Persian
    deity Mithras, which came to be known as the Mithraic mysteries or
    Mithraism. Plutarch says only that the Cilician pirates `offered
    strange sacrifices upon Mount Olympus, and performed secret rites or
    religious mysteries, among which those of Mithras have been performed
    to our own time [i.e., the second century A.D., roughly two centuries
    after Pompey's time], having received their previous institution from
    them.' It is also possible that the mysteries of Mithras, like certain
    other mystery cults in Roman dominions, were popularized by the
    mysterious `Chaldeans,' itinerant sorcerers from the East who were
    periodically expelled from Roman territory for encouraging the
    formation of subversive cultic secret societies.

    >From Persian Antiquity
    The name of Mithras is the Latinized equivalent of Mithra, an
    important deity in Persian Zoroastrianism. This god was worshipped far
    back into remotest antiquity by the ancestors of the Persians and
    Indians alike (in the Vedic Hymns of ancient India, he is known as
    Mitra, `the friend'). To the Persians, he was the god of oaths and
    covenants, and was worshipped far and wide across central Asia and the
    Middle East, from Armenia to the empire of Kushan in modern-day
    Afghanistan.

    The mystery cult, meanwhile, was a distinctively Mediterranean form of
    religious worship, a cult within a cult, as it were, in which esoteric
    beliefs withheld from the general populace were taught and secret
    rites performed. Among the ancient Greeks, the mysteries of Eleusis or
    Demeter proved most enduringly popular, while in Egypt, the mysteries
    of Isis reigned supreme. On Asia Minor the mysteries of Cybele, a
    goddess popular with the Phrygians, flourished.

    One particular mystery cult ' that of Bacchus, the god of wine and
    revelry ' acquired a sinister reputation in Rome in the second century
    B.C. Introduced by a mysterious Greek immigrant, the cult of Bacchus
    allegedly practiced human sacrifices and all manner of debauchery at
    its secret nighttime orgies. And the cult sought not only to corrupt
    Roman morals but also to take control of Roman government. `Never,'
    said Spurius Postumius, the Roman consul who first exposed the cult of
    Bacchus before the Roman Senate in 186 B.C., `has there been so much
    wickedness in this commonwealth, never wickedness affecting so many
    people, nor manifesting itself in so many ways.... Their [the Bacchan
    votaries'] impious conspiracy still confines itself to private
    outrages, because it has not yet strength enough to overthrow the
    state. But the evil grows with every passing day.... It aims at the
    supreme power of the state.' Fortunately for Rome, the Senate heeded
    Postumius' warning and suppressed the cult of Bacchus. But the episode
    showed the potency of cultic secret societies, and their potential, at
    least in the ancient Mediterranean world, to unravel moral fabric and
    even threaten the integrity of the state.

    The mystery cult of Mithras appears to have been structurally a Roman
    innovation, using certain features of Persian religion and mythology
    for its own purposes. Unfortunately, we know little about its growth
    or operations until more than a century after Pompey. Not until the
    ascendancy of Nero does the name Mithra reappear in Rome.

    One of the accomplishments of Rome's evilest emperor was to bring the
    Armenian king Tiridates to Rome for his coronation. As Tiridates
    prostrated himself before the Roman emperor, he informed Nero that he
    would worship him as he worshipped the great god Mithra (in a stroke
    of historical irony, a later Armenian king of the same name, Tiridates
    the Great, converted to Christianity and was responsible for Armenia's
    becoming the first state to embrace the new religion). Nero in his
    turn is supposed to have expressed great interest in being inducted
    into the mysteries of Zoroastrianism by the magi who accompanied
    Tiridates to Rome. Whether the Armenian king was an adherent of the
    mystery cult per se, or whether Nero became himself a devotee, is
    impossible to prove. But the episode suggests that, at very minimum,
    the worship of Mithra was a familiar concept in Rome by the mid-first
    century A.D.

    What the archaeological record bears out is that Mithraism was
    becoming widespread in the Roman Empire by the end of the first
    century of our era. The earliest Mithraic temples, or mithraea, of
    which we have record date from roughly 90 to 110 A.D., in the German
    provinces. The mysteries of Mithras must have been well-established by
    that time in the Roman heartland, the Italian peninsula. By the middle
    of the second century, the cult had spread throughout Roman territory,
    from the Middle East to the British Isles, displaying a vitality that
    only the young Christian faith could match.

    Imperial Sponsors
    The cult of Mithras seems to have begun in the Roman military,
    eventually becoming a cult not only of Roman legionaries, but of
    merchants and government officials as well. Nero was the first Roman
    emperor whose name was associated with the god Mithras, but he was far
    from the last.

    The turning point for Mithraism, which apparently enjoyed at least a
    measure of tolerance from the Roman government from its inception, was
    the administration of the emperor Commodus, the bestial son of Marcus
    Aurelius, who reigned from 180 to 190 A.D. Commodus is remembered
    chiefly for his savagery and many perversions, exceptional even by the
    standards of Roman emperors. Possessed of none of the equanimity and
    wisdom of his father nor of the saintly virtues of his grandfather,
    the aptly named Pius Antoninus, Commodus managed to undo in a few
    short, blood-soaked years much of the progress logged by Roman
    civilization during the previous several generations of comparative
    peace and progress. He was also the first Roman emperor of record to
    have been a full-blown initiate into the mysteries of Mithras.
    Commodus, says Franz Cumont, a pioneer in modern Mithraic studies,
    `was admitted among their adepts and participated in their secret
    ceremonies, and the discovery of numerous votive inscriptions, either
    for the welfare of this prince or bearing the date of his reign, gives
    us some ink-ling of the impetus which this imperial conversion
    imparted to the Mithraic propaganda. After the last of the Antonine
    emperors had thus broken with the ancient prejudice, the protection of
    his successors appears to have been definitely assured to the new
    religion.'

    While we have no details of how Commodus' involvement in the secret
    cult may have influenced his policymaking, his association with
    Mithras set a disturbing precedent ' namely, that most emperors
    associated with the cult displayed more than ordinary levels of
    brutality and depravity, and a peculiar animus for Christianity.

    Of the beliefs and rituals of Mithraism, we know very little, despite
    the abundant archaeological evidence. Mithraism has left us no
    religious texts comparable to, say, the epistles of Paul, the Talmud,
    or the patristic writings. We do know that it was a secret religious
    society to which only men were admitted. According to St. Jerome,
    there were seven initiatory grades in Mithraism, beginning with Corax
    (raven). The others, from lowest to highest, were Nymphus
    (bridegroom), Miles (soldier), Leo (lion), Perses (Persian),
    Heliodromus (sun-runner), and Pater (father). Of these the first two
    appear to have been preparatory levels, and induction into the rank of
    Miles was the real starting point for progression within the Mithraic
    hierarchy.

    Mithraism had a belief system characterized by vivid myths and
    maddeningly obscure symbolism. A typical mithraeum, an underground
    house of worship used by devotees of Mithras, was constructed to
    resemble a world-cavern, a metaphor of the cosmos favored in the
    ancient Middle East. The dominant feature of every mithraeum was a
    depiction, usually carved in stone, of the central myth of Mithras:
    the tauroctony or slaying of the bull of heaven. Mithras is depicted
    as a youthful hero wearing a characteristic Phrygian cap, killing the
    bull with a dagger. Surrounding and harassing the hapless bull are a
    dog, scorpion, raven, and snake, while flanking the scene stand two
    other youths holding torches (dadophori), Cautes and Cautopates, of
    whom the latter holds his torch with the tip pointed earthward.

    Devilish Details
    The precise meaning of this remarkable tableau is still disputed;
    nowhere in the Persian Zoroastrian canon as we have received it is
    there any reference to Mithra slaying a bull. Cumont perceived in
    Cautes and Cautopates, with their opposing torches, an allusion to the
    radical dualism of the Zoroastrian faith, the notion that good and
    evil must be regarded as opposite and completely equal forces.

    In the vivid paintings on the walls of the well-preserved mithraeum at
    Dura-Europos in Syria, there are also images of Mithras as an
    equestrian hunter ' the famous `mighty hunter' motif associated with
    Mesopotamian monarchs and gods since time immemorial ' and of Mithras
    forging his pact with the sun god Sol, whence Mithras' most famous
    epithet, `Sol Invictus,' or `Unconquerable Sun.'

    The other characteristic piece of Mithraic iconography, the so-called
    leontocephalous or lion-headed deity entwined with serpents, is easier
    to interpret. This terrifying figure, displayed in many surviving
    mithraea, has been identified with the Greek Kronos and Egyptian Kore,
    the god of time, but in several mithraea, this idol is captioned `Deus
    Arimanius.' Arimanius is the Latin form of Persian Ahriman, meaning
    `evil spirit.' Ahriman was the Satan of Zoroastrianism, and his
    presence in Mithraic sancta speaks volumes about the real nature of
    this mystery cult. Moreover, in the traditional Zoroastrian religion,
    it is Ahriman ' not Mithra ' who, according to historian of religion
    Yuri Stoyanov, `brings death to the `Lone-Created' bull in the violent
    act of the first `creative murder' which sparked off the cycle of
    being and generation.' In Stoyanov's view:

    The Mithraic Deus Arimanius is thus taken to show that Roman Mithraism
    derived from pre-Zoroastrian and later forbidden daevic [i.e.,
    diabolical] forms of Mithra-worship which were associated with the
    dreaded `mystery of the sorcerers' and which were sustained in
    Mesopotamia and Asia Minor.

    Of the rites and observances of Mithraism we know comparatively
    little. From images in a Mithraic grotto at modern-day Capua, we learn
    that initiates were blindfolded and subjected to various severe trials
    by a mystagogus in a white tunic. It appears, from the testimony of
    Tertullian, that initiates underwent various purification ceremonies,
    swore oaths of secrecy, and received brands on the hands or forehead
    betokening their membership in the order. According to M. J.
    Vermaseren, `on several [ancient] portraits, even on portraits of
    emperors, these tattoo marks are clearly visible, but on the forehead,
    in place of the hands.'

    A much more abominable practice, human sacrifice, may have been
    associated with Mithraism as well, though few modern researchers,
    aside from the scrupulous Vermaseren, bother to acknowledge it. The
    Christian historian Socrates, in the fourth or fifth century, alleged
    that Greeks in Alexandria `killed men' while celebrating the
    mysteries, despite the fact that human sacrifice had been explicitly
    forbidden in Roman dominions since at least the time of Tiberius. At a
    mithraeum in Saarburg, the skeleton of a man between 30 and 40 years
    old was discovered lying face downwards with his wrists manacled
    behind his back with an iron chain ' very likely a Mithraic
    sacrificial victim. Human sacrifices to Mithras have also been
    ascribed ' although never proven ' to two Roman emperors and Mithras
    devotees, Commodus and Julian.

    Son of God vs. `Sun God'
    It appears that, from the time of Commodus onward, nearly every Roman
    emperor was associated with the cult of Mithras in some way. In the
    early third century, a shrine to Mithras was built on the grounds of
    the palace of the Augusti. Elagabalus, another exceptionally depraved
    ruler in the tradition of Nero and Commodus, replaced Jupiter with the
    Unconquerable Sun, Deus Sol Invictus, as the head of the Roman
    pantheon, while Aurelian instituted an imperial cult dedicated to the
    same god. Diocletian, Licinius, and Galerius dedicated a temple to
    Mithras in Carnuntum in 307 A.D.; it was Galerius, moreover, who
    instituted one of the greatest persecutions against the Christians,
    because of his well-documented zeal for pagan tradition and worship.
    Constantine the Great, too, was at least associated with the cult of
    the Unconquerable Sun/Mithras, though whether he was an initiate into
    the mysteries is unclear. Rome's last pagan emperor, Julian, was
    inducted into the mysteries of Mithras while yet in his teens by
    Maximus of Ephesus, and in his efforts to suppress Christianity and to
    restore paganism to full flower, compelled the citizens at
    Constantinople ' by then the capital of the empire ' to worship
    Mithras.

    The early Christian church regarded the cult of Mithras as its mortal
    enemy. The mythology and liturgy of Mithraism were held up as
    deliberate mockeries of Christian doctrine and sacraments. The
    youthful hero-god Mithras was believed to be a caricature of Jesus
    Christ, while Mithraic initiatory rites were considered counterfeit
    baptisms. It is possibly Mithraism that the author of the Book of
    Revelation had in mind in associating the harlot of Babylon with
    `mystery,' and the Antichrist with the infamous `mark of the beast'
    (which mark, analogous to the brands inflicted on Mithraic initiates,
    was to be placed on the right hand or on the forehead). Whatever the
    case, there is every likelihood that, had not Constantine and all of
    his successors save Julian not chosen to adopt Christianity, the
    Western world might very well have become Mithraic instead.

    The demise of Mithraism was as shrouded in obscurity as its origins.
    After the death of Julian during his unsuccessful campaign in Persia,
    the recrudescent mysteries of Mithras were swiftly suppressed.
    Julian's Mithraic preceptor Maximus was put to death along with other
    unrepentant votaries of Mithras, but whether the cult managed to
    disappear underground or otherwise reinvent itself and persist in some
    other guise is unknown. Some have suggested a continuity of tradition
    between Mithraism and Manichaeism, the so-called `religion of light'
    founded by the Persian heretic Mani and promulgated across much of the
    Orient. Others have found in the underground heresies of Medieval
    Europe, especially the Paulicians and the Bogomils, lineal successors
    to Mithraism and the other mystery cults.

    Whatever its final fate, the cult of Mithras is perhaps the
    best-documented instance of a cult of empire, a secret, oath-bound
    society of elites that, for several centuries, was the power behind
    the throne of the mightiest realm the world had ever seen. It was
    apparently the mysteries of Mithras that gave cohesion to Rome's
    far-flung legions and ideological grounding for the autocratic
    behavior of her emperors. If the emperor was the embodiment of the
    Unconquerable Sun, who could pretend to stand against him? From what
    little we have been able to glean of the religion of Mithras and of
    its most prominent imperial adherents, we are fortunate that this last
    and greatest of the ancient mystery cults did not carry the day in its
    epic struggle with Christianity for the hearts and minds of Rome.

    * See `Fear & Fatal Power' by Joe Wolverton II in the May 24, 2010 issue of TNA.

    http://www.thenewamerican.com/index.php/history/world/3740-mithraic-mysteries-and-the-cult-of-empire




    From: A. Papazian
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