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Karl Pribram
and I were invited to attend the first Centaur inaugural ceremonies,
and subsequent congresses in Knoxville, Tennessee--fittingly held
each year on April 1st, a date that is traditionally associated
in Greece with the birth of Chiron, perhaps the world's most famous
centaur, as teacher to Herakles and Asklepios. My own schedule,
to-date, has only permitted me to participate peripherally in
these proceedings through remote feild work described below.
In 1992, with great
pomp and circumstance, the University of Tennessee received the
ancient bones of the legendary Centaur
of Volos. A gift of Professor William Willers of the University
of Wisconsin, the bones had been in the possession of that institution
since the mid-1980s, and the means of their discovery is in itself
a fascinating story which can be explored in depth on the website
of the fomer university's Interdisciplinary Studies Program. The
remains of the Centaur of Volos are now installed, and can be
visited by travelling scholars, in the Great Hodges Library on
the campus of the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.
Much has been written
about the centaurs from early times, more than enough to form
a good picture of how they were regarded by their contemporaries
in antiquity. Apart from their well-known role as educators and
healers, my own interest in centaurs was first captured by the
deep symbolism inherent in their biological makeup--part man,
part horse, a combination of man and beast--a dichotomy that was
not ignored by the ancients, any more than by contemporary writers
like Robert Graves, Carl Jung, and Thomas Mann. This two-in-one
holistic dualism makes the centaur almost a walking (or galloping)
prototype of the alchemical marriage, the ancient initiation process
known to all cultures, the purpose of which was to conceptualize
and make concrete the link between spirit and matter, the yolk
and the white, the yin and the yang. But despite the power and
presence of the centaur in early writings--or perhaps because
of the almost mythological stature of some of this species--most
scholars today have tended to regard the centaur as a fantasy
being, like fairies or dragons, and many continue to do so, even
today despite the weight of physical and scholarly evidence.
It was during a Christmas
research trip to North Africa, in 1997, that I came upon the large
mosaic depicted here. The mosaic itself is part of the huge display
at the Bardo Museum of Tunis, collected from Roman sites all across
Tunisia. This lovely and impressive work of hand-cut tiles depicts
two young female centaurs holding aloft a golden crown which they
are about to place on the head of Venus--the goddess who is also
known by her older Greek name: Aphrodite, the foam-born.

This mosaic may be
unique, in its subject matter, from any artistic representation
throughout history--according to current opinion, it is the only
major work of ancient North African art portraying centaurs, and
perhaps the sole ancient work portraying two female centaurs.
But due to its peculiar subject matter, the mosaic might also
contain the key to an ages-old mystery. This led me to return,
the following winter, to help unearth something of the history
of the region where the mosaic was found, and its connection to
even earlier cultures.
The mosaic itself
was brought from the Roman baths at Thurburbo Majus, which in
Roman times supplied water to the coast by the use of an elaborate
system of aqueducts that crossed the great Atlas mountains. The
city of modern Tunis, at the northernmost tip of the African continent,
was once the ancient Phoenician city of Carthage. According to
legend, Carthage was founded by Dido, queen of Tyre in Phoenicia,
who sailed across the Mediterranean seeking refuge when her brother
killed her husband. Dido later died by immolating herself on a
funeral pyre due to her unrequited love for the hero Aeneas, who'd
deserted her. This echoes the earlier story of Ariadne--daughter
of King Minos of Crete and sister of the Minotaur. Ariadne hanged
herself when she was deserted by the hero Theseus. One death was
therefore by fire, and another suspended on a tree beneath land
and sky--earth and air. (Ariadne herself was often symbolized
as a mountain containing a labyrinth--reinforcing the connection
between earth and sky.) The fourth and final element for the ancients
was water--assocated with life renewal, fertility, and Aphrodite.
In summary, we have
two centaurs--representing through their own beings the alchemical
mix of spirit (air) and matter (earth)--and they are in the act
of crowning Aphrodite, the foam-born, who represents water, the
picture itself having been created for the Roman baths at Thurburbo
Majus that supplied water to the city founded by Dido--queen of
fire. So in one picture, we have connected the four major elements
sacred to the ancients. What does it mean that they are portrayed
by a cast of all-female actors?
The trail was soon
to be revealed in my subsequent trip to Tunisia, with Karl, during
the month of Ramadan over New Yearıs of 1998-99. The answer involved
a grab-bag of clues, both ancient and modern, that proved to be
interconnected. These clues provided answers including, but not
limited to, the following:
- What was the meaning
of the specific location of Carthage, and its proximity to Sicily
and Malta, in ancient times?
- What was the significance
of the female horse to early goddess cultures around the Mediterranean?
- What was the secret
history of the mysterious archaeologist who first discovered
the remains of the Centaur of Volos?
- Who was the even
more mysterious woman, named Sabrina, whom he met in North Africa--and
what did she reveal to him there?
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